The series will take a break over the Canada Day holiday, coming back July 15. In the meantime, check out the best of local literary experimentation at the Scream Literary Festival, happening July 2 – 13, 2009. www.thescream.ca
Enjoy the summer!
The series will take a break over the Canada Day holiday, coming back July 15. In the meantime, check out the best of local literary experimentation at the Scream Literary Festival, happening July 2 – 13, 2009. www.thescream.ca
Enjoy the summer!
Pivot is back June 17 with three women who write: Sonja Greckol, Kathryn Kuitenbrouwer and Betsy Trumpener. Don’t miss it!
Sonja Greckol’s work has appeared in Literary Review of Canada, Canadian Literature, Dalhousie Review, CV2, Canadian Woman Studies, Fiddlehead and Matrix. She coordinates poetry for Women and Environments International Magazine. She has taught college and university, studied order and disorder in jokes, done human rights and gender-based research and consulting, and continues to do local activism while she writes.
Kathryn Kuitenbrouwer is the author most recently of Perfecting. She also wrote The Nettle Spinner which was shortlisted for the Amazon.ca/Books in Canada First Novel Award and Way Up: stories, which won a Danuta Gleed Award. She is the magazine editor for Bookninja.com and teaches both at the University of Toronto, and online through the New York Times Knowledge Network.
Betsy Trumpener is an award-winning CBC News reporter, writer and radio documentary producer. She has lived in Iowa, Israel, Alberta, Ontario, Bavaria and the Black Forest. She now lives with her family between a wild swamp and a pipeline in Northern BC, where she covers the daily drama of British Columbia’s interior. Trumpener’s non-fiction and fiction have been published in the Guardian, Globe and Mail, This Magazine, NOW Magazine, Monday Magazine and the Malahat Review. She was the first annual writer-in-residence for the CBC arts show North by Northwest, and she has been awarded a Western Magazine Award for her magazine column, “North of Unreal,” a Jack Webster Award for Best Radio Feature, and a Jack Webster Africa Journalism Fellowship. The Butcher of Penetang (Caitlin Press, 2008) is her first book. It was shortlisted for the Writers’ Union of Canada’s Danuta Gleed Literary Award for short fiction earlier this year.
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
8 p.m. at the Press Club
850 Dundas Street West
Hosted by Carey Toane
PWYC.
Just a quick announcement that Marianne Apostolides has cancelled her appearance at Pivot tomorrow night. Please see post below for all the details on the three other readers on the bill.
Thanks!
Carey
Summer!
Marianne Apostolides is a writer and critic whose novel, Swim, explores the eroticism of language, food and family. Toronto’s Globe and Mail says the book is “handled with assured grace and dynamic lucidity, and gives much trust to the reader’s ability to move… through the nuance and harm of words.” Apostolides’ first book was published by W.W. Norton and translated into Spanish and Swedish. She lives in Toronto with her two children.
Su Croll’s first book, Worlda Mirth, was the winner of the Kalamalka New Writers competition, and was short-listed for a Gerald Lampert Award. Her latest book, Blood Mother, has just been short-listed for a Stephan G. Stephansson Award (the Alberta Poetry Prize) as well as the Canadian Author’s Association Poetry Award. She lives in Edmonton and is currently working on a novel.
Born in Ottawa, Canada’s glorious capital city, rob mclennan currently lives in Ottawa. The author of over a dozen trade books of poetry, fiction and non-fiction, his most recent titles are the poetry collections a compact of words (Salmon Publishing, 2009) and Gifts (Talonbooks, 2009). An editor and publisher, he runs above/ground press, Chaudiere Books (with Jennifer Mulligan), Poetics.ca (with Stephen Brockwell, poetics.ca) and the Ottawa poetry pdf annual ottawater (ottawater.com). He spent the 2007-8 academic year in Edmonton as writer-in-residence at the University of Alberta, and regularly posts reviews, essays, interviews and other notices at robmclennan.blogspot.com.
Steven Mayoff is originally from Montreal, has lived in Toronto for 17 years and currently makes his home in the bucolic splendor of Prince Edward Island. His fiction and poetry have appeared in journals across Canada, such as the Dalhousie Review, CV2, the Windsor Review, Grain, Filling Station and the Malahat Review, as well as magazines in the U.S., Paris, Ireland and Algeria. His first fiction collection, Fatted Calf Blues, was published this year by Turnstone Press. His website is www.stevenmayoff.ca
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
8 p.m. at the Press Club
850 Dundas Street West
Hosted by Carey Toane
PWYC.
Please join us for three fantastic readers to round off the month of May:
Kevin Connolly is a Toronto poet, editor, and arts journalist. Connolly’s first collection of poems, Asphalt Cigar (Coach House, 1995), was nominated for the Gerald Lampert Award. His third collection drift (Anansi, 2005), won the Trillium Book Award for Poetry, and his most recent book, Revolver (Anansi, 2008) is a finalist for this year’s Griffin Prize. He lives with his partner, novelist Gil Adamson, in Toronto’s east end.
