Archive for October, 2009

Oct 29 2009

Caribbean: Rethinking online publishing

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[Nicholas Laughlin, Global Voices, October 26th, 2009]:

The anglophone Caribbean’s small but energetic literary blogosphere has taken notice of a new arrival to its conversation. Caribbean Book Blog, created by the St. Lucian journalist Tony Williams, aims to “inform writers and readers about the latest developments in the international book trade and how they are likely [to] affect the literary communities in the Caribbean and other small-island states.” Since launching on 11 October, 2009, Caribbean Book Blog has posted a series of thoughtful, statistics-laden essays on the issues facing Caribbean publishers, writers, and readers, at a time when literary publishing around the world is grappling with financial hardship and technological change. Williams’s posts have provoked thought and discussion both in the blog’s comments fields and elsewhere.

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Oct 26 2009

‘Galore’ on Governor-General Awards shortlist

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[Ashley Fitzpatrick, The Telegram, October 15th, 2009]:

Announced Wednesday, the short list of authors for the 2009 Governor General’s Literary Awards includes Newfoundland author Michael Crummey in the category for English fiction.

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Oct 24 2009

Writers in the landscape

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[Sally Cole, The Guardian, October 16th, 2009]:

On Prince Edward Island, writers focus on the landscape.
And the words they create are shaped by the elements that make up that landscape.
That’s the thinking behind a new fundraising calendar created by the P.E.I. Writers’ Guild, says Yvette Doucette.
“Many years ago, I read a poem by Milton Acorn called The Figure in the Landscape. That name stuck with me as a metaphor,” says Doucette, who is president of the guild.
So when she and fellow committee members Libby Oughton and Todd MacLean were beginning the calendar project and discovering the geography of the Rock Barra Artist Retreat, she remembered the metaphor and decided to place writers against the landscape elements at this stunning coastal location.
“So the name The Figure in the Landscape was realized,” says Doucette.
The 12-month calendar features stunning black and white photographs of writers sitting, standing, swimming or stretching out in the landscape at this eastern P.E.I. location.
The subjects in the pictures pose with or without clothing.

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Oct 21 2009

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[Steve Sharratt, The Guardian, October 21st 2009]:

Professor Pete Hay, from the University of Tasmania and teaching courses with the Institute of Island Studies, heralded Macphail’s only published work, The Master’s Wife, as a monumental story of time and place.

“It’s a classic of world literature,” he said. “It’s one of the greatest pieces of writing about place in the entire century.”

Hay said The Master’s Wife, written by Macphail in the late 1930s, captures the life of rural P.E.I. and a sense of time that has long since disappeared.

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Oct 19 2009

Battle of the Book Clubs

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It’s baaack! P.E.I.’s literary clash of the season, Battle of the Book Clubs, returns for a second season.

This year, we have a Facebook group to keep you up to date on all the Battle of the Book Club events. We also have a blog where you can talk about the Canada Reads books.

The Battle of the Book Club is CBC Prince Edward Island’s contribution to Canada Reads, the national celebration of Canadian literature.

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Oct 12 2009

Literature gaining presence on the net

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[M.L. Sanico, from 'Hawaii Book Blog', October 10th 2009]:

As you may have read in HBB’s “About” section, we began this site over a year and a half ago because we felt that Hawai’i’s literary achievements deserved more attention on the internet. We wanted to help share Hawai’i’s books with the world! Over the past year we’ve seen/found other blogs (like Susan Schultz’s awesome http://tinfisheditor.blogspot.com/) and websites that showcase Island books and authors. We are always excited to see new sites popping up and have amassed quite a long list of browser bookmarks (keep an eye out for the launch of our official HBB Favorite Links page). Social networks have enabled publishers to be more interactive and Hawaiiana’s online community has grown so much in such a short amount of time, we’re truly happy to be a part of it!

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Oct 11 2009

Launch of Deirdre Kessler’s poetry book October 20

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What are afternoon horses?

The phrase comes from a poem in Deirdre Kessler’s poetry book, AFTERNOON HORSES, to be launched October 20th at Beaconsfield’s Carriage House, Prince Edward Island, Canada, by Acorn Press.

Though Kessler has been writing poetry for more years than she has been writing fiction and nonfiction and has had poems published in chapbooks and in a number of collections and journals, Afternoon Horses is her first book of poetry.

“Deirdre Kessler enfolds us in her sense of wonder for friendship, for history, for the endless revelations of nature,” writes poet and UPEI professor Richard Lemm. “Fierceness and sadness also appear, when a desert is sown with land mines, when we slaughter other species. Yet, so much of life surprises with beauty, and our ‘hands find the right places / in dark rooms or under stars in middle of nowhere.’ These are poems that find the right places, that surprise us with us joy.”

Poet Laureate David Helwig writes: “Deirdre Kessler’s Afternoon Horses…pays its homage to the bright images and shapely tales collected in travel. It goes abroad, but it also follows the vital rhythms of language inward. Then her lean, taut lines offer lessons in how to take flight while standing perfectly still.”

Pete Hay, Taswegian poet and visiting scholar to UPEI this fall, says: “Here is a poetry of quiet power,a poetry of deep, all-gathering compassion, a poetry that reaches out in love to all that swims and swarms upon the face of the earth.”

Deirdre Kessler is the author of a dozen novels and picture books for children, including Canadian Children’s Book Centre Our Choice Award-winning Brupp Rides Again, a children’s novel, and Lobster in My Pocket, a perennially best-selling picture book. Her Island history book, a work that combines a fictional narrative with informational text, Exploring the Island, is now part of the P.E.I. grade six curriculum.

Kessler is recipient of the Award for Distinguished Contribution to the Literary Arts on Prince Edward Island and a P.E.I. Museum and Heritage Foundation Writing Award for A Century on Spring Street. She has freelanced for CBC Television and Radio. Her poetry has appeared in several collections, including Landmarks: An Anthology of New Atlantic Canadian Poetry of the Land (Acorn 2001).

She lives in Charlottetown and teaches children’s literature and creative writing with the UPEI Department of English.

Wondering what afternoon horses are?

Come to Beaconsfield’s Carriage House on Tuesday evening, October 20th, 7 to 9 p.m., and all will be revealed. There will be a poetry reading, music, refreshments, book signing, and one terrible joke.

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Oct 10 2009

Canada’s Sidney is a haven for book lovers

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[Steve Quinn, The Associated Press, October 8th 2009]:

Here, in the coastal town of Sidney on Canada’s Vancouver Island, it’s all about the books — thousands of them scattered throughout 12 stores.

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Oct 10 2009

A Cuban or a Yankee: fellow shares literature, life

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[Leslie Ventura, The Rebel Yell, October 8th 2009]:

“I felt Cuban until I went to Cuba,” said Black Muntain Institute scholar Cristina Garcia at her book reading Tuesday. “That fracturing of identity was essential in me beginning to write.”

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