East/West in Canadian Fiction | Luminato

Wednesday, June 16, 2010 - 7:00pm
Toronto Reference Library, 789 Yonge St.

How does living in Vancouver or St. John's affect what you write? What does a prairie writer have in common with a Cape Bretoner? And in a country of immigrants, what does "East/West" really mean?

Edmonton's Lynn Coady, Governor General's Award nominee for Strange Heaven, is also renowned for Play the Monster Blind and Saints of Big Harbour. Saskatchewan-born Lorna Crozier's poetry collections include Small Beneath the Sky, Whetstone and the Governor General's Award winner Inventing the Hawk. Novelist and playwright Anosh Irani evokes the India of his birth in such works as Bombay Black, The Song of Kahunsha and, most recently, Dahanu Road. Michael Winter, England-born and Newfoundland-raised, is author of The Architects are Here, The Big Why and This All Happened. Together, these diverse artists share their work and examine literary aspects of a major Festival theme.

Moderated by Noah Richler.

The Bram and Bluma Appel Salon (Toronto Reference Library)

 

Reading by Anosh Irani Dahanu Road

Thursday, June 17, 12:00 PM

North York Central Library (5120 Yonge Street)

 

Reading by Lorna Crozier Small Beneath the Sky

Thursday, June 17, 12:00 PM

Pape Danforth Branch (701 Pape Avenue)

"Stumbling onto a Lorna Crozier poem is like running into a tropical rainforest on the Prairies."

- Books in Canada

"Supreme originality, shattering insight... Michael Winter is well on his way to having one of the most distinctive voices in Canadian literature."

- Winnipeg Free Press


Shipping Options - Dahanu Road





Shipping Options - Blue Hour of the Day





Shipping Options - Song of Kahunsha





Shipping Options - This Is My Country