Thursday, December 16, 2010

Book News Vol. 5 No. 52

BOOK NEWS

Holiday Break
We wish everyone a joyful holiday season. Book News will be taking a break for the remainder of the year and will be back on your screens on January 6.

Final call for the perfect gift for book lovers! Ignite a passion for reading and writing in your loved ones this holiday season with a gift certificate for events at the 2011 Vancouver International Writers & Readers Festival (October 18–23). To purchase gift certificates (available in $20 increments), please call us at 604-681-6330 ext 0 by 11am on December 17. Non-fattening and easy to wrap!

Join the Writers Festival for a new twice-monthly series at the Central Library for illuminating readings and discussions with novelists, poets, non-fiction writers and more. Confirmed Spring appearances include 2010 Giller Prize winner Johanna Skibsrud and 2010 Giller Prize nominee Alexander MacLeod, as well as local stars Zuszsi Gartner and Timothy Taylor. Presented in partnership with the Vancouver Public Library. Info: http://www.writersfest.bc.ca/events/readingseries.

AWARDS & LISTS

Anosh Irani's Dahanu Road is one of the 10 books on the Man Asian Literary Prize longlist. Also included is Kenzaburo Oe, who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1994. The shortlist will be announced in February.
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/jacketcopy/2010/12/man-asian-longlist-announced.html

The shortlisted titles for the BC National Award for Canadian Non-fiction are: The Boy in the Moon: A Father's Search for His Disabled Son by Ian Brown; Burmese Lessons: A Love Story by Karen Connally; The Cello Suites: J.S. Bach, Pablo Casals, and the Search for a Baroque Masterpiece by Eric Siblin; and The Uncrowned King: The Sensational Rise of William Randolph Hearst by Kenneth Whyte. The award will be presented January 31, 2011.
http://www.bcachievement.com/home.php

NEWS & FEATURES

Green College at the University of British Columbia has opened their Writer-in-Residence program to applications for Fall 2011, with a deadline of February 1, 2011. They are accepting applications from writers located outside of the Lower Mainland of BC, and especially welcome playwrights who also work in one or more other genres to apply.
http://www.greencollege.ubc.ca/WIR

While many Africans express their regret that Kenyan writer Ngugi wa Thiong'o did not win the Nobel Prize in Literature, Daobi Tricia Nwaubani writes that African literature is better off without another Nobel...at least for now.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/12/opinion/12nwaubani.html?_r=1&ref=nobel_prizes

Minneapolis-based independent publisher Graywolf Press has bought world rights to a first English-language collection of poetry by Chinese poet and newly anointed Nobel peace laureate Liu Xiaobo, translated by poet Jeffrey Yang. June Fourth Elegies, explores the Tiananmen Square massacre on 4 June 1989. A second book of Liu's political writings will be published by Harvard University Press in 2012.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/dec/13/liu-xiaobo-poetry-english-nobel

Richard Lea interviews Amy Sackville, who has just won the John Llewellyn Rhys prize for her debut book, The Still Point. Lea describes Sackville as an "accidental novelist".
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/dec/07/amy-sackville-accidental-novelist?CMP=EMCGT_081210&

The New York Times' selection of the 10 best books of 2010 includes Emma Donoghue's Room.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/12/books/review/10-best-books-of-2010.html?_r=1&nl=books&emc=booksupdateema1

The Montreal Gazette offers a list of this year's best graphic novels and comics.
http://www.montrealgazette.com/entertainment/books/Pictures+help+tell+story+year+best+graphic+novels+comics/3953303/story.html

The Star's list of great gift books for kids can be found here:
http://www.parentcentral.ca/parent/activities/pc-festive/article/904797--great-gift-books-for-kids

Globe and Mail cartoonist Anthony Jenkins talks to the artist behind the famed Doonesbury comic strip and casts some of their interview in Trudeau's unmistakable style.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/anthony-jenkins-draws-out-garry-trudeau/article1832765/

In an article responding to UK government cuts to library budgets and a key proposal that skilled librarians be replaced by volunteers, Kate Mosse writes that: "The government has little idea of what skilled and trained librarians actually do". Mosse, Phillip Pullman and others are to meet with culture minister Ed Vaizey next week.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/dec/11/kate-mosse-libraries-books

On a recent journey on the train, Edward Docx noticed that the majority of the passengers were reading books. Then he noticed they were all reading Stieg Larsson. He argues that even good genre fiction doesn't bear comparison with works of true literary merit.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/dec/12/genre-versus-literary-fiction-edward-docx

An early copy of Anne of Green Gables, auctioned by Sotheby's last week, sold for $37,500 US. The copy, printed in 1909, had a pre-sale estimate of $20,200 to $30,300 Cdn.
http://www.sothebys.com/app/live/lot/LotDetail.jsp?lot_id=159569681

Leah McLaren writes that she welcomes e-books, especially when she's traveling. However, the act of giving books as gifts–once the simplest of holiday rituals–has been perverted beyond recognition as a result of technology. And sharing the reading experience is no longer an option.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/leah-mclaren/how-the-rise-of-e-readers-takes-the-fun-out-of-giving-books/article1833182/

In the household of David L. Ulin, Los Angeles Times Book Critic, the rule is that he and his wife will always pony up for a book. "Whatever else they are, after all, books are gifts (for the mind, the eye, the hand), which makes it downright uncharitable to deny them to anyone," he writes.
http://www.latimes.com/features/books/la-ca-gift-david-ulin-essay-20101205,0,5779882.story

Marie Aranaaranam writes about Dave Eggers as "literary evangelist" and his passion for spreading the love of writing to the young.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/12/10/AR2010121005522.html

In an article reflecting on the writing life, Dave Eggers writes: "This kind of life is at odds with the romantic notions I once had, and most people have, of the writing life. We don't imagine-or I didn't imagine-quite so much sitting... And so I have to get out of the shed sometimes."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/12/10/AR2010121005527.html

The Guardian offers a series of Season's Readings, suggested by readers and reviewers: Laura Ingalls Wilder and Jonathan Franzen, Susan Cooper, Charles Dickens, and Babar—and more.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/series/season-s-readings

And The Star offers great reads for younger eyes.
http://www.thestar.com/specialsections/holidaygiftguide/article/907319--great-reads-for-younger-eyes

BOOKS & WRITERS

Alison Pick used the family stories of her own Czech grandparents' five-year escape to Canada as the inspiration for her novel Far to Go. Nancy Wigston finds the story mesmerizing.
http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/books/article/905278--far-to-go-novelist-alison-pick-shines

Nicholas Wroe hails 2010 as a good year for verse, and briefly reviews a dozen new books of poetry.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/dec/11/poetry-roundup-nicholas-wroe-reviews

In his review of Thomas Powers' Crazy Horse, David Treuer writes: "More than the story of Crazy Horse or the battles between two implacable foes, Powers gives us a portrait of a place, done in the blood of the heartland. Powers has given us a great book."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/12/10/AR2010121007088.html

My Mother She Killed Me, My Father He Ate Me, edited by novelist Kate Bernheimer, includes 40 fairy tales and fairy tale-esque stories. Celebrity writers include Lydia Millet, Aimee Bender, John Updike, Chris Adrian, Neil Gaiman, Michael Cunningham and Francine Prose. These fairy tales are decidedly not for children, writes Kathryn Kuitenbrouwer.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/my-mother-she-killed-me-my-father-he-ate-me-forty-new-fairy-tales-edited-by-kate-bernheimer/article1832665/

Joe Queenan writes that David Bajo's Panopticon, paying affectionate homage to everyone from Jorge Luis Borges to Aldous Huxley to Jim Thompson to J.G. Ballard, is a mildly futuristic science-fiction novel written by someone who can actually write.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/panopticon-by-david-bajo/article1833448/

COMMUNITY EVENTS

SERENA LEUNG
Author launches her new book Fugitives at the Mouth of Pearl River. Saturday, December 18 at 2:00pm, free. Chinatown Cultural Centre, 2nd floor 50 Pender Street E. More information at www.2ndwavetogoldenmountain.com.

CRAFTING KINGDOMS: THE ART OF BUILDING STRONG FANTASY WORLDS
VPL hosts a fantastical writing and illustration workshop with author/illustrator Lee Edward Fodi. Open to teens 13-18. Saturday, December 18 at 3:00pm, free; call 604-331-3663 to register. Alma VanDusen & Peter Kaye Rooms, Lower Level, Central Library, 350 West Georgia Street.

LISTEN! LAUGH! ENJOY!
Storytelling and music featuring Irish storyteller Philomena Jordan, Deaf Dog musicians, and the Candy Cane Circle with short open-mike stories. Sunday, December 19 at 7:00pm. Tickets $7 at the door and includes tea, treats by donation. St. Mark's Anglican Church, 1805 Larch. More information at www.vancouverstorytellers.ca.

MEMEWAR MAGAZINE CHRISTMAS PARTY
Highlights include readings from the magazine, music by the Creaking Planks and Geometric Shapes, photos with Santa, ugly sweater contest, and carolling. Bring items for the food bank and receive a free raffle ticket. Sunday, December 19 at 8:30pm. Tickets are $10 at the door. Railway Club, 579 Dunsmuir. More information at www.memewaronline.com.

Upcoming

WALK MYSELF HOME
Caitlin Press presents readings from Walk Myself Home, an anthology of poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and oral interviews about violence against women, with contributions by Kate Braid, Yasuko Thahn, and Susan Musgrave. Thursday, January 13 at 7:00pm, free. Central Library, 350 W. Georgia.

ROBSON READING SERIES
Readings by Sheila Heti (How Should A Person Be?) and Bren Simmers (Night Gears). Thursday, January 13 at 7:00pm, free. UBC Library Bookstore, Robson Square, plaza level, 800 Robson Street. More information at www.robsonreadingseries.ubc.ca.

ANNE GIARDINI
Author reads from her warm and witty novel, Advice for Italian Boys. Tuesday, January 18, 2011 at 7:00pm, free. Alma VanDusen & Peter Kaye Rooms, Lower Level, Central Library, 350 West Georgia Street. For more information please contact Vancouver Public Library at 604-331-3603.

STEVE WEINER AND SAM WHARTON
Local authors explore post World War England in their books Sweet England and Ignorant Armies with dramatically different results. Wednesday, January 19, 2011 at 7:00pm, free. Alma VanDusen Room, Lower Level, Central Library, 350 West Georgia Street.

GUNG HAGGIS FAT CHOY WORLD POETRY NIGHT
Seventh annual gala, celebrating Robbie Burns Day and Chinese New Year. A celebration of Chinese and Scottish traditions with a distinctly Canadian twist! Monday, January 24 at 7:00pm, free. Alice MacKay Room, Lower Level, Central Library, 350 West Georgia Street.

DREW HAYDEN TAYLOR
Reading by the author of NEWS: Postcards from the Four Directions and Motorcycles & Sweetgrass. Thursday, January 27 at 7:00pm, free. UBC Library Bookstore, Robson Square, plaza level, 800 Robson Street. More information at www.robsonreadingseries.ubc.ca.

STEVEN HEIGHTON
One of Canada's finest writers, Steven Heighton reads from Every Lost Country. Wednesday, February 2 at 7:00pm, free. Alma VanDusen & Peter Kaye Rooms, Lower Level, Central Library, 350 West Georgia Street. For more information please contact Vancouver Public Library at 604-331-3603.

THE YEAR OF THE FLOOD
Writers' Trust co-founder Margaret Atwood will narrate a theatrical performance based on her best-selling novel, The Year of the Flood at a Writers' Trust of Canada fundraiser on February 3. The performance at the Fairmont Hotel Vancouver will feature the singers and actors from the VIWF's sold out 2009 production. Tickets for the event, which features special guest and Writers' Trust co-founder Graeme Gibson, a cocktail reception, and an auction of original postcard stories from celebrated Canadian writers and other select items, are $175. Tickets and more information here, http://www.writerstrust.com/News/Events-%281%29/Writers--Trust-Presents-Margaret-Atwood.aspx.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Book News Vol. 5 No. 51

BOOK NEWS

The perfect gift for book lovers! Ignite a passion for reading and writing in your loved ones this holiday season with a gift certificate for events at the 2011 Vancouver International Writers & Readers Festival (October 18–23). To purchase gift certificates (available in $20 increments), please call us at 604-681-6330 ext 0 by December 16. Non-fattening and easy to wrap!

