University of Montana Commencement Program, 1978
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Governor General's Literary Awards
Bibliothèque interculturelle 6767, chemin de la Côte-des-neiges 514.868.4720 Governor General's Literary Awards Fiction Year Winner Finalists Title Editor 2009 Kate Pullinger The Mistress of Nothing McArthur & Company Michael Crummey Galore Doubleday Canada Annabel Lyon The Golden Mean Random House Canada Alice Munro Too Much Happiness McClelland & Steward Deborah Willis Vanishing and Other Stories Penguin Group (Canada) 2008 Nino Ricci The Origins of Species Doubleday Canada Rivka Galchen Atmospheric Disturbances HarperCollins Publishers Ltd. Rawi Hage Cockroach House of Anansi Press David Adams Richards The Lost Highway Doubleday Canada Fred Stenson The Great Karoo Doubleday Canada 2007 Michael Ondaatje Divisadero McClelland & Stewart David Chariandy Soucoupant Arsenal Pulp Press Barbara Gowdy Helpless HarperCollins Publishers Heather O'Neill Lullabies for Little Criminals Harper Perennial M. G. Vassanji The Assassin's Song Doubleday Canada 2006 Peter Behrens The Law of Dreams House of Anansi Press Trevor Cole The Fearsome Particles McClelland & Stewart Bill Gaston Gargoyles House of Anansi Press Paul Glennon The Dodecahedron, or A Frame for Frames The Porcupine's Quill Rawi Hage De Niro's Game House of Anansi Press 2005 David Gilmour A Perfect Night to Go to China Thomas Allen Publishers Joseph Boyden Three Day Road Viking Canada Golda Fried Nellcott Is My Darling Coach House Books Charlotte Gill Ladykiller Thomas Allen Publishers Kathy Page Alphabet McArthur & Company GovernorGeneralAward.xls Fiction Bibliothèque interculturelle 6767, -
Edmonton Book Prize Naming Recommendation - Edmonton Arts Council
6. the Mayor’s Luncheon for Business and Edmonton Book Prize the Arts. 1 Naming The Prize is sponsored by Audrey’s Books and the Edmonton Arts Council. Recommendation Edmonton Arts Council Past winners include Myrna Kostash, Thomas Trofimuk, Todd Babiak, Ted Bishop, Marty Chan, Gloria Sawai, Recommendation: Alla Tumanov, Fred Stenson, That Community Services Committee Yvonne Johnson, Jack W. Brink, recommend to City Council: Bert Almon, Rudy Wiebe and That the City of Edmonton Book Prize Yvonne Johnson, David Carpenter, be named the “Robert Kroetsch City F. Royer and R. Dickinson, Bob Hesketh of Edmonton Book Prize”. and Frances Swyrpia. Report Summary Naming Recommendation The Edmonton Arts Council is It is common to name a City book prize recommending that the City of after an individual writer. Examples Edmonton Book Prize be named the include: Carol Shields Winnipeg Book “Robert Kroetsch City of Edmonton Award; and City of Calgary W. O. Book Prize”. Mitchell Book Prize. Report Robert Kroetsch was closely connected The City of Edmonton Book Prize was with Edmonton. He was recognized established by Edmonton City Council in internationally for his writings and was 1995. an important teacher and mentor for many Edmonton and Alberta writers. The Prize is awarded annually to titles His 1969 novel, the Studhorse Man, set addressing some aspect of the city or in Edmonton won the Governor written by an Edmonton author. Entries General’s Award for Literary Merit. may be written in various forms such as fiction, poetry, or drama and the chosen His death in a traffic accident in June audience may be adult or child. -
Exile Editions 2020
2020 AUTUMN CATALOGUE PLUS 2019 RELEASES RE-PRESENTED RECENT HIGHLIGHTS At Exile we envision, create, assist, and present the future of literary and visual arts in Canada by publishing personal, provocative, innovative, and often experimental stories that reflect the Canadian experience. To promote our books we use a mixture of traditional reading/review copies, as well as online resources such as NetGalley, and social media posts, ads, reviews, blogs, and savvy influencers to get the word out. For all publishing related inquiries: info @exileeditions.com 519 334 3634 www.ExileEditions.com Exile Editions, 144483 Southgate Road 14-GD, Holstein, ON, N0G 2A0, Canada Sales: Distribution: Returns: Canadian Manda Group Independent Publishers Group IPG c/o Fraser Direct 664 Annette Street 814 North Franklin Street, 8300 Lawson Road Toronto, ON, M6S 2C8 Chicago, IL, 60610 USA Milton, ON, L9T 0A4 www.mandagroup.com www.ipgbook.com 905-877-4411 416-516-0911 toll free: 1-800-888-4741 The publisher would like to acknowledge the financial support of the Canada Council for the Arts, the Government of Canada, the Ontario Arts Council, and the Ontario Media Development Corporation, for our publishing activities. $16.95US$ y r t e o P TO YOUR SCATTERED BODIES GO BRIAN BRETT Writing so vivid, observations so telling, these poems are a thoroughly perceptive appreciation of the human predicament that it is all together sobering and profound. OCTOBER 15 5 x 7.5 TPB 144 pages 978-1-55096-889-7 $19.95 Born to be an outsider because of a rare genetic dis - order, Kallmann syndrome, Brian Brett lived an androgy - nous childhood of abuse and sexual harassment. -
