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Why I\'m no Longer Talking topped a public poll of twenty books shortlisted in 2018 by the\\xa0UK Booksellers Association\\xa0as the most influential book written by a woman
We met at the Blue Met Literary Festival in Montreal (she was here to accept the Words to Change Prize, awarded to "the writer of a literary work that upholds the values of intercultural understanding and social inclusion", to talk about her book, about white people talking about racism, and about the prevalence and effects of systematic, structural racism in England and around the world.\\xa0
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We met a her home in Kingston, Ontario to talk about Both Hands, her biography of one of Canada\'s greatest publishers, Lorne Pierce (1890-1961) of Ryerson Press.\\xa0
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Cory Doctorow is an activist, science fiction author and co-editor of the blog Boing Boing. He is also a special advisor to the Electronic Frontier Foundation. He favours liberalising copyright laws and is a proponent of the Creative Commons organization, using some of their licences for his books, the most recent of which is called Radicalizing, four SF novellas "connected by social, technological, and economic visions of today and what America could be in the near, near future."
I met with Cory in Ottawa after he\'d appeared at the Ottawa International Writers Festival. We talk primarily about book publishing, the new EU copyright directive and the practice of writing Science Fiction.\\xa0
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Four of her novels have been translated into English by\\xa0Bitter Lemon Press, all of which have been adapted into feature films.\\xa0
We met at The Blue Met Literary Festival (Claudia was awarded the 2019 Premio Azul, Blue Met\\u2019s Spanish-language prize) in Montreal to talk about, among other things, Edgar Allan Poe, G.K. Chesterton and detective stories; literary prizes, and the difference between writing novels and television series screenplays.\\xa0
\\xa0
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Claudia Piñeiro is an Argentine novelist and television scriptwriter best known for writing literary crime novels, most of which are best sellers in Latin America. She was born in Buenos Aires and has won numerous literary prizes including the German LiBeraturpreis for Elena Sabe and the Clarin Prize for fiction for Thursday Night Widows.
Four of her novels have been translated into English by Bitter Lemon Press, all of which have been adapted into feature films.
We met at The Blue Met Literary Festival (Claudia was awarded the 2019 Premio Azul, Blue Met’s Spanish-language prize) in Montreal to talk about, among other things, Edgar Allan Poe, G.K. Chesterton and detective stories; literary prizes, and the difference between writing novels and television series screenplays.
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In 2000, Manguel purchased with his partner and renovated a medieval presbytery in the Poitou-Charentes region of France to house his 30,000 books. They left France for New York in 2015.
He has received many prizes, was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship and honorary doctorates from the universities of Li\\xe8ge, in Belgium, Anglia Ruskin in Cambridge, UK, and York and Ottawa in Canada. He is a Commandeur de l\\u2019Ordre des Arts et des Lettres (France).
We met in Montreal at the Blue Met Literary Festival to talk about his latest book Packing My Library (published by Yale University Press). The conversation turns to Canadian politics and Jody Wilson Raybould at about the 42 minute mark and rages on and off from there to the finish. It\'s a passionate exchange about justice and honesty, and how literature informs real life.\\xa0
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Born in Buenos Aires in 1948, Alberto Manguel grew up in Tel-Aviv, where his father served as the first Argentinian ambassador to Israel. At sixteen, while working at the Pygmalion bookshop in Buenos Aires, he was asked by the blind Jorge Luis Borges to read aloud to him at his home. Manguel left Argentina for Europe before the horrors of the 'disappeared' began, and just after the events of May 1968. During the 1970s he lived a peripatetic life in France, England, Italy, and Tahiti, reviewing, translating, editing, and always reading. In the 1980s he moved to Toronto, Canada where he lived and raised his three children for almost twenty years. He became a Canadian citizen and continues to identify his nationality as first and foremost Canadian.
In 2000, Manguel purchased with his partner and renovated a medieval presbytery in the Poitou-Charentes region of France to house his 30,000 books. They left France for New York in 2015.