Stay tuned for exciting news about the Vancouver International Writers Festival's new year-round reading series. Twice a month, we will present established and emerging writers discussing their new books—fiction, non-fiction, poetry, spoken word, travel, biography and more—in partnership with the Vancouver Public Library. And it’s free! The first event will be in the Alice MacKay Room at the Central Library on January 26 at 7:30 pm. Mark your calendar! Info: http://www.writersfest.bc.ca/events/readingseries.

AWARDS & LISTS

The finalists for the BC National Award for Canadian Non-Fiction are Stevie Cameron for On the Farm: Robert William Pickton and the Tragic Story of Vancouver's Missing Women, James FitzGerald for What Disturbs Our Blood: A Son's Quest to Redeem the Past, Charles Foran for Mordecai: The Life & Times, and John Vaillant for The Tiger: A True Story of Vengeance and Survival. The Award will be presented January 31, 2011.
http://www.vancouversun.com/news/Finalists+named+fiction+award/3951042/story.html

U.S. poet Elyse Fenton has won the 2010 Dylan Thomas Prize of £30,000 (about $47,000 Cdn) for writers under age 30, for her poetry collection, Clamor.
http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/books/article/900058--u-s-poet-elyse-fenton-wins-dylan-thomas-prize

Christopher Fowler's Paperboy, a memoir of growing up in 1960s London has won the inaugural Green Carnation prize for literature by gay men, one of the few prizes for gay literature.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/12/01/gay-men-literature.html

Japan has bestowed the prestigious Order of the Rising Sun on Joy Kogawa, author of several books, including Obasan, for her contribution to the understanding and preservation of Japanese Canadian history and the promotion of friendship between Japan and Canada.
http://www.vancouver.anglican.ca/News/tabid/27/ArticleId/1121/Default.aspx

The Guardian First Book Award—along with £10,000—has been won by Alexandra Harris’s Romantic Moderns: English Writers, Artists and the Imagination from Virginia Woolf to John Piper, a choice described as counter-intuitive since serious works of art history have difficulty finding publishers, let alone win populist prizes.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/dec/01/guardian-first-book-award-romantic-moderns

NEWS & FEATURES

A copy of John James Audubon's Birds of America became the most expensive book ever when it sold at Sotheby's for £7.3m ($11.6 million Cdn.) earlier this week.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/dec/07/world-most-expensive-book-sold

Figment.com will soon be unveiled as an experiment in online literature.Developed by two New Yorker staff (one current, one former), figment.com is a free platform for young people to read and write fiction, both on their computers and on their cellphones.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/06/books/06figment.html?ref=books

Philip Marchand explores how it is that some writers are loved by the New Yorker.
http://arts.nationalpost.com/2010/12/03/open-book-how-to-be-loved-by-the-new-yorker/#more-17952

Why is there no Good Sex in Fiction Award, asks Toby Lichtig.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/booksblog/2010/nov/30/good-sex-in-fiction-award

Onnesha Roychoudhuri explores the question: does Amazon have too much power over bookselling? and concludes that "publishers and readers will finally know what happens when you sell a book like it’s a can of soup".
http://www.bostonreview.net/BR35.6/roychoudhuri.php

Amazon now sponsors the US literary prize, the Best Translated Book Award. Some independent booksellers, including prize judges, have suggested that taking money from the retail giant would be "akin to the medical researchers who take money from cigarette companies."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/dec/06/against-amazon-sponsorship-row-bookseller

Google is challenging Amazon.com with its long-awaited launch this week of an on-line bookstore in the U.S.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/12/06/con-google-books.html

More than 100 independent book retailers in 36 states have already agreed to team up with Google.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/technology/friend-or-foe-google-indie-book-sellers-team-up/article1827922/

On the other hand, Robert McCrum says that "For all the kvetching about the digital era, the books world's vital signs are looking very healthy."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/booksblog/2010/dec/06/bookselling-merry-christmas

World Book Night is an ingenious scheme and celebration in which one million books will be given away for free across the UK and Ireland on March 5 2011. Margaret Atwood’s The Blind Assassin and Yann Martel’s The Life of Pi are among the books to be distributed.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/dec/02/world-book-night-1m-free-books?CMP=EMCGT_031210&

Susan Swan notes that Canadian literature is widely acclaimed internationally but barely included in Canadian schools’ curricula. Why aren’t we teaching more of these books? she asks.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/opinions/opinion/why-arent-we-teaching-more-of-these-books/article1822820/

While Anthony Burgess was a teacher at the Malay College Kuala Kangsar (considered the "Eton of the East"), he composed Ode: Celebration for a Malay College for the college's golden jubilee in 1955. The work was suppressed—and rediscovered only recently.
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/news/unveiled-work-by-anthony-burgess-suppressed-for-years-2151578.html

The Globe and Mail has hand-picked the best eye candy (books) of the season for your gift-giving pleasure.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/no-gift-so-rare-as-a-book-the-globes-christmas-gift-book-guide/article1823594/

Here is the New York Times’ annual list of 100 notable books in fiction, non-fiction and poetry.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/05/books/review/100-notable-books-2010.html?nl=books&emc=booksupdateema1

And eight notable children’s books of 2010.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/05/books/review/KidsNotables-t.html?nl=books&emc=booksupdateemb4

The Star recommends eleven entrancing fantasy books for kids for holiday reading.
http://www.parentcentral.ca/parent/activities/familyevents/article/899900--fantasy-books-for-kids

BOOKS & WRITERS

In her Eisner Award-winning coming-of-art memoir, What It Is, Lynda Barry prodded would-be writers to pick up a pen (or a brush) and put it to paper. Jennifer B. McDonald writes that Barry’s latest book, Picture This taps into something more elemental and asks, "Do you wish you could draw?"
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/05/books/review/McDonald-t.html?nl=books&emc=booksupdateema3

David L. Ulin says about Garry Trudeau’s 40: A Doonesbury Retrospective that "the narrative elements quickly grow seductive, just as the strip, at its best, has always been".
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/jacketcopy/2010/12/david-l-ulin-on-doonesbury.html

Once upon a time, writes Joe Friesen, not many people grew old. Much has now changed, as is clearly outlined in Ted C. Fishman’s Shock of Gray.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/shock-of-gray-by-ted-c-fishman/article1820751/

Many better-known writers will be lucky to leave behind a monument as memorable as John Lavery’s first novel, Sandra Beck, writes John Barber.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/could-life-be-better-for-john-lavery-or-worse/article1814867/

Kate Taylor interviews prolific author Anita Shreve about, among other things, the continuing desire (by some) to pigeonhole books written by women.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/anita-shreve-you-dont-sit-waiting-for-the-muse-to-come/article1823963/?cmpid=rss1

Those who used to follow Maira Kalman’s blog for the Opinion section of NYTimes.com will be particularly pleased at the news that she’s "written" a picture book for grown-ups. Leah Hager Cohen writes that And The Pursuit of Happiness is like an impromptu interpretive dance about America.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/05/books/review/Cohen-t.html?nl=books&emc=booksupdateema3

Nadine Gordimer’s Life Times: Stories 1952-2007 map Gordimer's engagement with the moral dimension of her art.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/dec/04/life-times-nadine-gordimer-review

Victoria Bond and T. R. Simon have written a young adult mystery featuring the iconic Harlem author Zora Neale Hurston. Zora and Me thrills and chills, writes Mary Quattlebaum.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/11/30/AR2010113006113.html

In Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan’s The Fall: Book Two of The Strain Trilogy, vampires spread like a virus. The Strain, Book One in the series, is now out in paperback.
http://www.montrealgazette.com/entertainment/books/Reads+Vampires+haunt+York/3918827/story.html

Bernhard Schlink’s new novel The Weekend focuses attention on one member of the German terrorist movement of the 1970s that called itself the Red Army Faction, since pardoned by the German President. Schlink is interested in how memories linger or don’t.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/12/01/AR2010120106052.html

John Gilkey is a serial stealer of books and the focus of Allison Hoover Bartlett’s The Man Who Loved Books Too Much. And then there is Ken Sanders, a book-dealer and sleuth.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/dec/04/man-loved-books-allison-hoover-bartlett-review

Julia Franck’s The Blind Side of the Heart, beginning in the chaos of the German withdrawal from Stettin in 1945, is a rich affecting novel, writes David Evans.
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/reviews/the-blind-side-of-the-heart-by-julia-franck-trs-anthea-bell-2151382.html

Annie Proulx hails an outstanding debut about Sicilian immigrants making lives in America in Salvatore Scibona’s The End. The reader gets the strong sense of standing just inside the door of the characters' shifting worlds, says Proulx. http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/dec/04/the-end-salvatore-scibona-review

Fannie Flagg, the author of Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Café, continues using her foolproof recipe for whimsical tales of Southern discomfort, and skeletons in Southern closets, with I Still Dream About You, says Emma Hagestadt.
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/reviews/i-still-dream-about-you-by-fannie-flagg-2151998.html

COMMUNITY EVENTS

BRENDAN MCLEOD
Turner Music's "All Things Spoken" presents the competitive performance poet and Vancouver SLAM champion with special guest R.C. Weslowski. Thursday, December 9 at 6:00pm. Tickets $10. Cory Weeds' Cellar Jazz Club, 3611 W. Broadway. More information at www.turnerme.com/brendanmcleod.shtml.

ROBSON READING SERIES
Readings by Anna Swanson (The Nights Also) and Deborah Willis (Vanishing and Other Stories). Thursday, December 9 at 7:00pm, free. UBC Library/Bookstore Robson Square, Plaza level, 800 Robson Street. For more information, visit www.robsonreadingseries.ubc.ca.

ANVIL PRESS CANADIAN TOUR
Canadian publisher presents Spaz author Bonnie Bowman, Ravenna Gets author Tony Burgess, A Mountie In Niagara Falls author Salvatore Difalco, Spat the Dummy author Ed Macdonald, and Vs. author Kerry Ryan reading selections from their newest works. Friday, December 10 at 7:00pm, free. Cafe Montmartre, 4362 Main Street. More information at www.anvilpress.com

BOOK SIGNING
Vikram Vij, author of Vij's at Home and Evaleen Jaager Roy, author of Four Chefs One Garden are signing their new cookbooks. Saturday, December 11 at 12:00pm. Chapters Granville, 2505 Granville Street.

CANDICE JAMES
Book launch and signing by New Westminster Poet Laureate. Sunday, December 12 at 2:30pm, free. Renaissance Bookstore, 43 6th Street, New Westminster. For more information, phone (604) 525-4566.

VANCOUVER POETRY SLAM
Featuring Jive Poetic. Monday, December 13 at 8:00pm. Cover: $5-10 sliding scale. Cafe Deux Soleils, 2096 Commercial Drive. More information at vancouverpoetryhouse.com.

STEPHEN HUME
Vancouver Sun columnist will give a reading and talk based on his new book A Walk With the Rainy Sisters: In Praise of British Columbia's Places. Wednesday, December 15 at 7:00pm, free. Central Library, 350 W. Georgia St. More information at www.vpl.ca.

SAY WHA?!
Sara Bynoe hosts an evening of deliciously rotten writing, as read by Ryan Steele, Billeh Nickerson, Andrew Barber, Eric Fell, and Jeff Gladstone. Wednesday, December 15 at 8:00pm. Tickets $10/5. Cottage Bistro, 4470 Main Street. More information at www.sarabynoe.com/shows/say-wha/.

Upcoming

ANNE GIARDINI
Author reads from her warm and witty novel, Advice for Italian Boys. Tuesday, January 18, 2011 at 7:00pm, free. Alma VanDusen & Peter Kaye Rooms, Lower Level, Central Library, 350 West Georgia Street. For more information please contact Vancouver Public Library at 604-331-3603.

THE YEAR OF THE FLOOD
Writers' Trust co-founder Margaret Atwood will narrate a theatrical performance based on her best-selling novel, The Year of the Flood at a Writers' Trust of Canada fundraiser on February 3. The performance at the Fairmont Hotel Vancouver will feature the singers and actors from the VIWF's sold out 2009 production. Tickets for the event, which features special guest and Writers' Trust co-founder Graeme Gibson, a cocktail reception, and an auction of original postcard stories from celebrated Canadian writers and other select items, are $175. Tickets and more information here, http://www.writerstrust.com/News/Events-%281%29/Writers--Trust-Presents-Margaret-Atwood.aspx.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Book News Vol. 5 No. 50

BOOK NEWS

The perfect gift for book lovers! Ignite a passion for reading and writing in your loved ones this holiday season with a gift certificate for events at the 2011 Vancouver International Writers & Readers Festival (October 18–23). To purchase gift certificates (available in $20 increments), please call us at 604-681-6330 ext 0 by December 16. Non-fattening and easy to wrap!

