Posts filed under 'Publishers Group Canada'

Toronto Public Library picks Groundwood, Tradewind titles for First & Best 2009

Crocodiles Play, by Robert Heidbreder
978-1896580890 | $16.95 hc | in stock
Tradewind Books / Publishers Group Canada (Raincoast)

When Stella Was Very, Very Small, by Marie-Louise Gay
9780888999061 | $18.95 hc | in stock
Groundwood Books (HarperCollins)

Mother Goose, by Celia Lottridge
978-0888999337 | $9.95 boardbook | in stock
Groundwood Books (HarperCollins)

Crocodiles Play, When Stella Was Very, Very Small and Mother Goose have been selected by the Toronto Public Library as First & Best books of 2009 as part of TPL’s Ready for Reading program. They promote the books in an ad for the Globe and Mail, in a TPL flyer, and in a bookmark.

Crocodiles Play

 

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Mother Goose

Add comment November 27, 2009

Warren Moon on TSN’s Off the Record, CBC’s As It Happens

Never Give Up On Your Dream, by Warren Moon
9780306818240 | $31.95 hc | in stock
Da Capo Press / Publishers Group Canada (Raincoast)

Warren Moon will be in Toronto next month, and will be a featured guest on TSN’s Off the Record and will be interviewed on CBC Radio’s As It Happens.

Add comment October 19, 2009

The Case for Books on CBC’s Writers & Company

The Case For Books, by Robert Darnton
9781586488260 | $30.50 hc | available October
Public Affairs / Publishers Group Canada (Raincoast)

Robert Darnton’s interview with Eleanor Wachtel for Writers & Company aired on Sunday, Oct. 18, and will repeat on the afternoon of Wednesday, Oct. 21.

Add comment October 19, 2009

Eggers’ The Wild Things coverage in Toronto Star, Globe & Mail, more

The Wild Things, by Dave Eggers
978-1934781616 | $24.95 hc | temporarily out of stock
McSweeney’s / Publishers Group Canada (Raincoast)

Now that the movie is in theatres, we will start seeing reviews of the Dave Eggers novelization of the film. Reviews are expected in The Toronto Star, The Globe & Mail, National Post and Chatelaine.

EYE Weekly mentioned the book in their review of the film, and will likely cover it again before the holidays. Tribute.ca has also posted an article about the book.

Add comment October 19, 2009

Coteau Books receives nine Saskatchewan Book Award nominations

Coteau Books has received nine nominations in five categories for the 2009 Saskatchewan Book Awards:

Nominated in the categories Book of the Year, Regina, and Award for Publishing:

Legacy of Stone, by Marg Hyrniuk, Frank Korvemaker and Larry Easton
978-1550503692 | $39.95 hc | in stock
Coteau Books / Publishers Group Canada (Raincoast)

Nominated in the categories Book of the Year and Fiction:

Euphoria, by Connie Gault
978-1550504095 | $21.00 pb | in stock
Coteau Books / Publishers Group Canada (Raincoast)

Nominated in the category Award for Publishing:

The Knife Sharpener’s Bell, by Rhea Tregebov
978-1550504088 | $21.00 pb | in stock
Coteau Books / Publishers Group Canada (Raincoast)

Nominated in the category Children’s Literature:

Fight For Justice, by Lori Saigeon
978-1550504057 | $7.95 pb | in stock
Coteau Books / Publishers Group Canada (Raincoast)

Nominated in the category Children’s Literature:

Danger in Dead Man’s Mine, by Dave Glaze
978-1550504163 | $8.95 pb | in stock
Coteau Books / Publishers Group Canada (Raincoast)

Add comment October 19, 2009

CBC’s The National, Toronto Star cover the Taqwacore movement

The Taqwacores, by Michael Muhammad Knight
978-1593762292 | $16.95 pb | in stock
Soft Skull Press / Publishers Group Canada (Raincoast)

The Taqwacores, by Kim Badawi
978-1576875001 | $45.50 hc | in stock
powerHouse Books / Publishers Group Canada (Raincoast)

Both The Toronto Star and the CBC’s The National ran stories about the Taqwacore movement, covering both Kim Badawi’s documentary film and Michael Muhammad Knight’s novel.

From the CBC’s online article:

They’ve got bands named Vote Hezbollah and Secret Trial Five. They’re Iranian-Texans, Vancouver-based lesbian Pakistanis and the converted son of a white supremacist wife-beater. They pump their fists into the air and chant “Allahu Akbar!”

And they’re punk Muslims.

Huh?

That was Omar Majeed’s reaction, too. He’s a Montreal-based filmmaker and his new film Taqwacore: The Birth of Punk Islam hits theatres in Montreal and Toronto this week after runs at film festivals in Vancouver and Montreal.

“It kind of blew my mind,” he said of his discovery of the sub-culture. “I kept thinking to myself, ‘Wow, if I’d only known about this when I was a teenager. What an effect it would have had on me.”‘

Majeed discovered the scene as he pondered what it meant to be a Muslim in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in the United States.

He wanted to hear from different voices than the Muslim fundamentalists often seen in the media or the “mainstream Muslim organizations that were basically just saying, ‘Muslim is all good, peace and love’ and all that stuff.”

Most Muslims, Majeed believed, were somewhere in the middle and “felt that voice hadn’t been represented yet.” Enter the Islamic punk movement, known as Taqwacore.

The director said he’s never been particularly religious, but was turned on to the book The Taqwacores by American convert Michael Muhammad Knight.

