SPRING NEWSLETTER 2013 Annual General Meeting Sunday April 28, 2:00Pm St

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

SPRING NEWSLETTER 2013 Annual General Meeting Sunday April 28, 2:00Pm St GREENWOOD CENTRE FOR LIVING HISTORY SPRING NEWSLETTER 2013 Annual General Meeting Sunday April 28, 2:00pm St. Mary’s Church Hall, Hudson, Quebec Guest Speaker: Heather Darche, historian, curator and manager of QAHN’s “100 Significant Objects” project Director’s Message Happy Spring to all of you. The Greenwood Centre for Living History is celebrating sixteen years this season. We continue to flourish and find new initiatives, thanks to our wonderful Board and volun - teers. We are proud of what we have accomplished over the last few years, and have some exciting plans for this season. Our theme, Conservation and Preservation: A Future for Our Past will be introduced at our Annual General Meeting on Sunday, April 28th. A brief business meeting will be followed by a guest speaker. The Kitchen Ceilidh will once again welcome you with their special sound, and, of course, there will be cake! Please join us! Heather Darche, our guest speaker, is in charge of a QAHN project entitled “ 100 Significant Objects ”. Museums, historical societies and other community organizations such as ourselves throughout Quebec have submitted stories about 100 objects that collectively create an online portrait of the culture of Quebec’s diverse English speaking communities, past and present. Greenwood’s contribution to this project is the wedding dress of Mary Cecelia Delesderniers, which she wore when she was married to Robert Ward Shepherd at St. James Church in 1847. Heather will show photos of some of these special “100 Significant Objects”, and talk about their place in our history. It promises to be a very interesting afternoon. Over the past five or six years, we have directed a portion of our proceeds from events to “conser - vation”, and launched an Adopt an Artifact ” programme towards this end. As a result, we now have a considerable number of items at Greenwood which have been conserved to museum standards. This season, we will highlight those items, and encourage our members and our visitors to work with us towards future plans for the preservation of this very special historic home and its contents. Delesderniers Wedding Dress We hope you will join us in this endeavour, and make Greenwood a place to visit this summer. photo-Rachel Garber Audrey Wall, Executive Director 100objects.QAHN.org Audrey Wall with Her Excellency Sharon Johnston at Rideau Hall, Bill Young, Greenwood’s first Executive Director, receives Governor General’s Literary Awards Gala, Nov 28,2012 the Queen’s Jubilee Medal from MP Jamie Nicholls, Dec.7, 2012 254 Main Road, Hudson, Quebec, Canada J0P 1H0 tel- (450) 458-5396 fax- (450) 458-5801 email- [email protected] www.greenwood-centre-hudson.org has been short-listed for the Trillium Book Award and received StoryFest! 2013 the Harbourfront Festival Prize. Prepare to be enthralled as StoryFest 2013 is shaping up to be a And to conclude our powerful season, StoryFest 2013 is thrilled winner once again! Our year begins with a pre-season event on to host iconic Canadian writer Michael Ondaatje, winner of May 26th. We are delighted to host Nancy Richler , finalist for multiple prestigious awards including the Man Booker, Giller, the 2012 Giller prize. Her book The Imposter Bride set soon five GG Awards, and was made an Officer of the Order of after WWII, describes the Jewish community of N.D.G., the same Canada in 1988. His latest novel is The Cat’s Table . How for - area in which Nancy tunate we are to have such an exciting line-up for 2013. grew up. This community has been well docu - mented by another Rich - Springtime at the Movies ler in a very different On June 3, Greenwood will once again signal the arrival of sum - way. Interestingly, the mer by screening a current film at Village Theatre, and follow - grandfathers of these two ing up with an informal Q and A. As we go to press we have yet writers were brothers. to settle on our final choice - so rich is the pool of film possi - The Imposter Bride is bilities. All we can say here is that it will be GREAT! We will Richler’s third novel. As formally announce our selection at the Annual General Meet - Nancy explains, “In all ing. But book the date now - June 3 - and prepare to settle in for my writing I explore the an exciting time at the movies! slipperiness of morality and identity in the face of extreme loss and threat, Volunteer Activities though the settings and circumstances change Our dedicated volunteers are invited to afternoon tea at with each novel.” Nancy Greenwood on Wednesday, May 8 at 3:00 pm where Audrey is again living in