Stay tuned for exciting news about the Vancouver International Writers Festival's new year-round reading series. Twice a month, we will present established and emerging writers discussing their new books—fiction, non-fiction, poetry, spoken word, travel, biography and more—in partnership with the Vancouver Public Library. And it’s free! The first event will be in the Alice MacKay Room at the Central Library on January 26 at 7:30 pm. Mark your calendar!

Eleanor Wachtel's interview with Gary Shteyngart, an event co-sponsored by the Vancouver International Writers Festival and the Jewish Book Festival, will be aired on Sunday, December 5th on Writers & Company, CBC Radio at 3pm.

The VIWF’s 2009 sold-out production of The Year of the Flood is being remounted. Writers’ Trust co-founder Margaret Atwood will narrate the theatrical performance, based on her best-selling novel. Tickets for the event, which features special guest and Writers’ Trust co-founder Graeme Gibson, a cocktail reception, and an auction of original postcard stories from celebrated Canadian writers and other select items, are $175. Tickets and more information at http://www.writerstrust.com/News/Events-%281%29/Writers--Trust-Presents-Margaret-Atwood.aspx.

AWARDS & LISTS

Amy Sackville has won the John Llewellyn Rhys prize for her debut novel The Still Point. Judges call the novel 'breathtaking’.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/23/john-llewellyn-rhys-amy-sackville

The Guardian first book award—along with £10,000—has been won by Alexandra Harris's Romantic Moderns: English Writers, Artists and the Imagination from Virginia Woolf to John Piper, a choice described as counter-intuitive since serious works of art history have difficulty finding publishers, let alone win populist prizes.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/dec/01/guardian-first-book-award-romantic-moderns

David Carpenter's non-fiction work, A Hunter's Confession, won the Book of the Year Award at the Saskatchewan Book Awards. Other award-winners include Dianne Warren for Clear Water, Sandra Birdsell for Waiting for Joe and Martine Noël-Maw (at the Festival in 2007) for Dans le pli des collines. A complete list is here:
http://www.bookawards.sk.ca/images/stories/PDF_Files/PressReleases/2010_Winners_Media_Release.pdf

The PEI Book Awards went to Brent MacLaine for poetry, Steven Mayoff for fiction and John Sylvester for non-fiction.
http://www.gov.pe.ca/news/index.php3?number=news&dept=&newsnumber=7455&lang=E

Irish writer Rowan Somerville has won the Bad Sex in Fiction Award for his book The Shape of Her.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/11/29/bad-sex-award.html

When Canadian novelist Annabel Lyon was shortlisted for this dubious award, she pronounced herself "deeply honoured" by the nomination of her bestselling novel, The Golden Mean. The news that Ms. Lyon did not win prompted this headline: Annabel Lyon denied Bad Sex writing award.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/annabel-lyon-denied-bad-sex-writing-award/article1817738/

Gil Courtemanche has refused the nomination of his book Je ne veux pas mourir seul (I Don't Want do Die Alone) for the French-language Archambault Prize for Literature to show his solidarity with locked out workers at Journal de Montréal.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/11/25/journal-archambault-quebecor.html

NEWS & FEATURES

Bestselling mystery writer Thomas Perry is one of dozens of authors who will name characters in their books after you—if you are the highest bidder—in a fundraiser to support free speech.
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/jacketcopy/2010/11/become-a-fictional-character-free-speech.html

It's been suggested that a boys' club generation of writers Amis-Barnes-McEwan-Rushdie has frozen out a generation of writers.
http://www.fictionuncovered.co.uk/2010/11/a-generation-of-undervalued-authors/

The Guardian is not convinced that literary recognition works that way.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/booksblog/2010/nov/29/amis-barnes-mcewan-rushdie-boys-club

Malicious reviews and false reviews seem to be part of the downside of online reviewing.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/30/amazon-stalker-poison-pen-reviews

The Independent offers its recommendations of the best books in all categories (fiction, nonfiction, poetry, crime, children's, food, memoirs) for Christmas.
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/features/the-best-books-for-christmas-our-pick-of-2010-2143731.html

The Guardian's recommendations overlap a little.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/27/christmas-books-year-roundup

The Globe and Mail suggests 100 Canadian books, in all categories.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/the-2010-globe-100-canadian-fiction/article1813220/

Poet Siân Hughes asks: Is there even such a thing as public poetry? There have been strange rumblings in Britain about whether Carol Ann Duffy, England's poet laureate, will, or should, or ought to be expected to write for the occasion of a royal wedding.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2010/nov/23/carol-duffy-poetry-royal-wedding

Russell Smith urges writers to ignore advice to blog and tweet and otherwise market their books—and to finish their novels, instead.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/russell-smith/note-to-canadian-authors-stop-tweeting-start-writing/article1812180/

Robert McCrum interviews Margaret Atwood about cowardly politicians, her love of birds, planet earth, the development of the Long Pen, and why she's joined the Twitterati, among other topics.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/28/margaret-atwood-interview

The Wall Street Journal interviews Salman Rushdie on why he became a writer.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704638304575636763279031150.html

Now that the requisite 100 years have passed and Mark Twain's autobiography has been published, what does it reveal about the father of American literature? asks John Crace.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/25/mark-twain-truth-fiction?CMP=EMCGT_261110&

Poet and prizewinning novelist Joe Dunthorpe describes his experience with The Ministry of Stories in Hackney. "Many of the young people who come through our secret door really struggle with writing and reading but, when they go home as published authors, their outlooks are thoroughly changed."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/27/joe-dunthorne-schools-ministry-stories

Grammy Award-winning singer Tom Waits is to make his publishing debut next year with a book that combines his poetry with images of the homeless.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/11/24/tom-waits-poetry.html

Kate Bittman explores what makes grownups love Harry Potter.
http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/books/2010/11/adult-education-at-hogwarts.html

BOOKS & WRITERS

Vancouver Island poet Patricia Young's ninth collection of poetry, An Auto-Erotic History of Swings, "shows an acclaimed poet swinging at the height of her powers," writes Candace Fertile in the Times Colonist.
http://www.timescolonist.com/news/Local+poet+explores+sexual+side+swinging/3896019/story.html#ixzz16gvWiK6X

David Homel's new novel, Midway attempts to restore dignity to the mid-life crisis by plumbing its emotional and psychological depths, says Harold Heft.
http://www.montrealgazette.com/entertainment/books/David+Homel+novel+finds+protagonist+depths+life+crisis/3884483/story.html

Jack Batten highly recommends the latest works on skullduggery from two octogenarians (just barely), John Le Carré's Our Kind of Traitor and Eric Walter's A Likely Story.
http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/books/article/897506--john-le-carre-and-eric-wright-two-hugely-readable-old-guys

In his review of Joseph Boyden's Louis Riel & Gabriel Dumont, Doug Grant writes "The enduring historical question is not whether Riel wasvmentally ill but whether his cause was just and he justly dealt with. There's no doubt in Joseph Boyden's mind about Riel's answer."
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/rebellion-through-the-eyes-of-riel-and-dumont/article1817819/

Physician and author Susan Okie describes Siddhartha Mukherjee's The Emperor of All Maladies an enthralling, scholarly, wonderfully written history of cancer.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/11/19/AR2010111906890.html

International affairs columnist Jonathan Manthorpe describes Andre Gerolymatos' Castles Made of Sand: A Century of Anglo-American Espionage and Intervention in the Middle East as "an often fascinating account of the American and British interventions in the Middle East after the collapse of the Turkish Ottoman Empire", including some errors in judgment.
http://www.vancouversun.com/news/Kermit+spook+making+modern+Middle+East/3893280/story.html

Historian Alan Taylor's The Civil War of 1812 presents a bold new argument about the War of 1812 and America's attempted invasion of Canada, writes Michael O'Donnell in a Barnes & Noble Review.
http://www.salon.com/books/history/index.html?story=/books/feature/2010/11/29/the_civil_war_of_1812_alan_taylor

Craig Davidson's Sarah Court can be read as any genre, writes Michelle Berry—a connected collection of stories, a novel—and, says Berry, it will please readers who think they don't enjoy science fiction.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/sarah-court-by-craig-davidson/article1819176/

COMMUNITY EVENTS

EVERYTHING WORKS
Mike McCardell signs his newly released book, Everything Works. Saturday, December 4 at 11:00am at Save On Foods in Coquitlam (Pinetree Village, 2991 Lougheed Highway). Also at 3:00pm at Save On Foods in Surrey (South Point, 3033 152nd Avenue). For information, phone Save On Foods at 604-552-1772 (Pinetree Village) or 604-538-7331 (Surrey).

RC WESLOWSKI CHRISTMAS SPECIAL
Santa Klaus Meine hosts the fifth annual spoken-word fundraiser, featuring the Svelte Ms. Spelt, Fang!, the Juggle Man, and the Klute, with proceeds to the AIDS Vancouver Holiday Food Hamper Program. Saturday, December 4, doors at 7:00pm, show at 8:15pm. Admission by donation. Café Deux Soleils, 2096 Commercial Drive.

LIGHTS FOR DARK NIGHTS
Vancouver Society of Storytelling presents Cric Crac storytellers Helen May, Kira Van Deusen, Anne Anderson, Wong Wing-Siu. Sunday, December 5 at 7:00pm. Tickets $8/6, includes tea and cookies. Silk Purse Arts Centre, 1570 Argyle Ave., West Vancouver.

WALK MYSELF HOME
Launch of an anthology of fiction/non-fiction/poetry about violence against women edited by Andrea Routley. Monday, December 6, doors open at 7:00pm, launch at 7:30pm. RSVP recommended. Historic Joy Kogawa House, 1450 64th Ave. W. More information at kogawahouse@yahoo.ca.

AN EVENING OF POETRY
Join Bibiana Tomasic and Sandy Shreve reading from their latest works at Vancouver's newest independent bookstore. Wednesday, December 8 at 7:00pm. Sitka Books & Art, 2025 West 4th Avenue. More information at 604-734-2025 or http://www.sitkabooksandart.com.

BRENDAN MCLEOD
Turner Music's "All Things Spoken" presents the competitive performance poet and Vancouver SLAM champion with special guest R.C. Weslowski. Thursday, December 9 at 6:00pm. Tickets $10. Cory Weeds' Cellar Jazz Club, 3611 W. Broadway. More information at www.turnerme.com/brendanmcleod.shtml.

ROBSON READING SERIES
Readings by Anna Swanson (The Nights Also) and Deborah Willis (Vanishing and Other Stories). Thursday, December 9 at 7:00pm, free. UBC Library/Bookstore Robson Square, Plaza level, 800 Robson Street. For more information, visit www.robsonreadingseries.ubc.ca.

ANVIL PRESS CANADIAN TOUR
Canadian publisher presents Spaz author Bonnie Bowman, Ravenna Gets author Tony Burgess, A Mountie In Niagara Falls author Salvatore Difalco, Spat the Dummy author Ed Macdonald, and Vs. author Kerry Ryan reading selections from their newest works. Friday, December 10 at 7:00pm, free. Cafe Montmartre, 4362 Main Street. More information at www.anvilpress.com

BOOK SIGNING
Vikram Vij, author of Vij's at Home and Evaleen Jaager Roy, author of Four Chefs One Garden are signing their new cookbooks. Saturday, December 11 at 12:00pm. Chapters Granville, 2505 Granville Street.

CANDICE JAMES
Book launch and signing by New Westminster Poet Laureate. Sunday, December 12 at 2:30pm, free. Renaissance Bookstore, 43 6th Street, New Westminster. For more information, phone (604) 525-4566.

STEPHEN HUME
Vancouver Sun columnist will give a reading and talk based on his new book A Walk With the Rainy Sisters: In Praise of British Columbia's Places. Wednesday, December 15 at 7:00pm, free. Central Library, 350 W. Georgia St. More information at www.vpl.ca.