He has received many prizes, was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship and honorary doctorates from the universities of Liège, in Belgium, Anglia Ruskin in Cambridge, UK, and York and Ottawa in Canada. He is a Commandeur de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres (France).
We met in Montreal at the Blue Met Literary Festival to talk about his latest book Packing My Library (published by Yale University Press). The conversation turns to Canadian politics and Jody Wilson Raybould at about the 42 minute mark and rages on and off from there to the finish. It's a passionate exchange about justice and honesty, and how literature informs real life.
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David Moscrop is a political theorist and SSHRC postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Communication at the University of Ottawa. He studies democratic deliberation, political decision-making, and digital media, and is a contributing columnist for the Washington Post, and a writer for Maclean\'s Magazine\\xa0He also provides regular political commentary for television and radio. His first book Too Dumb for Democracy? Why We Make Bad Political Decisions and How We Can Make Better Ones was published by Goose Lane Editions in March 2019.\\xa0
We met at the University of Ottawa to discuss his book, just in time for Canada\'s 2019 Federal election. Among other things we talk about the story behind the book, making smart voting decisions, Twitter, literary agent Chris Bucci, CBC Ideas; good, rational, autonomous thinking; diverse, trusted news sources; emotional biases, negative political advertising, threats to democracy, partisanship, SNC Lavalin, Jody Wilson Raybould, the importance of investing time in order to understanding politics, bots, good citizenship, voting on principle versus strategically, party discipline, and adopting proportional representation.
And for you non-political types: it\'s a lot more interesting than this makes it sound.\\xa0
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Mark Abley in his fascinating biography\\xa0Conversations with a Dead Man, The Legacy of Duncan Campbell Scott, explains why.\\xa0
I met with him at his home in Point Claire near Montreal - where the ghost of Scott appeared. We talk, among others things, about\\xa0boarding schools, Canada\'s residential school system, "genocide," the Department of Indian Affairs, Sir John A. MacDonald, forms of biography, assimilation, the "Indian Problem," and Scott\'s poetry, notably a sonnet to an \\u201cOnondaga Madonna.\\u201d\\xa0 \\xa0
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I met with its author Charles Foran to talk about its subject Mordecai Richler. The guts, aggression, honesty and pride of the man - a man who did things, who wrote to stimulate conversation, and argument, who was socially engaged, who asked hard, uncomfortable questions. We also discuss Richler\\u2019s similarities to Pierre Trudeau. His taking on a whole movement over Quebec\\u2019s sign laws; his desire to write the best novel ever written, least one book that would last; about Montreal, its tensions, and his loyalty to it; and about Canadian culture, digitization and the loss of literary life.
This interview was conducted in June, 2012
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We met at the Falena bookstore/wine bar in the\\xa0Chacarita neighbourhood of Buenos Aires to talk literary tourism over a glass. Here\'s our conversation (the bookstore we reference that was once a performing arts theater, then a cinema, is called\\xa0El Ateneo\\xa0Grand Splendid).\\xa0
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Most important viz our purposes: he was the founding president of the Society for the History of Authorship, Reading and Publishing (SHARP), and for many years, co-editor of its journal \'Book History\'.\\xa0
I met with Jonathan at SHARP\'S annual conference in Amherst, MA #Sharp19, to talk about his role in establishing the society. We also chat about SHARP\'S history, purpose, future, and noticeable vibrancy, about the importance of history text books; Gone with the Wind; JFK, and Playboy magazine (okay, the last only in passing).\\xa0 \\xa0
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Ana Mari\\u0301a Cabanellas began her career as a lawyer, after which she joined the family-owned publishing company Editorial Heliasta as a partner. In 1979, she became President of Editorial Claridad\\xa0which specializes in legal dictionaries, as well as fiction, philosophy and history. In 2006, Ms Cabanellas founded UnaLuna, which publishes children\\u2019s books.\\xa0
Over the years she has been extremely active in industry associations. For example, she is currently Vice- president of CADRA (Centro de Administracio\\u0301n de Derechos Reprogra\\u0301ficos Asociacio\\u0301n Civil), Argentina\\u2019s RRO, and Chair of the Latin American and Caribbean Committee of IFRRO. Previously, she served as President of the Ca\\u0301mara Argentina del Libro for seven years, was Secretary and then President of GIE from 1991-2004, and President of the International Publishers Association from 2004-2008.
