But before heading into Rochleau Court, take a look across the street to where Score Pizza is now – this location used to be home to The Sleepless Goat, a beloved café, hangout, and writing space for many authors in the area and those who have moved on – including Michael Casteels (who also runs Puddles of Sky Press), Bruce Kauffman, Ned Dickens, Wanda Praamsma, and Nasser Hussain.
Merilyn Simonds came to Kingston in 1987 to write for Harrowsmith magazine, based out of Camden East north of Kingston and a bastion for the “new journalism” – long-form non-fiction that allowed reporters to immerse themselves in their stories and use literary techniques to tell those stories. Wayne Grady had already been editing the magazine for several years when they met. Moving between non-fiction and fiction, the two prolific writers have each published numerous award-winning books, and co-wrote a travel memoir together.
For the pair, and many other writers, Chez Piggy – run by musician and arts advocate Zal Yanovsky – was their hangout of choice in the early ’90s. It was also where Simonds and Grady married in 1995.
“There was a real dynamism here in the city. On Friday afternoons, writers would meet at The Pig and we’d have our salon – Steve (Heighton), Diane (Schoemperlen), Helen (Humphreys), me, Wayne (Grady), Matt (Cohen) if he was in town,” Simonds explains, with Grady adding that they would host their own salons at their home on Patrick Street, with dozens of writers and friends gathering for impromptu readings.
“I personally really believe in community, and that’s a large part of why I started the festival (Kingston WritersFest). It’s fine to write but there is that saying, ‘a book isn’t finished until it’s read’ – there’s that interaction between writer and reader, and it’s also writer to writer to writer. We had great discussions. It’s a quiet lonely life living inside your head all the time, writing books. You can’t just feed off your own experience, you also have to live,” Simonds says.
“You have to live – and write about other people’s experiences,” adds Grady, laughing, alluding to the many relationships between writers in the ’90s Kingston scene.
“The Pig” also found its way into the writing itself. Diane Schoemperlen sets one of the stories in The Man of my Dreams on the patio of this famous Kingston eatery, which she renames:
“The Red Herring, on the other hand, is a classy place, and having a drink or even two or three there in the afternoon, especially on a Friday, is an acceptable thing for a real writer, even a female one, to do. I imagined that as I sat there sipping, my writer’s block would be hanging off me with a certain attractive, highly intelligent sheen . . .. The only empty table was one to the right just beneath the magnolia tree. Our table was occupied by four cheerful young women in straw hats and lacy sundresses. They were eating elaborate salads and toasting the glorious day with Perrier and lime. I had no reason to resent, dislike, or envy them, but I did anyway.”
Schoemperlen’s short story collection The Man of My Dreams was shortlisted for both the Governor-General’s Literary Award and the Trillium Book Award in 1990.