SAY WHA?!
Sara Bynoe hosts an evening of deliciously rotten writing, as read by Ryan Steele, Billeh Nickerson, Andrew Barber, Eric Fell, and Jeff Gladstone. Wednesday, December 15 at 8:00pm. Tickets $10/5. Cottage Bistro, 4470 Main Street. More information at www.sarabynoe.com/shows/say-wha/.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Book News Vol. 5 No. 49

BOOK NEWS

AWARDS & LISTS

Miguel Syjuco has won the Quebec Writers' Federation prize for his debut novel, Ilustrado.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/miguel-syjuco-wins-quebec-writers-federation-prize-for-ilustrado/article1810662/

Patti Smith's Just Kids, a memoir of a youthful affair with the photographer Robert Mapplethorpe has won the National Book Award for Non-fiction. Jaimy Gordon’s Lord of Misrule won the award for fiction. A complete list of award-winners and finalists in all categories is here:
http://www.nationalbook.org/nba2010.html

Valerie Wyatt's and Fred Rix's How To Build Your Own Country has won the Children's Literature Roundtables of Canada 2010 Information Book Award. Finalists and shortlisted titles:
http://vancouverchildrenslitroundtable.wordpress.com/information-book-award/

Stevie Cameron’s On the Farm: Robert William Pickton and the Tragic Story of Vancouver's Missing Women and a new biography of late Montreal writer Mordecai Richler by Charles Foran are among the ten books longlisted for British Columbia's National Award for Canadian Non-fiction.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/11/17/bc-non-fiction-book.html

Scott Griffin, the founder of the Griffin Prize, has launched a new competition designed to revive the art of poetry recital among high school students. The bilingual Poetry in Voice competition will offer $10,000 in prizes to students in 2011.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/scott-griffin-launches-school-poetry-reading-competition/article1810722/

Annabel Lyon's lauded The Golden Mean is among the books short-listed for the Literary Review's Bad Sex in Fiction Award. The complete list of those nominated for the dubious distinction is here:
http://www.literaryreview.co.uk/badsex.html

NEWS & FEATURES

Thanks to Douglas and McIntyre’s production of 70,000 paperback copies of The Sentimentalists—in the stores this week—Gaspereau Press has returned to producing handprinted copies of the book.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/11/18/gaspereau-sentimentalists-giller.html

Laura Miller asks why the National Book Awards bar fairy tales. Are humanity’s favourite stories punished for their vaguely disreputable origins?
http://www.salon.com/books/laura_miller/index.html?story=/books/laura_miller/2010/11/16/fairy_tales

Jack Zipes explores why fairytales are immortal.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/why-fairy-tales-are-immortal/article1805784/

Nick Hornby is following the example of Dave Eggars and Roddy Doyle in opening his shop Ministry of Stories—plus the world's first supply store for monsters—all efforts to get kids writing again.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/18/nick-hornby-ministry-stories

John Crace calls Nick Hornby the "Everybloke of modern British fiction".
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/17/nick-hornby-jamie-oliver

In The Novelist's Lexicon, published by Columbia University Press, 77 authors each come up with a single word that creates a window on their work. To be fair, a few cheat.
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/jacketcopy/2010/11/nanowrimo-aid-the-novelists-lexicon.html

The most recent issue of Geist includes The Authoritative Field Guide to: Language Vermin, a comic by Sarah Leavitt. Learn how to identify a parasitic passive verb and other dangerous language vermin.
http://www.geist.com/comix/authoritative-field-guide-language-vermin

Kate Bittman explores what makes grownups love Harry Potter.
http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/books/2010/11/adult-education-at-hogwarts.html

BOOKS & WRITERS

André Alexis writes that Paul Auster’s Sunset Park can be read as the chronicle of a community's rise and fall at a time when communities are disappearing or breaking down all over the United States. But there's more going on beneath the surface.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/sunset-park-by-paul-auster/article1796347/

Helena de Bertadano interviews Auster for The Telegraph.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/authorinterviews/8128941/Paul-Auster-interview.html

Tony Judt’s The Memory Chalet is a book to treasure, says Peter Preston.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/21/tony-judt-memory-chalet-review

Both the Globe and The Star focus this week on children’s literature. Deidre Baker focuses on three authors’ books that are, in part, about fishing.
http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/books/article/893962--tales-of-the-sea

Susan Perrin reviews seven books for children ages 0 to 9, ranging from fairy tales and bedtime poems, rude stories and more, including the origin of "the real McCoy".
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/childrens-books-the-best-of-the-current-crop/article1805865/

Maggie de Vries’ Hunger Journey is her first young-adult novel, and reviewer Marcy Shaw believes it will both entertain and teach teens about a part of Second World War history that is often forgotten.
http://www.vancouversun.com/news/Author+paints+picture+wartime+Holland+through+rich+characters/3858814/story.html

Tracy Sherlock writes that Myra Goldberg’s The False Friend explores the cruelty of pre-teen friendships in an honest and heartbreaking story.
http://www.vancouversun.com/news/Cruelty+teen+friendships+explored/3858816/story.html

Hans Keilson may be the greatest novelist we've never heard of. His Comedy in a Minor Key, written in 1947, is about to be released in England and his other books, translated into nine languages.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/21/hans-keilson-novelist-holocaust

Francine Prose describes Comedy as a masterpiece and its author, a genius.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/08/books/review/Prose-t.html?_r=1

Shilpi Somaya Gowda’s Secret Daughter is a runaway success story in Canadian publishing.
http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/books/article/895026--secret-daughter-a-runaway-success

Modern Canadian Poets: An Anthology, the most exhaustive and important anthology of Canadian poetry in two decades, according to Leah McLaren, was launched last week in Manchester. Ex-pats Todd Swift and Evan Jones, are on a mission to change the way the world sees Canadian poetry.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/leah-mclaren/rescuing-canadian-poetry-from-international-obscurity/article1806319/

Robert Buckman writes that in The Emperor of All Maladies, Siddhartha Mukherjee has written an interesting, and often absorbing, account of the most significant milestones in the history of cancer research and treatment. "He is a superb storyteller."
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/the-emperor-of-all-maladies-a-biography-of-cancer-by-siddhartha-mukherjee/article1805916/

COMMUNITY EVENTS

HELEN PIDDINGTON
Author of Rumble Seat: A Victorian Childhood Remembered, tells the story her childhood growing up in the Victoria suburb of Esquimalt in the 1920s. Thursday, November 25 at 7:00pm, free. Capilano Branch Library, 3045 Highland Blvd. More information at 604-987-4471.

**POSTPONED** ROBSON READING SERIES
Readings by Gurjinder Basran and Jack Hodgins. Thursday, November 25 at 7:00pm, free. UBC Library/Bookstore Robson Square, Plaza level, 800 Robson Street. For more information, visit www.robsonreadingseries.ubc.ca.

ATLANTIC/PACIFIC: AN EVENING OF POETRY
Readings by Judy Halebsky and Sandy Shreve. Thursday, November 25 at 7:30pm, free. People's Co-op Bookstore, 1391 Commercial Drive.

MIKE MCCARDELL
Mike McCardell signs his newly released book Everything Works. Saturday, November 27 at 11:00am. Coles in Abbotsford (Seven Oaks Mall, 32900 S. Fraser Way, Abbotsford). For more information about the signing, phone Coles at 604-854-3233.

CITY OF LOVE AND REVOLUTION
Book launch of Lawrence Aronsen's account of the Sixties. Sunday, November 28 at 2:00pm, free. Free poster of the cover with every book purchase. Psychedelic artist and cover illustrator Bob Masse will be on hand to sign posters. Vancouver East Cultural Centre, 1895 Venables Street. More information at http://www.newstarbooks.com/news.php?news_id=40103.

WORDSTORM READING SERIES
Join Daniela Elza, Peter Morin, Shannon Rayne, and Kim Clark for a reading. Monday November 29 at 6:30pm, free. The Red Room Grill, 75 Front Street 1, Nanaimo. More information at http://www.wordstorm.ca.

DON GAYTON
Man Facing West is a story of commitment to the causes of peace, rural development, and ecology. Respected author Don Gayton chronicles an American childhood infused with guns, Republican politics and dissent. Monday, November 29 at 7:00pm, free. Meeting Room, Level 3, Central Library, 350 West Georgia Street. For more information please contact VPL - Popular Reading Library at 604-331-3691.

VOGON POETRY SLAM AND VOG-OFF
Come to the Restaurant at the End of the Universe for our first-ever Vogon Poetry Competition. Ten of the universe's worst poems will be presented slam style for your pleasure (or not). Monday, November 29 at 7:00pm, free. Alma VanDusen & Peter Kaye Rooms, Lower Level, Central Library, 350 West Georgia Street. For more information please contact Vancouver Public Library at 604-331-3603.

ISLAND WRITER MAGAZINE
Come celebrate the launch of the Winter 2010 issue of Island Writer with readings from our published authors. Wednesday December 1 at 6:30pm. Oaklands Community Centre, 2827 Belmont Avenue (near Hillside Ave), Victoria. For further details see http://www.victoriawriters.ca.

BETTY LAMBERT TRIBUTE
Please join Anakana Schofield for a revisiting of Canadian playwright Betty Lambert's only published novel, Crossings (1979). Wednesday, December 1 at 7:00pm, free. Alma VanDusen & Peter Kaye Rooms, Lower Level, Central Library, 350 West Georgia Street. For more information please contact Vancouver Public Library at 604-331-3603.

AFTER CANAAN
Acclaimed poet Wayde Compton will launch his first book of essays, After Canaan, which "offers an alternative epistemology for thinking about race in Canada." Wednesday, December 1 at 8:00pm, free. The Brickhouse Late Nite Bistro & Bar, 730 Main Street, Vancouver. More information at 604-687-4233.

EVERYTHING WORKS
Mike McCardell at two book signings for his newly released book, Everything Works. Saturday, December 4 at 11:00am at Save On Foods in Coquitlam (Pinetree Village, 2991 Lougheed Highway). Also at 3:00pm at Save On Foods in Surrey (South Point, 3033 152nd Avenue). For more information about the signing, phone Save On Foods at 604-552-1772 (Pinetree Village) or 604-538-7331 (Surrey).

Upcoming

AN EVENING OF POETRY
Join Bibiana Tomasic and Sandy Shreve reading from their latest works at Vancouver's newest independent bookstore. Wednesday, December 8 at 7:00pm. Sitka Books & Art, 2025 West 4th Avenue. More information at 604-734-2025 or http://www.sitkabooksandart.com.

ROBSON READING SERIES
Readings by Anna Swanson (The Nights Also) and Deborah Willis (Vanishing and Other Stories). Thursday, December 9 at 7:00pm, free. UBC Library/Bookstore Robson Square, Plaza level, 800 Robson Street. For more information, visit www.robsonreadingseries.ubc.ca.

BOOK SIGNING
Vikram Vij, author of Vij's at Home and Evaleen Jaager Roy, author of Four Chefs One Garden are signing their new cookbooks. Saturday, December 11 at 12:00pm. Chapters Granville, 2505 Granville Street.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Book News Vol. 5 No. 48

BOOK NEWS

Special Event

Gary Shteyngart
Tickets are still available for Gary Shteyngart on November 21. The Vancouver International Writers Festival and the Cherie Smith JCGV Jewish Book Festival present the author of Super Sad True Love Story in conversation with Eleanor Wachtel. Details here, http://www.writersfest.bc.ca/events/shteyngart.