Mon - will announce our exciting plans for the coming season! At treal after spending this time, everyone can sign up for a favourite activity or be - twenty-five years in Vancouver and we hope you take this op - come involved in a new area of interest. portunity to meet her. Spring Work Bee You are needed! If you can spare a half-day for Greenwood Hudson native Lorne Elliot opens StoryFest on the first day of on Saturday, May 11, we would love to have you! There will October. As well as being a humorist, storyteller and musician, be a job to suit all skill levels and interests including garden - Lorne is also a playwright and author, a Renaissance man indeed! ing, painting, washing, dusting, cleaning, all things necessary And so the list continues…. to get ready for our sixteenth season! Please phone Green - wood at 450-458-5396 if you can lend a hand. Award winning Newfoundland writer and poet, Michael Crum - mey attracted much attention with his novel Galore , shortlisted Members Day for the 2011 IMPAC prize. He has just released Under the Keel , his first book of poetry in a decade. Emma Donoghue ’s Room We are constantly awed by those who see and value Greenwood garnered a spot on both the Man Booker and the Orange Prize as the jewel it is and who continue to support us. To recognize shortlist in 2010 and has just published Away , a book of short the importance of their role, we celebrate Members Day where stories focusing on the immigrant experience. Helen we welcome our members to Greenwood and take the opportu - Humphreys ’ Coventry was chosen as one of the top 100 books of nity to thank them for all their help. The 2013 Members Day the year by the Globe and Mail. Her novel The Lost Garden was Event will take place on Sunday, July 7 from 3:30-5:30 pm. We a Canada Reads selection for 2003. Charles Foran wrote the de - will be very proud to show you our newly decorated dining finitive portrait of Canada’s most provocative writer, Mordecai room and to enlarge upon the theme for this season, Conserva - Richler, titled Mordecai: The Life & Times for which he won the tion and Preservation: A Future for Our Past . Please mark this Governor General’s Literary Award for Non-Fiction in 2011. date in your calendar and enjoy the afternoon with us. Theatre Panache will produce a workshop version of Bonnie Laing ’s new play The Cottage , set in the Laurentians and span - Treasures in the Attic ning the years 1970 to 2000. Each performance will end with a Auction Items Needed !! “talk back” with the playwright, director and actors. What a won - We are seeking items for both our silent and live auctions for derful opportunity to gain insight into the creative theatre process. Treasures in the Attic which will be held on Saturday, Septem - ber 14. We have space in the Greenwood garage and items can In addition is Linda Spalding , winner of the 2012 Governor be picked up or dropped off here. Tax receipts can be given General’s Award for fiction for her novel, The Purchase. She for items of value. Conservation Adopt an Artifact Greenwood houses a unique collection of furniture, art, textiles Greenwood’s Adopt an and a variety of decorative objects. It is the charm of these fam - Artifact program offers ily heirlooms, on show in their historic setting that adds a special donors two ways to warmth and character to the house. However, unlike a museum, contribute to the we are limited in our ability to control the environment, there - restoration and preser - fore we must practice both Preventative and Remedial Conser - vation of our many vation. treasures: choose an in - dividual piece or join a Preventative Conservation slows down the deterioration of an group in the conserva - object by measuring and controlling humidity and light, main - tion of a major work. taining good housekeeping practices, storing to archival stan - dards and rotating the display of fragile items. We strive for a The next item up for delicate balance while allowing visitors to enjoy their experience. adoption is this charm - ing 1908 pastel by Remedial Conservation requires that we employ professional renowned Canadian conservators to clean and repair damage, thus slowing down de - artist Robert Harris, en - terioration. This is a lengthy and expensive process and it is titled “Young Girl”. As thanks to the continued interest and generosity of our members part of the work’s that we move forward. preservation, the cedar backing must be removed and the portrait cleaned professionally. It will be re-framed using UV resistant Work in progress: glass and an acid free backing. This unique portrait is just one of a long list of Greenwood treas - ures we dearly hope to preserve for the enjoyment of visitors today and in the years to come.
