Showing posts with label International Festival of Authors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label International Festival of Authors. Show all posts

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Presented in partnership with:
Northern Woman's Bookstore
and Thunder Bay Public Library

 

International Festival of Authors

Sunday, October 16 @ 7 p.m.
Prince Arthur Hotel & Suites - Provincial Room

 On Sunday, October 16, 2011, the International Festival of Authors (IFOA) Ontario touring program will be making a stop in Thunder Bay! Join us for readings by James Bartleman, Johanna Skibsrud and Jane Urquhart, followed by a Q & A period and a book signing.

 Tickets are $10 and are available at the Northern Woman's Bookstore and Waverley Resource Library. Tickets are now on sale. Call 684-6814 for information. Tickets may also be purchased online at litontour.com (click on the Thunder Bay event details, then on 'purchase tickets').

Featured Authors

James Bartleman (Canada)
became the first Native Lieutenant-Governor of Ontario in 2002 after a distinguished career of more than 35 years in the Canadian foreign service. The author of the prize-winning memoir Out of Muskoka, Bartleman presents As Long as the Rivers Flow.
Johanna Skibsrud (Canada) wonthe 2010 Scotiabank Giller Prize for her first novel, The Sentimentalists. Skibsrud presents This Will Be Difficult to Explain and Other Stories.
Jane Urquhart (Canada) is the internationally acclaimed author of three previous novels, a collection of short fiction, three books of poetry and a short biography of Lucy Maud Montgomery. Urquhart will read from her novel, The Underpainter, which is set in Thunder Bay.

Monday, November 3, 2008

INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL OF AUTHORS

I spent a few days in Toronto at the International Festival of Authors, a week long sprawl of an event with 200 plus writers and dozens of workshops, spread here and there among the forlorn spaces of two enormous Harbourfront buildings. The Sleeping Giant Writers Festival it ain’t. No informal lunches, coffees or the chance to engage the writers in conversation. In Toronto the writers disappeared after each workshop except when they hung around to sell their books.

I was lucky to run into an old friend, Wayson Choy, looking dapper and healthy. Wayson’s many friends from the Humber School for Writers will be happy to hear he was chosen to receive the Harbourfront Festival Prize, presented to a person who has made a significant contribution to Canadian writing. Wayson’s work as a novelist, memoirist and creative writing teacher as well as his volunteer work with literacy and AIDS garnered him a nice cheque of $10,000 as well as a Waterford Crystal bowl. Rumour has it he will release a new book this spring.

The final evening of the festival featured readings by the five Giller Prize finalists.
Authors and books were:
Joseph Boyden Through Black Spruce
Anthony De Sa Barnacle Love
Marina Endicott Good to a Fault
Rawi Hage Cockroach
Mary Swan The Boys in the Trees

All the books were good but one affected me strongly. This was Boyden’s reading of two excerpts from his novel Through Black Spruce. Two separate sections, one of survival in the bush and the other of survival on the streets of Toronto, were told with such gutsy emotion, such northern power, I could hardly stand it. The writing carried me away.

The local libraries carry cards for you to guess the winner. I know who I am rooting for,