In a recent Granta interview, Gary Shteyngart was asked: Do you see yourself in a certain 'tradition' – national, ethnic, comic, tragic? Shteyngart's response: "I am definitely America's tragicomic national ethnic."
http://www.granta.com/Online-Only/Interview-Gary-Shteyngart

AWARDS & LISTS

Dianne Warren's Cool Water has won the 2010 Governor General's Award for Fiction and Alan Casey's Lakeland: Journeys into the Soul of Canada, the Award for Non-fiction. Both authors are from Saskatchewan. Richmond B.C. school librarian Wendy Phillips has won the Children's Literature award for Fishtailing (a book for teens).
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/list-winners-of-the-2010-governor-generals-literary-awards/article1801004/

Eleven of this year's 14 recipients were honoured for the first time.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/11/16/governor-generals-literary-awards-winners.html

The shortlist for the BC National Award for Canadian Non-fiction has been announced.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/11/17/bc-non-fiction-book.html

Saskatoon author Arthur Slade's The Hunchback Assignments is the winner of this year's $25,000 TD Canadian Children's Literature Award. Manitoba's Colleen Sydor's Timmerman Was Here, won the $20,000 Marilyn Baillie Picture Book Award. A complete list of award-winners is here:
http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/books/article/888883--arthur-slade-wins-children-s-literature-award

National Book Awards were presented Wednesday and include Jaimy Gordon, author of Lord of Misrule, for fiction.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/18/books/18awards.html?_r=2&src=tptw

The shortlist for the Roald Dahl Funny Prize includes six titles for those aged 6 and under and six for those aged 7 to 14.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/13/roald-dahl-prize-philip-ardagh

Fifteen Canadian authors' books, including Annabel Lyon's The Golden Mean and Margaret Atwood's The Year of the Flood, are among the 162-book long list for the IMPAC Dublin Literary Award.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/11/15/impac-dublin.html

British historian Diarmaid MacCulloch is the 2010 winner of the $75,000 Cundill Prize, McGill University's non-fiction historical literature honour, for A History of Christianity: The First Three Thousand Years.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/11/15/cundill-2010-prize-macculloch-christianity.html

The Costa book prize shortlist has been announced, even with a shortage of biographies.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/16/costa-book-prize-shortlist-unfilled

NEWS & FEATURES

Adam Gopnik comments on why we care (and should) about the Nobel Prize for Literature.
http://www.newyorker.com/talk/comment/2010/10/18/101018taco_talk_gopnik

Marsha Lederman interviews Robert Wiersema about the backstory to Bedtime Stories. Wiersema writes his books in longhand in notebooks with a fountain pen, even when books like Bedtime Stories are over 500 pages.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/robert-wiersema-tells-the-backstory-of-bedtime-story/article1793905/

The Guardian claims the Internet is saving literary magazines. One result: it makes the short story an essential art form again.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/booksblog/2010/nov/10/literary-magazine-technology-internet

Yiyun Li writes about her hero Michel de Montaigne who, she says, looked at everything with curiosity, and tried to make sense of everything he studied – for the benefit of his readers.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/13/montaigne-my-hero-yiyun-li

Robert McCrum argues that Jonathan Franzen, Tony Blair and Ken Follett—indeed all modern books—are guilty of crimes against brevity.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/14/why-books-are-too-long-robert-mccrum

In her introduction to The Granta Book of the Irish Short Story Anne Enright answers the question she posed earlier on why the Irish excel at short stories.
http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/the_tls/article7168613.ece

Ian Tyson's autobiography The Long Trail: My Life in the West, and Charles Foran's Mordecai: The Life & Times, about the late Mordecai Richler raise questions about the ethics of art, writes Crawford Kilian.
http://thetyee.ca/Books/2010/11/15/RichlersEmbrace/?utm_source=mondayheadlines&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=151110

Good news for those who worry about their bad memories for faces: superior reading skills may be to blame.
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn19720-bad-memory-for-faces-blame-your-reading-skills.html?DCMP=OTC-rss&nsref=online-news

Have publishers lost interest in serious books? Ask biographer Victoria Glendinning.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/14/victoria-glendinning-biographies-publishers

The Star's publishing reporter Vit Wagner outlines the five things learned or confirmed during Canada's fall book award season.
http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/books/article/891649--book-prize-season-lessons

BOOKS & WRITERS

Ian McGillis writes that Johanna Skibsrud's The Sentimentalists is not only a coup for small presses, but for unapologetically challenging fiction.
http://www.montrealgazette.com/entertainment/books/Johanna+Skibsrud+protagonist+Sentimentalists+finds+that+some/3813590/story.html

The Star adds that the scarcity of copies of The Sentimentalists is a boon to eBook sales. The book is Kobo's top-selling title in Canada.
http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/books/article/889818--scarcity-of-giller-winning-sentimentalists-a-boon-to-ebook-sales

In its commemoration of Remembrance Day, CBC News created a photo essay in which Scott Chantler describes how and why he created the book, Two Generals.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/artdesign/story/2010/11/10/two-generals-scott-chantler.html

Armistead Maupin reunites scattered "Tales of the City" characters in San Francisco after decades apart, with Mary Ann in Autumn. Maupin's quirky yet engaging characters still speak to him, writes David L. Ulin.
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-et-armistead-maupin-20101109,0,7389603.story

Joseph Salvatore says that Mary Ann's is a tale of long-lost friends and unrealized dreams.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/14/books/review/Salvatore-t.html?nl=books&emc=booksupdateema3

Google Books offers an excerpt.
http://books.google.com/books?id=gxizgOuEebsC&printsec=frontcover

Martin Morrow writes that Dinaw Mengestu is one of the hottest new writers in the U.S. In his second book, How to Read the Air, the Ethiopian-American writer offers a unique take on the road novel.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/11/12/dinaw-mengestu-how-to-read-the-air.html

Carolyn Kellogg describes Mengestu's book as an intimate account of the narrator's immigrant parents' journey in the U.S.
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-et-1104-book-mengestu-20101105,0,5178482.story

"What a pleasure to read this smart, warm novel about getting older -- not getting decrepit or sick or depressed, but just getting older, with all the perspective such maturity can endow" writes Ron Charles about Gish Jen's World and Town.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wpdyn/content/article/2010/11/09/AR2010110905603.html

Jane Smiley's review of Rose Tremain's Compass informs us that this is a Gothic novel, not the historical fiction she frequently writes. A maestro, says Smiley.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wpdyn/content/article/2010/11/08/AR2010110805791.html

After a hospital stay that was longer than anticipated, Hilary Mantel wrote up her hospital diary—and reminds us that the visitor's idea of hospital is different from the patient's.
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v32/n21/hilary-mantel/diary

Salon.com reprints the Barnes & Noble review on Ian Frazier's Travels in Siberia, calling the book "the genius Siberian travelogue you should not miss".
http://www.salon.com/books/our_picks/index.html?story=/books/feature/2010/11/09/travels_in_siberia_ian_frazier

Jeff Parker notes that Frazier makes the case that the book's genre is tripartite: travel story, slave narrative, picaresque.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/travels-in-siberia-by-ian-frazier/article1796536/

Joanne Briscoe calls Lloyd Jones' Hand Me Down World, an extraordinary book, a story of a nameless "woman whose history, emotions and responses are foggily obscure, and yet we will follow her to the end, hopelessly in the thrall of her overriding motive: to be with her abducted child".
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/13/hand-me-lloyd-jones-review

Stream of consciousness, experimentation, sharp satirical riffs on the day's events, Mark Twain was doing all of the above in a book meant to be published only after he had been dead 100 years. Shelley Fisher Fishkin describes the work as "simple, direct, unpretentious...moving and eloquent." Stay tuned for the next installments.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/autobiography-of-mark-twain-volume-1/article1796491/

David Evans describes Mavis Gallant's The Cost of Living as "an exquisite collection".
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/reviews/the-cost-of-living-by-mavis-gallant-2130462.html

John Barber finds Sandra Birdsell's Waiting for Joe to be "100-per-cent genuine, bone-chilling Canadiana".
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/sandra-birdsells-bone-chilling-canadiana/article1797313/

Hadley Freeman interviews Curtis Sittenfeld, whose American Wife Freeman describes as "easily one of the best books written so far this century".
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/16/american-stories-curtis-sittenfeld?CMP=EMCGT_161110&

Here is an extract:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/16/extract-american-wife-curtis-sittenfeld

Tracy Sherlock describes Richard B. Wright's Mr. Shakespeare's Bastard as a delightful foray into 17th C. England; she was hooked.
http://www.vancouversun.com/entertainment/17th+century+tale+love+lust/3822638/story.html

COMMUNITY EVENTS

SCIENCE FICTION BOOK DISCUSSION GROUP
The sci-fi book under discussion this month is Poul Anderson's A Midsummer's Tempest. Thursday, November 18 at 7:00pm. The Grind & Gallery, 4124 Main Street. More information at darthbuddy2000@yahoo.ca.

CHRIS CZAJKOWSKI
Presentation and slide show by the author of A Wilderness Dweller's Cookbook: The Best Bread in the World and Other Recipes. Thursday, November 18 at 7:00pm, free. Capilano Branch Library, 3045 Highland Blvd., North Vancouver. More information at 604-987-4471.

HOUSE OF NORTHERN LIGHTS
Author Valen Watson reads and discusses her new novel. Friday, November 19 at 7:30pm, free. People's Co-op Bookstore, 1391 Commercial Drive. For more information, phone 604-253-6442.

SEE THE VOICE
Visible Verse's 10th anniversary celebration and festival. November 19-20, 2010. Pacific Cinematheque, 1131 Howe Street. For complete program details, visit http://tinyurl.com/24u5n3z.

JEWISH BOOK FESTIVAL
Authors include Stanley Coren, Martin Fletcher, Myla Goldberg, Daniel Kalla, Gary Shteyngart, and Eleanor Wachtel. November 20-25, 2010. Jewish Community Centre, 950 W. 41st Ave. More information at www.jewishbookfestival.ca.

LEANNE AVERBACK WITH MYNA WALLIN
Get intimate with the hearts and words of Tightrope Books authors, Myna Wallin and Leanne Averbach, and MC Dennis Bolen! Sunday, November 21 at 7:00pm, free. The Jazz Cellar (3611 West Broadway).

KAT VON D
Join tattoo artist and television star of LA Ink, as she signs copies of her new book The Tattoo Chronicles. Monday, November 22 at 7:00pm. Chapters Robson, 788 Robson Street.

SHORT LINE READING SERIES
Memewar Arts and Publishing Society presents readings by Ashok Mathur, Glen Lowry, and Ayumi Goto. Tuesday, November 23 at 6:30pm, free. Railway Club, 579 Dunsmuir St. More information at www.memewaronline.com.

A CHIP OFF THE OLD BLOCK
An author luncheon, reading, and book signing with Arthur Black. Thursday, November 25 at 11:00am. West Point Grey United Church, 4595 W. 8th. More information at 604-224-4388.

HELEN PIDDINGTON
Author of Rumble Seat: A Victorian Childhood Remembered, tells the story her childhood growing up in the Victoria suburb of Esquimalt in the 1920s. Thursday, November 25 at 7:00pm, free. Capilano Branch Library, 3045 Highland Blvd. More information at 604-987-4471.

ATLANTIC/PACIFIC: AN EVENING OF POETRY
Readings by Judy Halebsky and Sandy Shreve. Thursday, November 25 at 7:30pm, free. People's Co-op Bookstore, 1391 Commercial Drive.

Upcoming

WORDSTORM READING SERIES
Join Daniela Elza, Peter Morin, Shannon Rayne, and Kim Clark for a reading. Monday November 29 at 6:30pm, free. The Red Room Grill, 75 Front Street 1, Nanaimo. More information at http://www.wordstorm.ca.

ISLAND WRITER MAGAZINE
Come celebrate the launch of the Winter 2010 issue of Island Writer with readings from our published authors. Wednesday December 1 at 6:30pm. Oaklands Community Centre, 2827 Belmont Avenue (near Hillside Ave), Victoria. For further details see http://www.victoriawriters.ca.

AN EVENING OF POETRY
Join Bibiana Tomasic and Sandy Shreve reading from their latest works at Vancouver's newest independent bookstore. Wednesday, December 8 at 7:00pm. Sitka Books & Art, 2025 West 4th Avenue. More information at 604-734-2025 or http://www.sitkabooksandart.com.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Book News Vol. 5 No. 47

BOOK NEWS

Special Event

Gary Shteyngart
Vancouver International Writers Festival and the Cherie Smith JCGV Jewish Book Festival present the author of Super Sad True Love Story in conversation with Eleanor Wachtel. Details here, http://www.writersfest.bc.ca/events/shteyngart.