Knight, who was raised by a racist father and an abused mother, created a radical bunch of Muslim misfits to populate his book only to find that a whole community of real Muslim youths had embraced it and turned fiction into fact.

Majeed hooked up with Knight and went on a voyage of discovery across the United States and Pakistan as the punks tried to spread their message and get gigs for their bands, culminating in efforts to stage a mass outdoor show in a sketchy area of Lahore, Pakistan.

Add comment October 15, 2009

Sherman Alexie on Writers & Company, reviews in Globe & Mail and Winnipeg Free Press

War Dances, by Sherman Alexie
9780802119193 | $28.95 hc | in stock
Grove Press / Publishers Group Canada (Raincoast)

Sherman Alexie’s interview on CBC Radio’s Writers & Company was broadcast on Oct. 11 and again on Oct. 14. Reviews of his new story collection War Dances are expected soon in both The Globe and Mail and the Winnipeg Free Press.

Add comment October 15, 2009

Governor General’s Shortlists Announced

The Canada Council has announced the shortlists for the 2009 Governor General’s Awards, and I’m thrilled to have nine titles on the shortlists:

Fiction:

The Mistress of Nothing, by Kate Pullinger
978-1552787984 | $24.95 pb | in stock
McArthur & Co. (HarperCollins)

Non-Fiction:

The Cello Suites, by Eric Siblin
978-0887842221 | $29.95 hc | in stock
House of Anansi (HarperCollins)

Drama:

Where the Blood Mixes, by Kevin Loring
978-0889226081 | $16.95 pb | in stock
Talon Books / Publishers Group Canada (Raincoast)

Another Home Invasion, by Joan MacLeod
978-0889226227 | $16.95 pb | in stock
Talon Books / Publishers Group Canada (Raincoast)
Children’s Literature – Illustration:

Bella’s Tree, by Janet Russell, illustrated by Jirina Marton
978-0888998705 | $19.95 hc | in stock
Groundwood Books (HarperCollins)

My Great Big Mamma, by Olivier Ka, illustrated by Luc Melanson
978-0888999429 | $18.95 hc | in stock
Groundwood Books (HarperCollins)
Alego, by Ningeokuluk Teevee
978-0888999436 | $17.95 hc | in stock
Groundwood Books (HarperCollins)
Translation – French to English:

A Slight Case of Fatigue, by Stephane Bourguignon, translated by Phyllis Aronoff and Howard Scott
978-0889225961 | $18.95 pb | in stock
Talon Books / Publishers Group Canada (Raincoast)

Empire of Desire, by Thierry Hentsch, translated by Fred A. Reed
978-0889225879 | $29.95 pb | in stock
Talon Books / Publishers Group Canada (Raincoast)

Add comment October 14, 2009

Daniel Goldhagen lecture to be taped for As It Happens

Worse Than War, by Daniel Goldhagen
9781586487690 | $37.95 hc | available October
Public Affairs / Publishers Group Canada (Raincoast)

Daniel Goldhagen’s lecuture in Toronto was taped for broadcast by the CBC, and part of it was aired on CBC Radio’s As It Happens on Oct. 16.

Add comment October 9, 2009

Love in Infant Monkeys gets 5 star review in EYE

Love in Infant Monkeys, by Lydia Millet
9781593762520 | $17.50 pb | in stock
Soft Skull Press / Publishers Group Canada (Raincoast)

Lydia Millet’s new collection of short stories has been given the full five stars in EYE Weekly:

Review by Brian Joseph Davis  
October 07, 2009

In reviewing this collection of short stories, I’m tempted to type the 10 words, “Lydia Millet is the greatest American author of her generation” 50 times to fill up this space and just be done with it. In reality, however, I am paid to justify things beyond giddy fandom and, I’ll admit it, professional jealousy.

Just as you realize that she is writing about Madonna Ciccone in the opening story “Sexing the Pheasant,” Millet has, with her economical eloquence, already set up everything needed for a consonant arc (a superficial woman shoots a pheasant and confronts death, superficially, on her superficially British estate) as well as the common theme of the collection: encounters between celebrities and animals based loosely on factual accounts. It’s a perfect collision point to study human vanity imposing itself on nature.

This is why Millet is the greatest American author of her generation. She breaks rules by turning author polemic into poetry while at the same time allowing the kind of characters most writers wouldn’t touch to own the stories outright.

Witness her capturing Madonna’s charming crudity and blitheness in service of the story: “The best fags were all English fags,” Madonna broods. “Englishmen were the Ur-faggots, pretty much. All other fags in the world were pale imitations of real English fags. This was the land of homos; even the straight men were fags here. One reason she liked it so much. In the US guys were basically rapists.”

Stories like “Jimmy Carter’s Rabbit” and “Chomsky, Rodents” (Noam Chomsky pitching a hamster condo at a dump frequented by Cape Cod intellectuals) feature their famous subjects as protagonists, yet when Millet moves away from star power her writing really gets under the skin. “Sir Henry,” a tale of a dog walker in the employ of David Hasselhoff, is a subtly unnerving and wrenching day-in-the-life of a person charged with giving four-legged fulfillment to C-list celebrity ornaments.

At her best, Millet is a writer of ecologies, both traditional and, in Love In Infant Monkeys, cultural. Many creative-writing-grad types will tell you to avoid using fiction to explore big ideas but a more specific warning should be to avoid only certain overdone big ideas. Millet’s big ideas are always starting points that allow good writing to follow, naturally.

Add comment October 9, 2009

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