She speaks frequently at publishing events around the world. In 2012, the Buenos Aires Book Fair named her one of the \\u201c50 most influential people in publishing in the Spanish Language.\\u201d
We met at her offices in BA to talk about her career, her vision, publishing in Argentina, copyright, peace, education and children\'s books, among many other things.\\xa0
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Series: Biblio File in Buenos Aires
Liliana Heker was born in 1943 in Buenos Aires. Her\\xa0writing career began at age 17 thanks to a letter she wrote\\xa0Abelardo Castillo\\xa0requesting a job at a magazine he edited.\\xa0During Argentina\'s so called Dirty War in the seventies and eighties,\\xa0she defiantly wrote and edited several well known left-wing literary journals, subtly protesting her country\'s violent, repressive regime, while defending the practice of literature. She also famously engaged in correspondence with\\xa0Julio Cort\\xe1zar, arguing that resistance to tyranny is better staged at home where the people can read your work and take faith from it, rather than from abroad.\\xa0
This from Biblioasis: "She is the author of two novels and numerous books of short stories and essays, in addition to being a founder of two important Argentine literary magazines. Her collected short stories were published in Spanish in 2004 and translated into Hebrew; her stories have been included in anthologies in many countries and languages. Her collection, The Stolen Party and Other Stories, is available in English. Her novel\\xa0The End of the Story\\xa0was not only a literary success, but a cultural event that provoked controversy and avid discussion of how best to remember the years of the Argentine dictatorship." \\xa0 I met Liliana at her home in Buenos Aires to talk about all of the above, and more. \\xa0 Her collection of short stories, Please Talk to Me, translated by Alberto Manguel and Miranda France, is available from Yale University Press
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Tania Craan\\u2019s career as an art director and designer spans more than three decades. For the past 25 years, she has run her freelance graphic design studio. She started her career working as a designer at Penguin Books Canada and then went on to McClelland & Stewart where she became art director. In addition to books, she has designed stamps for Canada Post, three Ontario Provincial Government inquiry reports, and annual reports for a variety of corporate clients. She "blends the disciplines of publication design with an appreciation of how readers actually navigate pages and their content \\u2014 into visually pleasing, highly readable communication pieces."
I met with Tania at her home near Kingston, Ontario. We talk in this interview about her career - notably her time with McClelland and Stewart - her transition from employee to freelancer, and a selection of the books she is most proud of having designed.
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McBride\'s second novel\\xa0The Lesser Bohemians\\xa0was published in September 2016.\\xa0Set in Camden Town in the 1990s, it tells the story of the turbulent relationship between an eighteen year old drama student and a thirty-eight year old actor.
In 2017 McBride was awarded the inaugural Creative Fellowship of the Beckett Research Centre,\\xa0University of Reading.
We met in Montreal - where she was, at the invitation of the School of Irish Studies at Concordia University - to talk about her work, and her experience getting it published.\\xa0
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Eimear McBride is an Irish novelist whose debut novel, A Girl Is a Half-formed Thing, won the inaugural Goldsmiths Prize in 2013 and the 2014 Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction. She wrote the book in six months, but it took nine years to get it published. Galley Beggar Press of Norwich finally picked it up in 2013. The novel is written in a stream of consciousness-like style and tells the story of a young woman's complex relationship with her family.
McBride's second novel The Lesser Bohemians was published in September 2016. Set in Camden Town in the 1990s, it tells the story of the turbulent relationship between an eighteen year old drama student and a thirty-eight year old actor.
In 2017 McBride was awarded the inaugural Creative Fellowship of the Beckett Research Centre, University of Reading.
We met in Montreal - where she was, at the invitation of the School of Irish Studies at Concordia University - to talk about her work, and her experience getting it published.
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