"Gary Shteyngart's latest novel, Super Sad True Love Story, signals his move out of Soviet territory and into a near-future New York City, where books have no place in a hyper-technological society", writes Natalie Jacoby in The Paris Review.
http://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2010/07/27/gary-shteyngart/

However, Amelia Glaser, in a review called Gary Shteyngart, Old Man, concludes: "This book made me a little less frightened of growing up with him".
http://www.openlettersmonthly.com/gary-shteyngart-old-man/


AWARDS & LISTS

Johanna Skibsrud is the winner of the 2010 Scotiabank Giller Prize. Her book The Sentimentalists was handprinted by Gaspereau Press.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/the-giller-prize/johanna-skibsrud-wins-giller-prize-for-the-sentimentalists/article1792687/

Nobel and Pulitzer prize-winning U.S. author Toni Morrison has been made an officer of the French Legion of Honour. France's culture minister, Frederic Mitterrand called Morrison, "the greatest American novelist of her time."
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/11/03/toni-morrison-legion-honour.html

Michel Houellebecq, who has fanned controversy with his writings and comments on women and Islam, has won the Prix Goncourt for his latest work, La Carte et Le Territoire. The 105-year-old prize comes with a €10 ($14) purse, but it guarantees literary acclaim and high sales for the winner.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/controversial-author-michel-houellebecq-wins-frances-top-literary-prize/article1789772/

The (Australian) Prime Minister's Literary Awards, each with a $100,000 Australian cash prize, have been awarded.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/11/08/australian-literary-awards.html

Rebecca Skloot's "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks" has won the £25,000 Wellcome Trust Book Prize. The book is, in part, the history of a poor black tobacco worker who died of cervical cancer and whose cancer cells, taken without her knowledge, became an essential part of medical research in the 20th century.
http://www.wellcomebookprize.org/News/Announcements/WTX063313.html

Three B.C. children's authors—K.L. Denman, Gina McMurchy-Barber, and Wendy Phillips—are finalists for this year's Governor General's Literary Awards. Adult English-language author finalists include Sandra Birdsell, Emma Donoghue, Drew Hayden Taylor and Kathleen Winter. The full list of nominees can be found here:
http://canadacouncil.ca/prizes/ggla/2010

Canadians voted for their favourites from a list of the essential top 40 Canadian novels of the past decade, resulting in the following ten titles on the Canada Reads shortlist.
http://www.cbc.ca/books/canadareads/

NEWS & FEATURES

Each autumn's literary awards season highlights a publishing conundrum: the big publishers tend to dominate—and have the capacity to print many additional copies of their shortlisted titles, with opportunities for economies of scale in printing and distribution.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/the-giller-prize/giller-list-highlights-a-publishing-conundrum/article1787892/

Small presses such as Gaspereau Press in Kentville, N.S., where each book is printed and bound on the premises, focus on considerations other than economies of scale.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/gaspereau-press-and-the-peril-of-the-giller/article1771622/

Talking Books started as an aid for blinded World War I veterans and elderly people with failing eyesight. Seventy-five years later, recorded books are enjoyed by millions as an alternative to the printed word.
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/news/sales-soar-as-talking-books-mark-75-years-2127347.html

John Barber recommends that writers preparing for reading tours examine David Sedaris' readings, including his understanding of audiences.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/wowing-an-audience-the-david-sedaris-way/article1784572/

Why are the Irish so good at the short story, and why do they love it so much, asks Anne Enright.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/06/anne-enright-irish-short-story

An interview with Garry Trudeau on the occasion of the publication of 40: A Doonesbury Retrospective, a collection from the most important, and most hilarious, comic strip of our era.
http://www.slate.com/id/2271947/

The memoir of a former Boston prison librarian reveals prisoners' book preferences.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/oct/27/memoir-prisoners-book-choices

Mordecai Richler is considered an icon of Canadian literature, but a fledgling campaign calling for Montreal to rename a public space after the author is drawing some opposition.
http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/books/article/886214--petition-to-name-street-in-quebec-after-mordecai-richler

Readers are furious at sudden and significant increases in Amazon's Kindle prices with some digital editions now costing the same as, or more than, printed books. They are protesting by giving books one-star reviews on the retailer's website.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/03/ebook-prices-kindle-amazon-protests

Savethewords.org offers people a chance to adopt a disappearing word and then drop it casually into everyday conversation.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/07/rescuing-obscure-words

Stuart McLean, whose Vinyl Café Notebooks (Penguin Canada) is currently enjoying bestseller status, has reportedly recorded a special episode of The Vinyl Café in which he talks about some of his favourite bookstores. The program is scheduled to air on November 20, 21, and 23.
http://www.cbc.ca/vinylcafe/home.php

BOOKS & WRITERS

The Star's Book Editor Dan Smith has compiled an annotated list of book titles dealing with Canadian military history and related themes, ranging from World War II to Afghanistan, standard military histories and personal narrative, biography, poetry and graphic art.
http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/books/article/887035--canada-at-war-remembrance-day-by-the-books

The National Post offers a more detailed review of Scott Chantler's Two Generals.
http://arts.nationalpost.com/2010/11/05/book-review-two-generals-by-scott-chantler/#more-16141

Samantha Nutt writes that Romeo Dallaire's book is a sobering look at at the systematic failure of peacekeepers, UN agencies, NGOs and others to effectively deal with the pervading abuse of children in combat.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/they-fight-like-soldiers-they-die-like-children-by-romo-dallaire/article1787085/print/

Sue Montgomery writes that Dallaire provides clear solutions in They Fight Like Soldiers, They Die Like Children.
http://www.montrealgazette.com/entertainment/books/crime+against+humanity/3784807/story.html

Sunday's New York Times' Book Reviews includes a special section of reviews of Children's Books and Y.A. blockbusters.
http://www.nytimes.com/pages/books/index.html

Robert Wiersema's BedtimeStory is entirely consuming, writes Roz Spafford.
http://www.vancouversun.com/entertainment/Wiersema+work+power+devour+readers/3787883/story.html

It is possible to begin ones life's work at seventy-two, we learn from Molly Peacock's biography of Mary Granville Pendarves Delaney, a woman who invented a new art-form and created a body of work considered a national treasure.
http://www.vancouversun.com/news/Peacock+delights+story+woman+invented+form+18th+century/3787887/story.html

Stacy Schiff's biography of Cleopatra portrays the Egyptian ruler as a shrewd political strategist, writes Wendy Smith.
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-ca-stacy-schiff-20101107,0,2749115.story

Kathryn Harrison adds: "Cleopatra mythologized herself before anyone else had the chance."
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/07/books/review/Harrison-t.html?nl=books&emc=booksupdateema1

Here is an excerpt:
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/07/books/review/excerpt-cleopatra.html?ref=review

The Independent (UK) describes John Vaillant's The Tiger as a book that moves with subtlety and grace, commands a vast terrain--and has the power to shake the observer's soul.
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/reviews/the-tiger-by-john-vaillant-2125185.html

Whether he sets his tales in Africa, his native Trinidad or anywhere else, writes Eliza Griswold, V. S. Naipaul is always writing about V. S. Naipaul. But The Masque of Africa marks a startling shift: Naipaul is willing to express a new attitude, one of self-doubt.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/07/books/review/Griswold-t.html?nl=books&emc=booksupdateema3&pagewanted=all

Salon.com asks: Is Adam Levin the new David Foster Wallace? The Instructions is a brilliant new novel about a young Jewish boy that recalls Philip Roth and Infinite Jest, writes Maud Newton.
http://www.salon.com/books/our_picks/index.html?story=/books/feature/2010/11/02/adam_levin_the_instructions

In her review of The Hilliker Curse, Elaine Showalter describes James Ellroy as the Ancient Mariner of LA Noir. She recommends the book, both to Ellroy cultists and as a marketing guidebook for aspiring women writers who struggle with diffidence, modesty and self-deprecation.
http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/the_tls/article7168318.ece

In an interview with Sarah Crowne, Bernard Cornwall discusses how his most recent novel The Fort challenges American long-held assumptions about Paul Revere.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/video/2010/nov/03/bernard-cornwell-fort-novel

COMMUNITY EVENTS

ROMEO DALLAIRE
Author of They Fight Like Soldiers, They Die Like Children: The Global Quest to Eradicate the Use of Child Soldiers discusses the practice of using children in conflicts. Thursday, November 11 at 7:30pm. Tickets $20. Kay Meek Centre, 1700 Mathers Avenue, West Vancouver. More information at http://www.kaymeekcentre.com/on_stage/979.

MIKE MCCARDELL
Book signing by TV personality and author of Everything Works. Two appearances on Saturday, November 13: first at 1:00pm at Black Bond Books White Rock (Semiahmoo Mall) and then at 3:30pm at Black Bond Books Ladner (Trenant Park Square Shopping Centre). For more information about the signing, phone Black Bond Books at 604-536-3336 (Semiahmoo Mall) or 604-946-6677 (Ladner).

CBC RADIO STUDIO ONE BOOK CLUB
Singer/songwriter, rancher and grassland conservationist Ian Tyson will be here with his new memoir The Long Trail: My Life in the West. Ian reflects on how his love for the West started in Victoria, nurtured and inspired his musical talent, taught him life lessons in the saddle, and has saved his soul. Sunday, November 14. Enter to win free tickets at www.cbc.ca/bc/bookclub.

PEN-IN-HAND
Readings by poets bill bissett, Jim Christy, Susan Stenson and Linda Rogers. Monday, November 15 at 7:30pm. Serious Coffee, 230 Cook Street, Victoria.

JUNE HUTTON
White Rock Library in partnership with the Community Arts Council of White Rock & District hosts June Hutton for a discussion of her book Underground. Tuesday, November 16 at 2:00pm, free. Register by phoning 604-541-2201. White Rock Library, 15342 Buena Vista, White Rock. More information at www.fvrl.bc.ca.

SEMIAHMOO ARTS' LITERARY SERIES
Reading by June Hutton, the author of Underground. Tuesday, November 16 at 7:30pm, free. Pelican Rouge Coffee House, 15142 North Bluff Road, White Rock. More information at www.semiahmooarts.com.

HUMANITALES
An evening of storytelling with Jan Derbyshire, Julie McNamara, and David Roche. Tuesday, November 16 at 7:30pm. Pay what you can at the door. W2 Storyeum, 151 W. Cordova. More information at info@kickstart-arts.ca.

DRAWING LIFE
Learn how to illustrate your own guide to life, the universe, and everything, with graphic-novel artist Julian Lawrence. No experience necessary; materials provided. Wednesday, November 17 at 6:30pm. Central Branch, 350 W. Georgia Street. More information at www.vpl.ca/obov.

PLAY CHTHONICS
Surrey-based poet and author Phinder Dulai and Ontario author Daniel Heath Justice read from their works. Wednesday, November 17 at 7:30pm. Graham House, Green College, 6201 Cecil Green Park Road. More information at www.playchthonics.blogspot.com.

SAY WHA?
Comedic performers Morgan Brayton, Riel Hahn, Shaun Stewart, Ryan Steele, Sarah Szloboda, and host Sarah Bynoe read from the most cringe-worthy, awful, and painfully earnest writing in print. Wednesday, November 17 at 8:00pm. Tickets: $10/5. Cottage Bistro, 4470 Main Street). More information at www.sarabynoe.com.

SCIENCE FICTION BOOK DISCUSSION GROUP
The sci-fi book under discussion this month is Poul Anderson's A Midsummer's Tempest. Thursday, November 18 at 7:00pm. The Grind & Gallery, 4124 Main Street. More information at darthbuddy2000@yahoo.ca.

CHRIS CZAJKOWSKI
Presentation and slide show by the author of A Wilderness Dweller's Cookbook: The Best Bread in the World and Other Recipes. Thursday, November 18 at 7:00pm, free. Capilano Branch Library, 3045 Highland Blvd., North Vancouver. More information at 604-987-4471.

SEE THE VOICE
Visible Verse's 10th anniversary celebration and festival. November 19-20, 2010. Pacific Cinematheque, 1131 Howe Street. For complete program details, visit http://tinyurl.com/24u5n3z.

JEWISH BOOK FESTIVAL
Authors include Stanley Coren, Martin Fletcher, Myla Goldberg, Daniel Kalla, Gary Shteyngart, and Eleanor Wachtel. November 20-25, 2010. Jewish Community Centre, 950 W. 41st Ave. More information at www.jewishbookfestival.ca.

KAT VON D
Join tattoo artist and television star of LA Ink, as she signs copies of her new book The Tattoo Chronicles. Monday, November 22 at 7:00pm. Chapters Robson, 788 Robson Street.

Upcoming

ATLANTIC/PACIFIC: AN EVENING OF POETRY
Readings by Judy Halebsky and Sandy Shreve. Thursday, November 25 at 7:30pm, free. People's Co-op Bookstore, 1391 Commercial Drive.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Book News Vol. 5 No. 46

BOOK NEWS

Special Events

Sara Gruen
Tonight, the Vancouver International Writers Festival and Random House Canada present the author of Water for Elephants reading from her new book Ape House. Details here, http://www.writersfest.bc.ca/events/gruen.

In her profile of Sara Gruen for McClatchy Newspapers, Connie Ogle describes how the bonobo apes decided to meet with Gruen. The bonobos communicate using American Sign Language and lexigrams. We discover that animals have always played an important role in Gruen's life, both at home and in her prior novels.
http://www.kansascity.com/2010/10/25/2352236/author-sara-gruen-talks-to-the.html

Gary Shteyngart
Vancouver International Writers Festival and the Cherie Smith JCGV Jewish Book Festival present the author of Super Sad True Love Story in conversation with Eleanor Wachtel. Details here, http://www.writersfest.bc.ca/events/shteyngart.