Recommended publications
  • Cahiers-Papers 53-1
    The Giller Prize (1994–2004) and Scotiabank Giller Prize (2005–2014): A Bibliography Andrew David Irvine* For the price of a meal in this town you can buy all the books. Eat at home and buy the books. Jack Rabinovitch1 Founded in 1994 by Jack Rabinovitch, the Giller Prize was established to honour Rabinovitch’s late wife, the journalist Doris Giller, who had died from cancer a year earlier.2 Since its inception, the prize has served to recognize excellence in Canadian English-language fiction, including both novels and short stories. Initially the award was endowed to provide an annual cash prize of $25,000.3 In 2005, the Giller Prize partnered with Scotiabank to create the Scotiabank Giller Prize. Under the new arrangement, the annual purse doubled in size to $50,000, with $40,000 going to the winner and $2,500 going to each of four additional finalists.4 Beginning in 2008, $50,000 was given to the winner and $5,000 * 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]. 1 Quoted in Deborah Dundas, “Giller Prize shortlist ‘so good,’ it expands to six,” 6 October 2014, accessed 17 September 2015, www.thestar.com/entertainment/ books/2014/10/06/giller_prize_2014_shortlist_announced.html. 2 “The Giller Prize Story: An Oral History: Part One,” 8 October 2013, accessed 11 November 2014, www.quillandquire.com/awards/2013/10/08/the-giller- prize-story-an-oral-history-part-one; cf.
    [Show full text]
  • October 2013\Adult Book List.Wpd
    This is the published version: Mackey, Margaret, De Vos, Gail, Ganshorn, Heather, Johnston, Ingrid, McClay, Jill Kedersha and Moruzi, Kristine 2012, Contemporary Canadian adult books for strong teen readers, Resource links: connecting classrooms, libraries & Canadians learning resources, vol. 18, no. 1, pp. 58‐66. Available from Deakin Research Online: http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30062208 Reproduced with the kind permission of the copyright owner. Copyright : 2012, Resource Links Contemporary Canadian Adult Books for Strong Teen Readers by Margaret Mackey with Gail de Vos, Heather Ganshorn, Ingrid Johnston, Jill Kedersha McClay, and Kristine Moruzi With this column, our eighteenth in an ongoing annual series, we present our pick of contemporary Canadian adult publishing that we believe has the potential to appeal to strong teenage readers. We began this work in 1996 believing that good teen readers were seriously under-served when it came to reading advice. Where should they go when they begin to come to the end of the road with young adult literature (as wonderful as much of that literature undoubtedly is)? Who provides guidance on the kinds of adult materials that might speak to a teenager? We saw a vacuum, and we have made efforts to step into that empty space ever since. As usual, our main selection criterion is that the book should have some kind of youth appeal. Middle-age crises need not apply to appear on these pages. We do not screen for strong language or graphic sex or violence; we assume that a confident teenage reader will not hesitate to put down a book if it does not appeal, for whatever reason.
    [Show full text]
  • Ottawa Jewish Bulletin Publishing Co
    JEWISH NATIONAL FUND OF OTTAWA ottawa jewish ✡ Join us for the Bulletin redesign and website launch, November 26 · 7 pm. More info page 27. ottawajewishbulletin.com bulletinnovember 11, 2013 volume 78, no. 5 kislev 8, 5774 Ottawa Jewish Bulletin Publishing Co. Ltd. • 21 Nadolny Sachs Private, Ottawa, Ontario K2A 1R9 • Publisher: Andrea Freedman • Editor: Michael Regenstreif $2.00 at large, “as well as his remarkable personal generosity.” Arnie Vered receives Despite his current battle with cancer, O’Reilly Runte noted Vered “remains centred on caring for the Ontario Medal others and ensuring the continued well-being of family, friends and community. for Good Citizenship Vered’s nomination for the medal received widespread support. Jewish community leader is one of only eight people “In the close to 50 years I have been in Ottawa, I do not know of in the province to receive the award in 2013 anyone who comes close to Ar- By Michael Regenstreif Ottawa Jewish community leader ly,” noted the award citation. nie’s record of community service,” In an investiture ceremony pre- Arnon (Arnie) Vered, who was un- Vered was nominated for the wrote Rabbi Reuven Bulka in his sided over by Lieutenant-Governor able to attend the ceremony because award by Carleton University Pres- letter of support. David C. Olney in the Legislative he is currently undergoing cancer ident Roseann O’Reilly Runte, who Rabbi Bulka mentioned Vered’s Building at Queen’s Park in Toron- treatment. cited Vered’s “extraordinary career support for hospitals, the arts and Arnie Vered’s nomination for the education, and called special at- to, October 17, eight Ontarians were “Wherever he turns his sights of voluntary service, his strong lead- Ontario Medal for Good Citizen- honoured with the Ontario Medal and energies, people say he brings ership qualities, dedication and ac- tention to leadership roles he has ship received widespread sup- for Good Citizenship.