Lisa Foad’s debut story collection, The Night Is A Mouth (Exile Editions, 2009), has been praised by the Globe and Mail as “a brand-new thing” – Foad writes “with courage and surprising panache.” And EYE Weekly, in its five-star review, declares, “her DeLillo-sized sentences create a linguistic tension that could cause the pages to flip autonomously.” Her creative work has appeared in Matrix, Exile: The Literary Quarterly, and Red Light: Superheroes, Sluts and Saints, and she contributes cultural commentary to a variety of publications, including the Globe And Mail, NOW Magazine and Xtra. Lisa Foad lives in Toronto and is at work on her first novel.
Nyla Matuk’s first book of poems, Oneiric, was published in February by Frog Hollow Press. Poems appear at the Greenboathouse Books archive of poets and in The Shore magazine, and her short fiction has been published in Event, Room of One’s Own and Alphabet City. Essays and journalism have appeared in Descant, Alphabet City, The Globe and Mail, Toronto Life, and numerous other magazines.
Note: Jordan Scott, previously listed, has had to cancel. Apologies for any inconvenience this may cause.
Wednesday, May 20, 2009
8 p.m. at the Press Club
850 Dundas Street West
Hosted by Carey Toane
PWYC
May kicks off with a very special Pivot featuring Pasha Malla, Camille Martin, and Stripmalling co-authors JP Fiorentino and Evan Munday. Join us!
Pasha Malla is the author of The Withdrawal Method, a book of stories, and All Our Grandfathers are Ghosts, a book of poems.
Camille Martin, a Toronto poet and collage artist, is the author of Sonnets (Shearsman Books, forthcoming) and Codes of Public Sleep (BookThug, 2007). Her poetry has been published in numerous journals in Canada, the United States, the U.K., and Australia. Her current work in progress is a long poem (working title: “The Evangeline Papers”) based on her Cajun/Acadian heritage and her recent visit to Nova Scotia, where she participated in an archaeological dig at Beaubassin and researched Acadian and Mik’maq history and culture. Her website is www.camillemartin.ca.
Jon Paul Fiorentino is a writer and editor. His first novel is Stripmalling (ECW, 2009). His most recent book of poetry is The Theory of the Loser Class (Coach House Books, 2006). He is the author of the poetry book Hello Serotonin (Coach House Books, 2004) and the humour book Asthmatica (Insomniac Press, 2005). His most recent editorial projects are the anthologies Career Suicide! Contemporary Literary Humour (DC Books, 2003) and Post-Prairie – a collaborative effort with Robert Kroetsch, (Talonbooks, 2005). He lives in Montreal where he teaches writing at Concordia University and is the editor of Matrix magazine.
Evan Munday is an illustrator whose work has appeared in books and magazines, including Toronto Life, This Magazine, Alternatives Journal and Broken Pencil. He is the publicist for Coach House Books and is currently at work on a graphic novel, Quarter-Life Crisis, set in a post-apocalyptic Toronto in which everyone except the twenty-five year-olds have died.
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
8 p.m. at the Press Club,
850 Dundas Street West
Hosted by Carey Toane
PWYC
Join us for the second and last Pivot of Poetry Month on April 22 with Stacey May Fowles, Liisa Ladouceur and Michelle Winters.
Stacey May Fowles is the current publisher of Shameless Magazine and the Circulation Director at The Walrus. Her first novel, Be Good, was published by Tightrope Books in 2007. This Magazine called it “probably the most finely realized small press novel to come out of Canada in the last year.” In fall 2008 she released an illustrated novel, Fear of Fighting, and staged a theatrical adaptation of it with Nightwood Theatre. Her writing has appeared in various magazines and has been widely anthologized in Nobody Passes: Rejecting The Rules of Gender and Conformity; First Person Queer; Yes Means Yes; and I.V. Lounge Nights.
Michelle Winters is a translator and technical writer from Saint John, New Brunswick. She is a founding member of Just in a Bowl Productions with whom she has co-written and performed two plays, Unsinkable and The Hungarian Suicide Duel. She devotes herself to fiction now, but still enjoys a nice set of stage directions.
Liisa Ladouceur is a poet and arts & entertainment reporter from Toronto who loves dead things and arcane words. She has performed her multimedia presentation of poetry based on street signs across North America, been published in the IndiePolitik anthology Strong Words: Year One (2006) and is the editor of Nuit Blanche: Poems for Late Nights (Royal Sarcophagus Society, 2007). Her first poetry collection, On Tenterhooks, was published by Burning Effigy Press in 2008. Her latest work is Alive! The Sideshow Sonnets, an illustrated collection of sonnets about carnival freaks published the House of Pomegrantes Press. http://www.therss.com/liisa
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
8 p.m. at the Press Club,
850 Dundas Street West
Hosted by Carey Toane
PWYC
Start April off with some exciting poetry and fiction from Elisabeth de Mariaffi, Derek McCormack and Andrew Steinmetz. Bring a friend!