Igor Shteyngart, of Leningrad who, at 7, became Gary Shteyngart of Little Neck, Queens returned this month to Russia—a country he revisits every year or two—to do an informal book tour. A Russian-language translation of Super Sad True Love Story is being published soon.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/25/books/25gary.html?ref=books

An excerpt of Super Sad True Love Story (in English) can be found here:
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/27/books/excerpt-super-sad-true-love-story.html?ref=books


AWARDS & LISTS

The Rogers Writers' Trust Awards were announced Tuesday: Emma Donoghue's Room, for Fiction; James FitzGerald's What Disturbs Our Blood: A Son's Quest to Redeem the Past, for Non-Fiction; Devon Code's story Uncle Oscar, for a short story or novel in progress; Miriam Toews, for a body of work. Lifetime of distinguished achievement awards went to Myrna Kostash and Polly Horvath. John Macfarlane, editor of The Walrus, received the Distinguished Contribution Award.
http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/books/article/884922--donoghue-s-room-wins-writers-trust-prize

Canada Reads 2011 has issued a list of the Top 40 books in contention for the annual book debate, to be held next February. CBC Radio has asked readers to help choose the best novels of the 2000s before five are chosen from that list for the book debate.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/10/28/canada-reads-2011.html

Czech playwright and former president Vaclav Havel has won the Franz Kafka literary prize for what a jury called "artistically exceptional literary work by a contemporary author."
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/10/27/kafka-prize.html

The new DSC Prize for South Asian Literature, worth $50,000 US, created to increase awareness of South Asian literature around the world, is open to authors of any nationality so long as the work is based on the region and its people. A shortlist has been announced.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/oct/26/new-prize-south-asian-literature

Stonewall awards for adult books began nearly 40 years ago. This year, the Stonewall prize will honour "English-language works for children and teens of exceptional merit relating to the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered experience" and will be included in the American Library Association's annual announcement of children's prizes.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/11/01/library-prize.html

Unhooking the Moon, a first novel by Gregory Hughes about two orphaned siblings who take a road trip from Canada to New York, has won the Booktrust Teenage prize. A Liverpudlian by birth, Hughes currently lives in Vancouver.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/01/gregory-hughes-booktrust-teenage-prize?CMP=EMCGT_021110&

Manu Joseph has won the Hindu Best Fiction award 2010 with his first novel, Serious Men, a story that examines caste in contemporary India.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/nov/02/manu-joseph-india-serious-men

The National 1st Book Competition, sponsored by The Writer's Studio at Simon Fraser University announced this year's winners at the Vancouver International Writers Festival: Birthmother by Myrl Coulter, creative nonfiction; Nondescript Rambunctious by Jackie Bateman, fiction; and Galaxy by Rachel Thompson, poetry. The winning manuscripts will be published in 2011.
http://www.thewritersstudio.ca/

NEWS & FEATURES

In anticipation of next week's Giller Prize announcement, the Globe and Mail features a look at the shortlisted authors and their books.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/the-giller-prize/

A young (27) indie bookstore employee's excitement about a little-known book led to a Pulitzer Prize for the book.
http://www.nhmagazine.com/home/886019-101/the-2010-it-list.html

Five days after the Peruvian novelist Mario Vargas Llosa won the Nobel Prize in Literature, he walked into a Princeton classroom where 25 students awaited their weekly seminar. Vargas Llosa continued to teach.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/30/books/30masterclass.html?ref=books

Adam Gopnik writes that Vargas Llosa is exactly the kind of writer the prize ought to go to.
http://www.newyorker.com/talk/comment/2010/10/18/101018taco_talk_gopnik

Independent publisher Melville House, whose The Confessions of Noa Weber won the 2010 Best Translated Book award for fiction earlier this year, has vowed to boycott the American prize for translated fiction after Amazon.com was announced as a sponsor.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/oct/29/publisher-boycotts-prize-protest-amazon-sponsorship

The northern Labrador town of Rigolet has won a competition to be the focus of the next book by children's author Robert Munsch. The Pick-A-Munsch competition, which drew 150,000 votes, encouraged people to pick their favourite Munsch story idea.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/11/01/nl-munsch-labrador-1101.html

The Booker prize-winning writer Arundhati Roy has made a strident defense of comments she made over the disputed territory of Kashmir after the Indian government threatened to arrest her for sedition.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/arundhati-roy-called-a-traitor-for-kashmiri-rights-plea-2117400.html

This past weekend, Ms. Roy's Delhi home was besieged by protesters demanding that she leave India because she supports Kashmir independence.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/oct/31/arundhati-roy-home-besieged-protesters

Poet Mark Ford writes that "Last Letter", the draft of a poem by Ted Hughes, is unlikely to do much to rehabilitate Hughes with those who hold him responsible for the deaths of Sylvia Plath and Assia Wevill.
http://www.nybooks.com/blogs/nyrblog/2010/oct/28/ted-hughes-last-letter/

Mike Doherty interviews author Jonathan Franzen on pleasing readers, reconciling with Oprah and meeting Obama.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/10/30/jonathan-franzen-freedom.html

"No country has the right to point only at the Germans. Everybody has to empty their own latrine," says Günter Grass in an interview with Maya Jaggi on his life in writing.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/culture/2010/nov/01/gunter-grass-interview-maya-jaggi

BOOKS & WRITERS

Lisa Appignanesi calls Michael Holroyd's A Book of Secrets: Illegitimate Daughters, Absent Fathers "a gem of a book".
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/oct/31/book-secrets-michael-holroyd-review

Ken McGoogan's How The Scots Invented Canada immodestly, and accurately, credits Scots blood as the defining element of our fair nation, writes D. Grant Black.
http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/books/article/882600--how-the-scots-invented-canada

In The Mind's Eye, Oliver Sacks offers up his usual elegant mixture of case history and street-level observations of the struggles of those afflicted with visual disorders, writes neurologist Robert Burton in the San Francisco Chronicle.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/10/31/RVNL1FU1S9.DTL

Psychiatrist Norman Doidge comments that unlike earlier books, here Sacks' observations are based on his own experience of going blind due to eye cancer.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/the-minds-eye-by-oliver-sacks/article1777708/singlepage/#articlecontent

One of the central issues Kevin Major explores in New Under the Sun is a question poet John Newlove posed many years ago: "Whose land this is, and is to be." It's a question that concerns all of us. Gary Geddes finds Major's exploration of this fascinating.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/new-under-the-sun-by-kevin-major/article1778682/

Imagine Alan Bennett writing the X-Files and you get some idea of the offbeat genius of Paul Magrs's Whitby fantasia. "An audacious collision of craziness and mundanity" says David Barnett.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/booksblog/2010/oct/28/brenda-and-effie

Readers mourning the loss of Stieg Larsson will enjoy this book by Larsson's friend Kurdo Baksi, says Rosie Swash in the Observer.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/oct/31/stieg-larsson-my-friend-kurdo-baksi-review

Peter Ackroyd's The English Ghost: Spectres Through Time is a compilation of true ghost stories.
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/reviews/the-english-ghost-spectres-through-time-by-peter-ackroyd-2117355.html

COMMUNITY EVENTS

GURJINDER BASRAN
Author reads from her book Everything Was Good-Bye, winner of the Search for the Great B.C. Novel contest, chosen from 64 manuscripts by Jack Hodgins. Thursday, November 4 at 7:00pm, free. Central Branch, VPL, 350 West Georgia Street. More information at www.vpl.ca.

AGNES TOEWS-ANDREWS
Reading with author of The Goddess Lives: Poetry, Prose, and Prayers in Her Honour, about her world travels and her search to uncover the long-forgotten tradition of Goddess worship. Friday, November 5 at 7:00pm, free. Capilano Branch Library, 3045 Highland Blvd, North Vancouver. More information at www.isismoonpublishing.com.

CONVERSATION ABOUT CRIME
Canadian Crime Writers' Association authors Robin Spano, Debra Purdy Kon, and Elizabeth Elwood talk about the art of writing murder mysteries. Saturday, November 6 at 1:00pm, free. Black Bond Books, 5251 Ladner Trunk Rd., Delta.

IN LOVE WITH THE MYSTERY
Singer and performer Ann Mortifee launches her new photo illustrated book of inspirational writings, along with a companion CD by her husband flutist Paul Horn. Saturday, November 6 at 7:30pm. Tickets: $10. St. Mark's Anglican Church (1805 Larch). More information at www.inlovewiththeymystery.com.

THE ESSENTIALS: 150 GREAT B.C. BOOKS AND AUTHORS
Alan Twigg discusses his book, a guide to writing and writers that have shaped our literary landscape. Monday, November 8 at 7:00pm, free. Peter Kaye Room, Lower Level, Central Library, 350 W. Georgia. More information at www.vpl.ca.

MARTIN FLETCHER
The NBC political correspondent talks about his latest book Walking Israel. Tuesday, November 9 at 8:00pm. Tickets: $18. Norman Rothstein Theatre, 950 W. 41st Ave. More information at www.jewishbookfestival.ca.

THE HEART DOES BREAK
Readings on grief and mourning by authors Stephen Collis, Joan Givner, Anne Stone with editors Jean Baird and George Bowering. Wednesday, November 10 at 7:00pm, free. UBC Library/Bookstore at Robson Square, plaza level, 800 Robson Street.

MEMORY FESTIVAL
Events include readings and performances by Lee Henderson, Sarah Leavitt, Hiromi Goto, Faith Moosang (interviewed by Hal Wake!) and Marcus Yousef. Art exhibition featuring David Campion and Sandra Shields, Goran Basaric and video storytelling by the Thursdays Writing Collective Workshops on writing your own memories, from graphic to poetic memoir. November 10-19, 2010 at the Roundhouse Community Centre. Information at www.memoryfestival.org.

JOEL HENG HARTSE
Reading by the author of Sects, Love, and Rock & Roll. Wednesday, November 10 at 7:00pm. The Wired Monk, 2610 4th Ave. W. More information at http://ow.ly/30vW8.

ROMEO DALLAIRE
Author of They Fight Like Soldiers, They Die Like Children: The Global Quest to Eradicate the Use of Child Soldiers discusses the practice of using children in conflicts. Thursday, November 11 at 7:30pm. Tickets $20. Kay Meek Centre, 1700 Mathers Avenue, West Vancouver. More information at http://www.kaymeekcentre.com/on_stage/979.

MIKE MCCARDELL
Book signing by TV personality and author of Everything Works. Two appearances on Saturday, November 13: first at 1:00pm at Black Bond Books White Rock (Semiahmoo Mall) and then at 3:30pm at Black Bond Books Ladner (Trenant Park Square Shopping Centre). For more information about the signing, phone Black Bond Books at 604-536-3336 (Semiahmoo Mall) or 604-946-6677 (Ladner).

CBC RADIO STUDIO ONE BOOK CLUB
Singer/songwriter, rancher and grassland conservationist Ian Tyson will be here with his new memoir The Long Trail: My Life in the West. Ian reflects on how his love for the West started in Victoria, nurtured and inspired his musical talent, taught him life lessons in the saddle, and has saved his soul. Sunday, November 14. Enter to win free tickets at www.cbc.ca/bc/bookclub.

Upcoming

PEN-IN-HAND
Readings by poets bill bissett, Jim Christy, Susan Stenson and Linda Rogers. Monday, November 15 at 7:30pm. Serious Coffee, 230 Cook Street, Victoria.

JUNE HUTTON
White Rock Library in partnership with the Community Arts Council of White Rock & District hosts June Hutton for a discussion of her book Underground. Tuesday, November 16 at 2:00pm, free. Register by phoning 604-541-2201. White Rock Library, 15342 Buena Vista, White Rock. More information at www.fvrl.bc.ca.

SEMIAHMOO ARTS' LITERARY SERIES
Reading by June Hutton, the author of Underground. Tuesday, November 16 at 7:30pm, free. Pelican Rouge Coffee House, 15142 North Bluff Road, White Rock. More information at www.semiahmooarts.com.

SEE THE VOICE
Visible Verse's 10th anniversary celebration and festival. November 19-20, 2010. Pacific Cinematheque, 1131 Howe Street. For complete program details, visit http://heatherhaley.com/visibleverse.php.

KAT VON D
Join tattoo artist and television star of LA Ink, as she signs copies of her new book The Tattoo Chronicles. Monday, November 22 at 7:00pm. Chapters Robson, 788 Robson Street.

ATLANTIC/PACIFIC: AN EVENING OF POETRY
Readings by Judy Halebsky and Sandy Shreve. Thursday, November 25 at 7:30pm, free. People's Co-op Bookstore, 1391 Commercial Drive.

