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You are here: Home / Archives for Arts and Books

Artists for the rainforest — and reality

12/10/2012 by backofthebook.ca

By Rachelle Stein-Wotten Art is at the forefront of a raging energy debate in Canada. Enbridge’s Northern Gateway Pipeline – you know, the one that would travel 1,000 kilometres from Alberta to British Columbia’s coast, delivering oil to be pumped into tankers taller than monuments, destination: Asia — has created a small boom in art-not-just-for-art’s […]

Filed Under: Arts and Books Tagged With: Alberta, BC, business, Canada, Enbridge, Enbridge Pipeline, visual arts

Son of “Midnight’s Children”

11/05/2012 by backofthebook.ca

By Mark Leiren-Young When I walk into the downtown Toronto hotel room to meet Salman Rushdie, I can’t help scoping the halls for bodyguards. Even though he’s no longer in hiding, there’s still a three million dollar bounty on the writer’s head and he’s still the most buzzed about celebrity at the 2012 Toronto International […]

Filed Under: Arts and Books, Leiren-Young Tagged With: books, Canada, Canadian film, Deepa Mehta, film, Salman Rushdie, Toronto International Film Festival, writing

Open season on critics

09/13/2012 by backofthebook.ca

By Zoe Grams Fringe, film fest and publishing season is upon us – a time when the smell of suntan lotion lingers as we push into theatres. But it’s the critics, not just the performers, who are making headlines. With 76 events in the Vancouver Fringe, more than 100 in the Toronto International Film Festival, […]

Filed Under: Arts and Books Tagged With: books, film, literature, Media, online media, theatre

The Giller Prize deserves an award

09/10/2012 by backofthebook.ca

By Frank Moher A bunch of years ago now, I wrote an article for Saturday Night magazine decrying the fact that the Giller Prize was a captive of big name publishers and authors. On the basis of the long list for the 2012 Giller that was released last week, as well as the one from […]

Filed Under: Arts and Books Tagged With: authors, books, Canada, fiction, Giller Prize, literature, publishing

Terry Fallis gets it all wrong, brilliantly

07/02/2012 by backofthebook.ca

By Mark Leiren-Young Somebody has to tell Terry Fallis how publishing works. When he couldn’t find a publisher for his debut novel – the story of a reluctant campaign manager managing an even more reluctant candidate for the Parliament of Canada — Fallis released his story a chapter at a time as a podcast series […]

Filed Under: Arts and Books, Leiren-Young Tagged With: books, CBC, iTunes, Leacock Award, McClelland & Stewart, online media, publishing, Terry Fallis

Inside Read: “Cold Comfort” by Gil McElroy

06/24/2012 by backofthebook.ca

Inside Read is our sampler of new Canadian books we think merit your attention. In Cold Comfort, Colborne, Ontario poet and curator Gil McElroy uses a box of photographs left behind by his late father, a DEW line operator during the Cold War, to reconstruct that era and “come to terms with the mysterious photographer, […]

Filed Under: Arts and Books Tagged With: books, Canada, Canadian military, Nova Scotia, WWII

Volunteers aim to avoid 200,000+ book-burning

06/19/2012 by backofthebook.ca

A BoB short: Maybe it has something to do with the recent death of Ray Bradbury, and memories of Farenheit 451, but Shaunna Raycraft has found lots of help with her 200,000+ books. Seven years ago, the Pine Lake, Sask. woman rescued the massive literary hoard from a neighbour, who had threatened to burn it […]

Filed Under: Arts and Books Tagged With: books, Canada, good behaviour, literature, Saskatchewan

LPG cut, Summerworks restored: Is this any way to run a culture?

06/13/2012 by backofthebook.ca

Update, June 14th: Moore reverses cuts to LPG. By Frank Moher Let us now consider the Department of Canadian Heritage, and the confusion that is its Minister, James Moore. As we reported on the weekend, the Literary Press Group of Canada, a 37-year old organization whose job is to sell the books of Canadian authors, […]

Filed Under: Arts and Books Tagged With: books, business, Canada, CBC, Conservatives, Department of Canadian Heritage, James Moore, Jim Flaherty, museums, Summerworks, theatre

Literary Press Group loses funding; some questions for Canadian Heritage

06/09/2012 by backofthebook.ca

By Frank Moher I have been pursuing the story of the Literary Press Group getting its funding yanked by the Department of Canadian Heritage. In concert with that department’s decision to restore funding to the Summerworks theatre festival in Toronto, having pulled it last year, the matter raises questions about its management under Minister James […]

Filed Under: Arts and Books Tagged With: books, business, Canada, Department of Canadian Heritage, James Moore, Literary Press Group, Summerworks

Inside Read: Bad Mommy

06/09/2012 by backofthebook.ca

Inside Read is our sampler of new Canadian books we think merit your attention. In Bad Mommy, Vancouver author Willow Yamauchi satirically assesses all the ways women can (and will) mess-up child-rearing, while also featuring tales from “22 admitted bad mommies . . . Instead of hiding mommy guilt and shame with brave smiles, matching […]

Filed Under: Arts and Books

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Fire sale sign

Fort McMurray: Shopping time!

By Brady Tighe We’re now officially in the aftermath phase of the northern Alberta wildfire crisis. The fire is long gone, and everyone with a home to return to is back in its … [Read More...]

Nathan Cullen

Electoral reform: Hashtag fresh thinking

By Alison@Creekside The most interesting and innovative idea to come out of the first meeting of the all-party Special Committee on Electoral Reform, or ERRE, was Nathan Cullen's suggestion, … [Read More...]

Trudeau on quantum computing

The Trudeau gush fest is getting old

By Jim Henshaw There have been several bewildered as well as angry accounts coming out of the USA lately about how little media time has been spent covering the Democratic Presidential Primary … [Read More...]

Rick Meyers in Nanaimo Pride Parade

My friend, Rick, at the Pride Parade

By Frank Moher On this dreadful day, I don't want to write about the shootings in Orlando. I want to write about my friend, Rick. Rick lives just outside of Nanaimo, a city of about 80,000, … [Read More...]

Stephen Colbert on Late Night set

Triumph of the drama nerds

By Frank Moher Two drama nerds have recently moved into high profile positions. Before I name them (or perhaps you’ve already guessed who they are; or perhaps you’d like to scroll down and look at … [Read More...]

From “Our Rape Blog”: Shooting the Moon

Originally published on Our Rape Blog, the author's account of the aftermath of a violent sexual assault. By Mary Fraughton Have you ever played Hearts? It’s a card game. For our purposes, … [Read More...]

First Nations defending Lelu Island

The video: Lelu Island: “They will come.”

From Creekside: The B.C. provincial government is trying to green light the construction of a massive LNG terminal on Lelu Island in the Skeena Estuary -- Pacific Northwest LNG, backed by Malaysian … [Read More...]

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  • Fort McMurray: Shopping time!
  • From “Our Rape Blog”: Shooting the Moon
  • Electoral reform: Hashtag fresh thinking
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