    [Show full text]
  • Canadian Jewish Writing Rebecca Margolis
    2 1 Across the Border: Canadian Jewish Writing Rebecca Margolis Canadian Jewish literature has often been compared to its U.S. counterpart, for both geographic and cultural reasons. The two countries share a vast bor- der, are former English colonies with a continual use of that language, and have signifi cant immigrant populations. The two countries absorbed signif- icant numbers of Jewish immigrants, including a mass Eastern European immigration that was Yiddish speaking and working class. The comparison between the two countries should be natural, at least from a Canadian per- spective. However, rather than being a mini–United States, Canada has pro- duced a literature that has evolved its own very distinctive set of defi ning characteristics. Further, the dominating presence of the United States and its overshadowing infl uence on Canada in terms of literature, theater, lm,fi and music are indisputable, and Canadian culture is oft subsumed into the larger category of “American.” Canada’s Jewish writers are confl ated with U.S. writ- ers or neglected altogether . Michael Greenstein’s study Third Solitudes sug- gests marginality as a key feature of Jewish Canadian literature. 1 Intertwining historical realities have informed Canada’s cultural identity and the literature that its Jewish writers have produced. The ideological foun- dation of the country is a French-English bilingualism that dates to its roots as a European colony, and the dynamics of that uneasy duality have permeated the country’s cultural development. Unlike the United States, Canada was not born out of revolution and rejection of the British Empire that dominated it.
    [Show full text]
  • Inspiration in Action 2017 Impact Report Contents
    INSPIRATION IN ACTION 2017 IMPACT REPORT CONTENTS 03. LETTERS FROM DR. GOODALL, OUR CEO AND BOARD CHAIR A year of growth and learning 04. WHO WE ARE Meet the JGI Canada team 06. THE CHIMPS OF TCHIMPOUNGA Providing the best care for rescued chimpanzees 08. COMMUNITY CONSERVATION IN DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO Grassroots conservation to protect habitat and help people 12. JANE GOODALL’S ROOTS & SHOOTS Tomorrow’s community leaders and global citizens 16. FINANCIALS Your donations in action 18. SUPPORTERS & PARTNERS Our generous donors make change possible Above: JGI Canada’s CEO, Andria Teather, in conversation with Jane before a full house in London, ON. On the cover: Jane Goodall looks out over Gombe, Tanzania. Probably taken in 1963, Jane was just beginning her ground-breaking research on chimpanzee behaviour. Photo (this page): JGI Canada/ Alice Xue Cover photo: JGI U.S./Hugo Van Lawick INSPIRE. IMPACT. I write this letter from a place of hope. It is true that We’ve been busy. As you will see in the following pages, the bad news bombarding us almost daily can be 2016/2017 was a year of enormous growth and learning overwhelming. In the face of terrible declines in species — especially when we consider how far we’ve come. and biodiversity, as well as the devastating impacts of climate change, the outlook is bleak. Yet, I am hopeful. In 1994, when the Canadian chapter first opened its doors, our focus was squarely on supporting the Nature is resilient. orphaned chimpanzees living at the Tchimpounga Chimpanzee Rehabilitation Center. No other Canadian- In 1990, I flew over Gombe, in Tanzania, where I had based organization was so closely engaged in the care and conducted my research and discovered that much of protection of great apes rescued from the illegal trade in the forest had been cut down.