Saskatchewan Arts Board Annual Report 2006-07
Artists. Partnerships. Access. AR 2006-2007 Darren McKenzie Darren McKenzie, a Cree Métis from Saskatchewan, has studied art at Medicine Hat College, the Ontario College of Art and the University of Regina. He also studied intensively for four years with master wood carver Ken Mowatt at the Kitanmaax School of Northwest Coast Indian Art in Hazelton, B.C. The imagery found in Darren’s work is reminiscent of the pre-history of the Northwest Coast peoples, often including the mythology of signifi cant creatures and symbols such as the bear, raven, and sun, as well as the human form. In 2005, Darren realized a dream when he participated in the Changing Hands 2 exhibit, a celebration of North American Indigenous art that opened in New York’s Museum of Art and Design. In May 2009, Darren will have a solo exhibit at the Art Gallery of Regina, where he intends to bring to life through painting, drawing and sculpting, a vision depicting the culmination of his diverse learnings. “There is a power which lives in all of us and we simply have to reach out with our spirits to feel it; all things are bound by it, even stone, water and trees, living, growing, feeling. And when we do, the Creator is pleased, for we are one with Him and shall always be.” – Darren McKenzie Previous page: Darren McKenzie Righteous Apparition, 2005 (#2 from Urban Sentinel series) Cedarwood, hair Photo credit: Don Hall The Honourable Dr. Gordon L. Barnhart Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan Your Honour: The Saskatchewan Arts Board is pleased to submit its annual report for the fi scal year April 1, 2006 to March 31, 2007. -
Society Pages
T HE L ITERARY AND H ISTORICAL S OCIETY OF Q UEBEC SOCIETY PAGES P UBLISHED Q UARTERLY ▪ N UMBER 7 ▪ S PRING 2005 www.m o r r i n . o r g DON’T MISS THE 181ST LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT Dear members: MARCH 7TH - 19:00 On December 7, 2004, the Literary and Historical Society of Quebec embarked upon an FEATURING A PRESENTATION BY important new phase of its long and illustrious existence. On that day, the Society signed a 99 ARCHITECT MICHEL BOUDREAU year emphyteutic lease with the City of Quebec, which puts us in possession and control of ON THE RESTORATION PROJECT the Morrin College building for the next century. WINE AND CHEESE WILL FOLLOW THE MEETING For the first time since 1868, there are no books on the shelves in the library rooms and there is an air of anticipation lingering in the beautiful building. Our historic statue of General Wolfe ALL ARE WELCOME has left for safe keeping at the Plains of Abraham. The architects have been hired, the BRING A FRIEND (OR TWO) engineers are in the final stages of selection and in a few short weeks the actual renovation work will begin. ▪ LIBRARY HOURS ▪ THE LIBRARY AT KIRK HALL Our staff, council, and the professionals have a great challenge before them. This 45, CHAUSSÉE DES ÉCOSSAIS extraordinary building must be properly restored, its facilities and spaces brought up to meet today’s building codes and we must develop within it a vibrant successful English-language SUN 1:00PM-4:00PM MON CLOSED cultural centre to surround and support the activities of the library. -
THE STORY SO FAR: English Canadian Fiction in the Twenty-First Century Gary Draper
THE STORY SO FAR: English Canadian fiction in the twenty-first century Gary Draper October 7: ENDURANCE Some of the best Canadian fiction of the twenty-first century has been produced by writers who made their names in the twentieth. ~Richard Wright. Clara Callan (2001) ~Alice Munro. Too Much Happiness (2009) ~Michael Ondaatje. Cat’s Table (2011) October 14: OTHER TIMES Historical fiction has many pleasures, from telling new things about past times to applying old templates to current issues. ~Guy Vanderhaghe. The Last Crossing (2002) ~Joseph Boyden. Three-Day Road (2006) ~Margaret Sweatman. The Players (2009) October 21: OTHER PLACES Unsurprisingly, in this nation of immigrants, much of the best writing in Canada is set far from our native shores. ~Lewis deSoto. A Blade of Grass (2004) ~Helen Humphreys. Coventry (2008) ~Alison Pick. Far To Go (2010) October 28: REGION Ours is a land—and a culture—of great diversity; much of our best writing has a strongly regional flavour. We’ll look at three from Newfoundland. ~Jessica Grant. Come Thou Tortoise (2009) ~Michael Crummey. Galore (2011) ~Lisa Moore. Caught (2013) November 4: VOICE One of the joys of reading fiction is the opportunity to hear a variety of voices, and hear voice put to a variety of uses. ~Yann Martel. The Life of Pi (2001) ~Lori Lansens. The Girls (2006) ~Anita Rau Badami. Can You Hear the Nightbird Call? (2007) November 11: FORM When we say the word “fiction,” we often mean “novel,” but the short story form has its own special pleasures. ~John Gould. Kilter (2003) ~Tamas Dobozy. -
Wild Words: Essays on Alberta Literature/Edited by Donna Coates and George Melnyk