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Book News Vol. 5 No. 45

BOOK NEWS

Festival Wrap-Up
The Vancouver International Writers & Readers Festival wrapped up this week, with 60 per cent of events at near capacity and more than 13,000 people attending over the six days of the Festival. Events with David Mitchell, Ali Smith, David Grossman, Andrea Levy, Lynda Barry and many others were sell outs. "People want to see and hear the world’s best writers—and the world’s best writers want to come to Vancouver’s literary festival,” says Hal Wake, the Festival’s artistic director.

One hundred national and international authors appeared, coming to Vancouver from Canada, the US, the UK, Italy, France, Ireland, Israel, Australia, and New Zealand. The Festival attracted nominees and winners of all the major literary prizes, including the Man Booker, the Giller Prize, the Rogers Trust Prize and the Governor General’s literary awards.

Check our Festival blog to see what our bloggers had to say about events with Andrea Levy and David Mitchell and many others.
http://www.writersfest.bc.ca/festival/2010/blog

Last chance to get your ticket for the Festival art raffle! Enter the draw to win a exquisite painting by Vancouver artist Jamie Evrard and support the Festival. Tickets are $20 (only 300 printed). The draw takes place Friday October 29 at noon so call now: 604 681 6330 ext 109.
http://www.writersfest.bc.ca/events/literati/raffle

Festival Lost and Found
Two scarves, two umbrellas, jacket, t-shirt, keychain, two Festival books, reading glass case, water bottle, earring, cellphone pouch, purple grocery bag. Call the office to identify.


Special Events

Sara Gruen
The Vancouver International Writers Festival and Random House Canada present the author of Water for Elephants reading from her new book Ape House. Details here, http://www.writersfest.bc.ca/events/gruen.

"The bonobo apes demonstrate more humanity than many of the humans in Sara Gruen's new novel Ape House", writes Monique Polak in the Montreal Gazette. http://www.montrealgazette.com/news/Sara+Gruen+novel+House+bonobo+apes+show+more+humanity+than+humans/3535317/story.html

Gary Shteyngart
Vancouver International Writers Festival and the Cherie Smith JCGV Jewish Book Festival present the author of Super Sad True Love Story in conversation with Eleanor Wachtel. Details here, http://www.writersfest.bc.ca/events/shteyngart.


AWARDS & LISTS

Miguel Syjuco's Ilustrado has been nominated for Quebec's Hugh MacLennan Prize for fiction, Erin Moure’s O Resplandor for the A.M. Klein Prize for Poetry.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/10/15/quebec-literary-awards.html#ixzz12T6uNup0

Retired TV writer, producer and host John Leigh Walters has won the $10,000 Edna Staebler Award for Creative Non-Fiction for A Very Capable Life: The Autobiography of Zarah Petri, a retelling of his mother's immigration from Hungary to Canada.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/10/13/staebler-award-walters-petri-capable-life.html

Mark Sinnett’s The Carnivore, a novel set at the time of Hurricane Hazel, is the winner of the $15,000 Toronto Book Award.
http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/books/article/875495--mark-sinnett-wins-toronto-book-award

J.K. Rowling has won the inaugural Hans Christian Andersen Literature Prize, a prize created to honour children's authors who write in the spirit of Andersen.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/10/19/hans-andersen-prize.html

Visions of British Columbia, edited by Bruce Grenville and Scott Steedman, has won the 2010 Vancouver Book Award.
http://vancouver.ca/commsvcs/cultural/gasp/awards/book/2010/index.htm

Three authors have been awarded ReLit Awards for literature: Michael Kenyon for the novel The Beautiful Children, Stuart Ross, for his short story collection Buying Cigarettes for the Dog and Gillian Jerome, for her poetry collection Red Nest.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/10/22/relit-awards.html

Sandra Birdsell, Alice Kuipers (twice) and Yann Martel are among the authors shortlisted for the Saskatchewan Book Awards. David Baudemont and Martine Noël-Maw (who have participated in La Joie de Lire) are shortlisted for the Prix du Livre Français category.
http://www.bookawards.sk.ca/images/stories/PDF_Files/PressReleases/2010_Shortlisted_Titles.pdf

Turkish publisher Irfan Sanci, currently being prosecuted for publishing a translation of Apollinaire's 1911 novel Les exploits d'un jeune Don Juan (The Exploits of a Young Don Juan) has been recognized with a special Freedom to Publish award.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/oct/25/turkish-publisher-obscenity-trial-honoured

Books by Kathleen Winter, Michael Winter, Trevor Cole, Emma Donoghue, and Michael Helm have been nominated for the Rogers Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize. The Globe and Mail online offers readers excerpts from each book and the opportunity to vote.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/take-refuge-in-michael-helms-city/article1773821/

NEWS & FEATURES

Stuart Jeffries interviews Howard Jacobson on the experience of winning the 2010 Man Booker Prize.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/oct/13/howard-jacobson-booker-winner-interview

The comic novel is not a genre, Jacobson tells Boyd Tonkin.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/profiles/howard-jacobson-funny-jewish-sad-no-its-just-a-novel-2106102.html

Meanwhile, Bloomsbury has printed an additional 150,000 copies of Jacobson's book.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-11532332

Laura Miller describes why Salon believes the Booker is the best of the annual literary awards.
http://www.salon.com/books/literary_prizes/index.html?story=/books/laura_miller/2010/10/13/booker

As part of as yet undisclosed 'bigger plans', Orange, sponsor of the Orange prize for fiction has dropped the debut authors' prize, in favour of year-round online promotion.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/oct/14/orange-ditches-award-for-new-writers

At 89, Farley Mowat says his new book, Eastern Passage, is his last. He says that his typewriters are all broken and he's become a house painter.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/books/the-gospel-according-to-farley-mowat/article1758795/

Nineteen years after the publication of Such a Long Journey, Rohinton Mistry finds himself mounting a vigorous defence of his book and of freedom of speech after the novel was dropped from a Mumbai University curriculum and copies burned by ultra-nationalists.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/10/19/rohinton-mistry.html

Fiction Uncovered is the title of a new promotion next year intended to identify eight talented British authors who haven't had the exposure they deserve.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/oct/22/fiction-uncovered-highlight-overlooked-novels

For 50 years, historians have assumed the Lady Chatterley's Lover obscenity trial could hardly have been more entertaining than it actually was. Now there are some additional details discovered in letters and papers in the Penguin archive at Bristol University. A 50th anniversary edition of Lady Chatterley's Lover is forthcoming.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/the-drama-behind-the-lady-c-defence-2115114.html

BOOKS & WRITERS

Charles Foran's new biography, Mordecai: The Life and Times, fills a significant void in Richler scholarship, writes Howard Heft. "The new biography is a fitting tribute to Mordecai Richler."
http://www.montrealgazette.com/entertainment/books/biography+fitting+tribute+Mordecai+Richler/3713176/story.html

Hans Keilson, a former German resistance fighter who wrote a novel 63 years ago is to see Comedy in a Minor Key published in Britain for the first time. Rave US reviews have given the unknown author belated recognition among "the world's very greatest writers".
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/oct/17/german-hans-keilson-comedy-minor-key?CMP=EMCGT_181010&

Player One, Douglas Coupland’s tale of four strangers holed up in an airport cocktail lounge while the world around them crumbles, has an odd tenderness, says Stephanie Merritt.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/oct/24/player-one-douglas-coupland-review

Catherine Bush adds that this is a novel obsessed with time, and with the breakdown of storytelling as a way of making meaning.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/player-one-what-is-to-become-of-us-by-douglas-coupland/article1768724/

Hugo Hamilton admires Bernhard Schlink's The Weekend, a novel that proceeds almost like a stage play.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/oct/23/weekend-bernhard-schlink-reader-review

Donna Rifkind suggests that the notion of literature as echo is useful for readers of David Grossman's To the End of the Land, which seeks to escape the entrenched ways of thinking about what Israelis call "the situation."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/10/18/AR2010101805159.html

Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's The Little Prince has been re-interpreted as a graphic novel by Joann Sfar. The LA Times calls it "a beautiful and well-rendered tribute to the original".
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-ca-little-prince-joann-sfar-20101024,0,4401253.story

In Zero History, William Gibson imagines the links between the billion-dollar fashion industry and the military. Jason Anderson spoke to Gibson about clothes, old-time westerns and how he goes about "executing" his novels.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/10/25/william-gibson-zero-history.html

COMMUNITY EVENTS

MAKING WAVES: READING BC AND PACIFIC NORTHWEST LITERATURE
Featuring poets and essayists George McWhirter, Trevor Carolan, Judith Copithorne, Susan McCaslin, and Colin James Sanders. Thursday, October 28 at 7:30pm, free. Café Montmartre (4362 Main Street). More information at info@anvilpress.com.

GHOSTS IN THE HOOD
BC author Robert C. Belyk's collection of true ghost stories will be presented as a dramatic reading. Friday, October 29 at 6:45pm and 8:00pm. Inlet Theatre, 100 Newport Drive, Port Moody. More information at www.cityofportmoody.com/arts.

THE RETURNING JOURNEY
Poetry book launch and concert featuring author Dalannah Gail Bowen and keyboardist Michael Creber. Thursday, October 28 at 8:00pm, free. Centre A (2 W. Hastings). More information at dalannahgailbowen@yahoo.ca.

ONE BOOK, ONE VANCOUVER
Enjoy a double bill of District 9 and The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Friday, October 29 at 7:00pm, free. Alice MacKay Room, lower level, Central Library, 350 West Georgia Street. More information at www.vpl.ca.

COLD LAND, WARM HEARTS
Keith Billington will be signing books. Saturday, October 30 at 1:30pm. Black Bond Books, Royal City Centre (102 -610 Sixth Street, New Westminster). For more information please contact 604-528-6226.

GRANT LAWRENCE
Host of CBC Radio 3 Podcast with Grant Lawrence presents a slideshow and book signing for Adventures in Solitude: What Not to Wear to a Nudist Potluck, and Other Stories from Desolation Sound. Monday, November 1 at 7:00pm, free. Vancouver Public Library, Central Branch (350 W. Georgia). More information at 604-331-3603.

GORDON BITNEY
A humorous and informative story of a summer in Provence, France by the author of Provence, je t'aime. Wednesday, November 3 at 6:30pm, free. Kitsilano Branch, 2425 Macdonald Street. For more information please contact Vancouver Public Library at 604-331-3603.

ELIZABETH KOSTOVA
Author of The Historian reads from her new novel about art and obsession, The Swan Thieves. Wednesday, November 3 at 7:00pm, free. Central Branch, VPL, 350 W. Georgia Street. More information at www.vpl.ca.

ANNABEL LYON
Reading by the author of The Golden Mean. Thursday, November 4 at 1:00pm, free.Irving K. Barber Learning Centre, Room 301 Point Grey Campus, 1961 East Mall. More information at www.robsonreadingseries.ubc.ca.

GURJINDER BASRAN
Author reads from her book Everything Was Good-Bye, winner of the Search for the Great B.C. Novel contest, chosen from 64 manuscripts by Jack Hodgins. Thursday, November 4 at 7:00pm, free. Central Branch, VPL, 350 West Georgia Street. More information at www.vpl.ca.

THE ESSENTIALS: 150 GREAT B.C. BOOKS AND AUTHORS
Alan Twigg discusses his book, a guide to writing and writers that have shaped our literary landscape. Monday, November 8 at 7:00pm, free. Peter Kaye Room, Lower Level, Central Library, 350 W. Georgia. More information at www.vpl.ca.

Upcoming

JOEL HENG HARTSE
Reading by the author of Sects, Love, and Rock & Roll. Wednesday, November 10 at 7:00pm. The Wired Monk, 2610 4th Ave. W. More information at http://ow.ly/30vW8.

CBC RADIO STUDIO ONE BOOK CLUB
Singer/songwriter, rancher and grassland conservationist Ian Tyson will be here with his new memoir The Long Trail: My Life in the West. Ian reflects on how his love for the West started in Victoria, nurtured and inspired his musical talent, taught him life lessons in the saddle, and has saved his soul. Sunday, November 14. Enter to win free tickets at www.cbc.ca/bc/bookclub.

SEE THE VOICE
Visible Verse's 10th anniversary celebration and festival. November 19-20, 2010. Pacific Cinematheque, 1131 Howe Street. For complete program details, visit http://heatherhaley.com/visibleverse.php.

ATLANTIC/PACIFIC: AN EVENING OF POETRY
Readings by Judy Halebsky and Sandy Shreve. Thursday, November 25 at 7:30pm, free. People's Co-op Bookstore, 1391 Commercial Drive.