    [Show full text]
  • Ottawa Jewish Bulletin Publishing Co
    JEWISH NATIONAL FUND OF OTTAWA ottawa jewish ✡ Tefilateinu page 11 ottawajewishbulletin.com bulletinoctober 28, 2013 volume 78, no. 4 cheshvan 24, 5774 Ottawa Jewish Bulletin Publishing Co. Ltd. • 21 Nadolny Sachs Private, Ottawa, Ontario K2A 1R9 • Publisher: Andrea Freedman • Editor: Michael Regenstreif $2.00 Former CNN correspondent describes her ‘unlikely journey’ Linda Scherzer tells Choices audience “miraculous” happened when she picked up the book Exodus by about moving from reporting on Israel Leon Uris and was so inspired, she felt compelled to see Israel for her- to advocating on its behalf self. In 1987, she went on a Jewish singles mission only to fall in love By Ilana Belfer After studies at Brandeis Uni- with her Israeli tour guide. Life choices are what led Linda versity in Massachusetts and He was part of the reason she Scherzer, a Jewish girl from Mon- Northwestern University in Il- chose to return to Israel a year lat- treal, to the front lines of “one of linois, she began her career as a er. the most bitter and protracted con- television journalist with a local Although the romance eventu- fl icts on the international scene,” station in Burlington, Vermont – ally hit a snag, her career and love as a CNN correspondent in Israel. all the while removed from the for the country fl ourished. CNN More than 250 women were on Jewish community and aspects of was only eight years old at the hand, October 8, at Agudath Israel Jewish identity. time and, thus, she said, “Some- Congregation, to hear Scherzer’s “I was on that path,” she said, body like me with a little bit of keynote address at the seventh an- pointing to the recent Pew Re- chutzpah and a grand sense of ad- nual Choices dinner in support of search Center Survey of U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • I BEYOND the LAST PAGE: UNDERSTANDINGS OF
    BEYOND THE LAST PAGE: UNDERSTANDINGS OF TEACHERS’ EXPERIENCES IN BOOK CLUBS AND PEDAGOGICAL LINKS Jennifer Rottmann Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree in Doctorate of Philosophy in Education Faculty of Education University of Ottawa © Jennifer Rottmann, Ottawa, Canada, 2014 i TABLE OF CONTENTS ABSTRACT v ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS vi INTRODUCTION 1 LITERATURE REVIEW: PATHS PREVIOUSLY TAKEN 6 Book Clubs and Teacher Education 9 Book Clubs and Teachers 11 Book Clubs as Professional Development 12 Teachers and Reading 14 Students and Reading 19 Book Clubs and Literature Circles 20 The Culprit: Tensions Between In-School and Out-of-School Literacies 23 Chapter Summary 26 THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK 27 Social Constructivism 28 Narrative Inquiry 31 Narrative Inquiry as a Pedagogical Tool 34 Reader-Response Theory 35 A Brief History of Reader-Response Theory 36 METHODOLOGY 48 Research Design 48 Research Participants 50 Unpacking Data Collection Methods 52 Questionnaires 52 In-depth Open Ended Interviews 53 Reading Interest Profile 54 Contextual Experience of Book Club Meetings 55 Intertextual and Narrative Analysis of Texts 57 Researcher’s Journal 58 Analysis and Re/presenting the Data 59 Chapter Summary 63 PARTICIPANTS’ PROFILES: THE READING TEACHERS 64 Anne 66 Charlotte 69 Diana 71 Emma 74 Grace 76 Helen 79 ii Isabella 81 James 83 Lydia 85 Maria 87 Rose 89 Sophia 91 Kathleen 93 INTERLUDE: READING THIS THESIS 95 BOOK CLUB MEETINGS 96 Patrick McGrath’s (1996) Asylum
    [Show full text]
  • Ruth Panofsky Address: Department of English Member of the Graduate Faculty Ryerson University 350 Victoria Street Toronto, Ontario M5B 2K3 416 979 5000 Ext
    CURRICULUM VITAE Name: Ruth Panofsky Address: Department of English Member of the Graduate Faculty Ryerson University 350 Victoria Street Toronto, Ontario M5B 2K3 416 979 5000 ext. 6150 416 979 5387 fax [email protected] Position: . Professor . Research Associate, Modern Literature and Culture Research Centre . Member, Centre for Digital Humanities Citizenship: Canadian Languages: English, French EDUCATION: PhD, York University, English 1991 Examinations: First field: Canadian Literature Second field: Novel and Other Narrative Dissertation: A Bibliographical Study of Thomas Chandler Haliburton’s The Clockmaker, First, Second, and Third Series Supervisor: Professor John Lennox MA, York University, English 1982 MRP: Studies in the Early Poetry of