ESSAYS ON ALBERTA LITERATURE Edited by Donna Coates and George Melnyk 061494_Book.indb i 2/9/09 2:47:51 PM 061494_Book.indb ii 2/9/09 2:47:52 PM ESSAYS ON ALBERTA LITERATURE Edited by Donna Coates and George Melnyk 061494_Book.indb iii 2/9/09 2:47:53 PM © 2009 Donna Coates and George Melnyk Published by AU Press, Athabasca University 1200, 10011 – 109 Street Edmonton, AB T5J 3S8 Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication Wild words: essays on Alberta literature/edited by Donna Coates and George Melnyk. Includes bibliographical references and index. Issued also in electronic format (ISBN 978-1-897425-31-2). ISBN 978-1-897425-30-5 1. Canadian literature – Alberta – History and criticism. I. Coates, Donna, 1944- II. Melnyk, George III. Title. PS8131.A43W54 2009 C810.9’97123 C2008-908001-7 Cover design by Kris Twyman Cover painting by Marion Twyman Book layout and design by Infoscan Collette, Québec Printed and bound in Canada by Marquis Book Printing This publication is licensed under a Creative Commons License, see www.creativecommons.org. The text may be reproduced for non-commercial purposes, provided that credit is given to the original author(s). Please contact AU Press, Athabasca University at [email protected] for permission beyond the usage outlined in the Creative Commons license. This book was funded in part by the Alberta Historical Resources Foundation. TABLE OF CONTENTS PREFACE: The Struggle for an Alberta Literature Donna Coates and George Melnyk . vii INTRODUCTION: Wrestling Impossibilities: Wild Words in Alberta Aritha van Herk . 1 PART ONE: Poetry 1. -
List of Books Read Since 1971
List of Books Read since 1971 2015- Ru, by Tinh Nguyen (our first book of the year, to be reviewed 2016 on September 24) The Children’ s Act, by Ian McEwan The Kabul Beauty School, by Deborah Rodriguez The Glass Room, by Simon Mawer A Town like Alice, by Nevil Shute All the Light we Cannot See, by Anthony Doerr All my Puny Sorrows, by Miriam Toews How the Light Gets in, by Louise Penny (or any other Louise Penny novel) 2014- Jonas Jonasson, The Hundred Year Old Man who Climbed 2015 Out the Window and Disappeared Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper’s Wife Jennifer Worth, Call the Midwife M. L. Stedman, Light Between Oceans Alice Munro, Dear Life and/or another book of short stories Malala Yousafzai, I Am Malala Eleanor Catton, The Luminaries John Steinbeck, The Grapes of Wrath 2012- Emma Donoghue, Room 2013 Carmen Aguirre, Something Fierce: The Memoirs of a Revolutionary Daughter Esi Edugya, Half-Blood Blues Janis Cooke Newma, Mary Joanna Trollope, Second Honeymoon Aloa Al Awany, The Yacoubian Building Norman Doidge, M.D., The Brain that Changes Itself Robert Crease, The Prism and the Pendulum 2011- Terry Fallis, The Best Laid Plans 2012 Somerset Maugham, Somerset Maugham (Short Stories) Jack Weatherford, The Secret History of the Mongol Queens Abraham Verghese, Cutting For Stone Shilpi Gowda, Secret Daughter Joseph Boyden, Through the Black Spruce / Three Day Road Irshad Manji, The Trouble with Islam Markus Zusak, The Book Thief 2010- Tim Bowling, The Annotated Bee and Me* 2011 Nicholas Dickner, Nikolski Carlos Ruiz Zafon, The Shadow of the -
The ASLE Online Bibliography, 2000–2010
The Association for the Study of Literature and Environment The ASLE Online Bibliography, 2000–2010 Editor's Note “Have you read . ?” “You should read. .” “Can anyone recommend good articles, essays, poems, or books about . ?” Sharing of bibliographical references must rank among the most frequent activities in any academic community. Informal exchanges of bibliographic information occur at every conference and on every e-mail list. On the listserv of the Association for the Study of Literature and Environment (ASLE), from its inception to today, long-established netiquette has called for folks who have posted requests for bibliographical references to compile the suggestions and post them back to the group. Listserv archives were (and are) available and searchable, but finding bibliographic information in those archives is not a trivial task. And in the early 1990s, academic bibliographies such as the MLA International Bibliography did not index many sources of interest to the emerging interdisciplinary field of ecocriticism. Accordingly, from 1990 to 1997, ASLE produced annual or biennial annotated bibliographies. Working with volunteer bibliographers, the editors of the ASLE Bibliography compiled entries in MLA format, accompanied by one-sentence abstracts, paragraph-length summaries, and keywords from a custom list of terms designed to reflect the work and concerns of ecocriticism. Those invaluable bibliographies were printed in an 8.5 x 11” format and sold to members to cover printing costs. Creating an annual, printed bibliography with few resources and a volunteer staff amounted to a Herculean task, and the fruits of that labor could be distributed only once every year or two. So, when the job of editor opened up in the late 90s, I began exploring with ASLE’s Executive Council the possibility of creating an online bibliography. -