Elisabeth de Mariaffi’s poetry has been published in a fat handful of Canadian journals, including the Antigonish Review, CV2, Descant, Prairie Fire and PRISM; she was also the recipient of the 2007 Lina Chartrand Award for poetry. Her first-ever published short story is appearing in the spring issue of The New Quarterly and new fiction is also forthcoming, at some undisclosed time, in the Fiddlehead. All of this proves, once and for all, that she is a two-trick pony; that’s right, a pony with two tricks. Elisabeth is an MFA student in the Guelph-Humber program.
Derek McCormack’s most recent novel is The Show That Smells (ECW Press, 2008). His last novel, The Haunted Hillbilly, was named a best book of the year by both the Globe & Mail and Village Voice, and was nominated for a Lambda Literary Award for Best Gay Fiction. He lives in Toronto.
Andrew Steinmetz strums the guitar and pushes a pen for a living. Steinmetz is the editor of Esplanade Books, the fiction imprint at Véhicule Press. He is the author of a memoir, Wardlife: The Apprenticeship of a Young Writer as a Hospital Clerk and two collections of poetry, Histories and Hurt Thyself. Eva’s Threepenny Theatre (Gaspereau Press) is his first novel. In an unusual fiction about family memoir, Steinmetz tells the story of his great-aunt Eva who performed in one of the first touring productions of Bertolt Brecht’s play, The Threepenny Opera, in 1928.
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
8 p.m. at the Press Club,
850 Dundas Street West
Hosted by Carey Toane
PWYC
March marches on with three readers with witty bios on March 25:
Jim Johnstone is the author of The Velocity of Escape (Guernica Editions, 2008). He is a two time winner of the E. J. Pratt Medal and Prize in Poetry and was shortlisted for the 2007 CBC Poetry Award. Recently, his work has appeared in periodicals such as The Antigonish Review, Descant, The Fiddlehead, Grain, The Malahat Review, Prairie Fire and Prism International. He is currently the editor of Misunderstandings Magazine, a literary journal he co-founded in 2005.
Born and raised in Toronto, Nathaniel G. Moore is a cultural pariah and experimental monster. His best book so far is Let’s Pretend We Never Met (Pedlar Press, 2007) which is like a novel in poems, all about the Latin poet Catullus. The book turns two this year. He is the co-editor of Toronto Noir. He considers himself the main event, the showstopper and the icon that can still go. He is terrifying.
Eva Moran is a SWF 5′ 6″ Montreal native living and working in Toronto. Eva is a non-smoker who rarely drinks. But make no mistake, she’s a spunky, fun and energetic Leo. Eva has her MA in English Literature from Concordia, is an aspiring boxer, and she works out six days a week. Eva enjoys running, yoga, and long bike rides. She adores petting puppy golden retrievers. Love her!
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
8 p.m. at the Press Club,
850 Dundas Street West
Hosted by Carey Toane
PWYC
March is the month of ems at Pivot, as we kick it off with three mmmarvelous readers:
Michael Fraser is a high school teacher, poet, and writer. He has been published in numerous journals such as Literary Review of Canada, The Paris Atlantic, and Caribbean Writer. He won the 2005 Toronto Star “Poem About Toronto” contest. His manuscript, The Serenity of Stone, won the 2007 Canadian Aid Literary Award and was published in 2008 by Bookland Press. He is the creator and director of the Plasticine Poetry Series.
Born in Italy, Michael Mirolla is a novelist, short story writer, poet and playwright who splits his time between Toronto and Montreal. Publications include two novels—Berlin and The Boarder, two short story collections—The Formal Logic of Emotion and Hothouse Loves & Other Tales, and a bilingual Italian-English poetry collection, Interstellar Distances/Distanze Interstellari. His story, “A Theory of Discontinuous Existence,” was selected for The Journey Prize Anthology, while another story, “The Sand Flea,” was nominated for The Pushcart Prize. His prose and poetry has appeared in journals and anthologies in Canada, the U.S. and Britain, including Event’s Peace & War Anthology, Telling Differences: New English Fiction from Quebec, Tesseracts 2: Canadian Science Fiction, the Collection of Italian-Canadian Fiction, and New Wave of Speculative Fiction Book 1.
Melissa Major is a poet, playwright, director and performer. Her writing has been published in the CanPlay, Sydney Law Society Journal, International Psychogeriatrics and Open Book Toronto. She has worked on almost forty stage productions and her own scripts have been produced in Canada, USA and Asia. She is currently completing an MFA in Creative Writing at University of Guelph here in Toronto.
Hosted by Carey Toane
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
8 p.m. at the Press Club,
850 Dundas Street West
PWYC.