Miriam Waddington Supervisor: Professor John Lennox BA Honours, Carleton University, English 1980 First year, Vanier College, Social Sciences 1976 AWARDS AND FELLOWSHIPS (EXTERNAL): 2016 Rosa and the late David Finestone Canadian Jewish Studies Award for Best Book in English or French, J. I. Segal Awards, Jewish Public Library ($500) 2016 Finalist, Vine Awards for Canadian Jewish Literature 2015 Canadian Jewish Literary Award for Yiddish Culture ($1,000) 2015 PROSE Award for Literature, Professional and Scholarly Publishing Division, Association of American Publishers 2015 Finalist, Eric Hoffer Award for Independent Books 2 – Ruth Panofsky 2013 McCorison Fellowship for the History and Bibliography of Printing in Canada and the United States, Bibliographical Society of America ($2,000US) 2011-14
    [Show full text]
  • Recognize Our Donors
    THANK YOU! Recognizing your Landmark contribution to nature Nature Conservancy of Canada Landmark Campaign Recognition List 1 Big Trout Bay, Ontario Dear Friends, NATIONAL CAMPAIGN CABINET Co-chairs As co-chairs of the Nature Conservancy of Canada’s Harold (Hal) Kvisle (NCC’s) Landmark Campaign, we watched with Corporate Director; pride and awe as more than 110,000 Canadians took Former CEO, TransCanada and Talisman Energy conservation into their own hands, giving generously Brian Tobin to save the lands and waters that sustain us all. Vice-Chair, BMO Financial Group Cabinet Members You were one of those donors, and we’re so Shelley Ambrose very grateful. Hal Kvisle Former Publisher & Executive Director, The Walrus Thanks to you, we have not only achieved, Gary Doer but surpassed our campaign goal of raising Corporate Director; $750 million for conservation in Canada! Former Canadian Ambassador to the U.S. L. David Dubé Together, we have delivered a historic and President & CEO, Concorde Group Corp. lasting impact for nature that benefits not only us as Canadians, but the world. By supporting Darren Entwistle Brian Tobin NCC, you expanded our network of protected President & CEO, TELUS areas, conserving an additional 11.5 million hectares James D. Irving (28 million acres) — more than one-and-a-half times the size of New Brunswick. You helped Co-CEO, J.D. Irving Ltd. safeguard habitat for hundreds of species and mitigate the effects of climate change by Patrick Pichette protecting the forests, wetlands and grasslands that act as carbon sinks. And you ensured General Partner, Inovia Capital natural areas remain accessible to Canadians, benefitting us both physically and mentally.
    [Show full text]
  • F13 Canadian Cat.Pdf
    CONTENTS PAGE 2 New Fiction and Non-fiction PAGE 49 Harper Paperbacks PAGE 78 Young Adult & Children's Titles PAGE 90 Author Index PAGE 91 Title Index PAGE 92 Key Contacts Please note: Prices, dates and specifications listed in this catalogue are subject to change without notice. The suggested retail prices are in Canadian dollars and do not include GST/HST. All resellers are free to establish their own prices. Consumer prices are suggestions only and do not reflect the prices at which books and other products will be sold. 2 HarperCollins Strikingly original in form, The Kraus Project is a feast of thought, passion and literature hundred years ago, the writings of Viennese satirist Karl Kraus A were among the most penetrating and prophetic in Europe: a relentless criticism of the popular media’s manipulation of reality, the JO NATHAN FRANZ EN dehumanizing machinery of technology and consumerism, and the jin- goistic rhetoric of a fading empire. But even though Kraus’s followers included Franz Kafka and Walter Benjamin, he remained something of a lonely prophet, and few people today are familiar with his work. Thank- The Kraus Project fully, Jonathan Franzen is one of them. Translations and Annotations In The Kraus Project, Franzen not only presents his definitive new by Jonathan Franzen translations of Kraus but annotates them spectacularly, with supplemen- tary notes from the Kraus scholar Paul Reitter and the Austrian writer WITH ASSISTANCE AND ADDITIONAL Daniel Kehlmann. Kraus was a notoriously cantankerous and difficult NOTES FROM PAUL REITTER author, and in Franzen he has found his match: a novelist unafraid to voice unpopular opinions strongly, and a critic capable of untangling AND DANIEL KEHLMANN Kraus’s o"en dense arguments to reveal their relevance to contempo- ņěŖŚńŝŝ rary America.