Download Download
The Governor General’s Literary Awards: English-Language Winners, 1936–2013 Andrew David Irvine* Entries are now being received for the Governor-General’s Annual Literary Awards for 1937, arranged by the Canadian Author’s Association. Medals will be given for the best books of fiction, poetry and general literature, respectively. The book must have been published during the calendar year 1937; and the author must be a Canadian. … There is no particular closing date. When the judges have read all the books, they will name the winners and that will end the matter. William Arthur Deacon1 This list2 of Governor General’s Literary Award–winning books differs from previous lists in several ways. It includes • five award-winning books from 1948, 1963, 1965, and 1984 (three in English and two in French) inadvertently omitted from previous lists; • the division of winning titles into historically accurate award categories; • a full list of books by non-winning finalists who have received cash prizes, a practice that began in 2002; • a full list of declined awards; • more detailed bibliographical information than can be found in most other lists; and 1* Andrew Irvine holds the position of professor and head of Economics, Philosophy, and Political Science at the University of British Columbia, Okanagan. Errata may be sent to the author at [email protected]. 11 William Arthur Deacon, The Fly Leaf, Globe and Mail, 9 April 1938, 15. 12 The list is split between two articles. The current article contains bibliographical information about English-language books that have won Governor General’s Literary Awards between 1936 and 2013. -
Exile Editions 2020
A NEW DECADE! 2020 SPRING CATALOGUE TWO NEW BOOKS FOR SPRING 2020 2019 RELEASES RE-PRESENTED RECENT HIGHLIGHTS (FOR 2020 AUTUMN: 8 NEW TITLES WILL BE ANNOUNCED) For all publishing related inquiries: [email protected] 519 334 3634 www.ExileEditions.com Exile Editions, 144483 Southgate Road 14-GD, Holstein, ON, N0G 2A0, Canada Sales: Distribution: Returns: Canadian Manda Group Independent Publishers Group IPG c/o Fraser Direct 664 Annette Street 814 North Franklin Street, 8300 Lawson Road Toronto, ON, M6S 2C8 Chicago, IL, 60610 USA Milton, ON, L9T 0A4 www.mandagroup.com www.ipgbook.com 905-877-4411 416-516-0911 toll free: 1-800-888-4741 The publisher would like to acknowledge the financial support of the Canada Council for the Arts, the Government of Canada, the Ontario Arts Council, and the Ontario Media Development Corporation, for our publishing activities. Poetry THE OLD MAN IN THE MIRROR ISN’T ME: LAST CALL HAIKU RAY ROBERTSON In his first book of poetry Robertson’s singular touch lies in words of clean musicality. APRIL 1, 2020 5.5 x 8.5 TPB 96 pages 978-1-55096-873-6 $18.95 “A haiku by Ray Robertson, like a novel by Ray Robertson, is the language we actually speak – whether by ‘language’ you mean what it sounds like, or what life seems to us, given that we talk this way. ‘Corn Flakes before bed / Zoloft for breakfast / I’m doing the best I can.’ The language is so mordant, relaxed, flint-chip shapely and edged, I think Sam Spade must have said these haiku first, between gun-butts to the skull, and Robertson channelled them. -
Contents – Just Click on the Name.)
(Each writer is linked to his or her entryContents – just click on the name.) Acknowledgements .................................................................................................. 3 Foreword ..........................................................................................................................4 Frequently Asked Questions .....................................................................................6 Timothy Anderson ........................................................................................................8 John Ballem ..................................................................................................................18 Marty Chan ....................................................................................................................21 Joan Crate ......................................................................................................................25 Paulette Dubé ...............................................................................................................29 Dave Duncan .................................................................................................................33 Will Ferguson ................................................................................................................38 Cheryl Foggo .................................................................................................................48 Fil Fraser ..........................................................................................................................52