    [Show full text]
  • The Girl Who Stole Everything
    THE GIRL WHO STOLE EVERYTHING a novel Norman Ravvin .ll. Krzysztof Majer, Elise Moser, Linda Leith, Shelley Butler and Nancy Richler helped me think and write about Poland and Vancouver. Copyright © 2019, Norman Ravvin All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, for any reason or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. The following is a work of fiction. Many of the locations are real, although not necessarily as portrayed, but all characters and events are fictional and any resemblance to actual events or people, living or dead, is purely coincidental. Prepared for the press by Elise Moser. Cover photograph by Cezary Jurkiewicz, reproduced by permission. Excerpt from “Family Home,” in Unseen Hand (2009) by Adam Zagajewski on page 5 is reproduced by permission of Farrar, Straus and Giroux. Author photo by Allen McInnis, Montreal Gazette/Postmedia. Cover design by Debbie Geltner. Book design by Tika eBooks. Printed and bound in Canada. Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication Title: The girl who stole everything / Norman Ravvin. Names: Ravvin, Norman, 1963- author. Identifiers: Canadiana (print) 20190066768 | Canadiana (ebook) 20190066776 | ISBN 9781773900278 (softcover) | ISBN 9781773900285 (EPUB) | ISBN 9781773900292 (Kindle) | ISBN 9781773900308 (PDF) Classification: LCC PS8585.A8735 G57 2019 | DDC C813/.54—dc23 The publisher gratefully acknowledges the support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Council for the Arts, the Canada Book Fund, and Livres Canada Books, and of the Government of Quebec through the Société de développement des entreprises culturelles (SODEC). .ll. Linda Leith Éditions Montreal www.lindaleith.com . all the nights since you left are snarled like the yarn of an old sweater in which wild cats have nested.
    [Show full text]
  • New Fiction and Non-Fiction Harper Paperbacks Harper Weekend Young Adult & Children's Titles Key Contacts Index
    Contents page 2 New Fiction and Non-fiction page 44 Harper Paperbacks page 62 Harper Weekend page 64 Young Adult & Children’s Titles page 77 Key Contacts page 78 Index Please note: Prices, dates and specifications listed in this catalogue are subject to change without notice. The suggested retail prices are in Canadian dollars and do not include GST/HST. All resellers are free to establish their own prices. Consumer prices are suggestions only and do not reflect the prices at which books and other products will be sold. 2 harpercollins onfident, original and humane, the stories in The Best Place on Earth are peopled with characters at the cross- roadsC of nationalities, religions and communities: expatriates, travellers, immigrants and locals. In the powerfully affecting opening story, “Tikkun,” a The universality of war, love, chance meeting between a man and his former lover carries heartbreak and hope them through near tragedy and into unexpected peace. In “Casualties,” Tsabari takes us into the military—a world every Israeli knows all too well—with a brusque, sexy young female AYELET TSABARI soldier who forges medical leave forms to make ends meet. Poets, soldiers, siblings and dissenters, the protagonists here The Best Place on Earth are mostly Israelis of Mizrahi background (Jews of Middle Stories Eastern and North African descent), whose stories have rarely been told in literature. In illustrating the lives of those whose FICTION • $24.99 CL identities swing from fiercely patriotic to powerfully global, ISBN: 9781443411950 • SHIPPING IN MARCH The Best Place on Earth explores Israeli history as it illuminates FIC029000 • 224 pp • 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 • carton qty: 48 the tenuous connections—forged, frayed and occasionally rights acquired: world/all languages destroyed—between cultures, between generations and across editor: Jane Warren • publicist: Sonya Koson the gulf of transformation and loss.
    [Show full text]