2010 Reader`s Guide
Transcription
2010 Reader`s Guide
TORONTO READING one BOOK KEEP Join the library’s city-wide book club and read More by Austin Clarke. FESTIVAL 2010 April 1-30 keeptorontoreading.ca Program and One Book Reader’s Guide presented by Toronto Public L i b r a ry A CELEBRATION OF ALL THE BOOKS WE LOVE keeptorontoreading.ca Welcome to keep toronto Reading 2010 Welcome from the Mayor Welcome to the fifth fantastic year of the Library’s Keep Toronto Reading. Since this wonderful festival began, I have been wowed by our city’s passion for books in all their forms, and how Torontonians have come together to read, discuss and celebrate books and literary culture in our city. I know that passion will Welcome from the City Librarian & the Board Chair continue this year, as the Library invites us all to share the books we love. the role of fathers in our families; and contemporary race relations. I particularly look forward to sharing this year’s One Book, Austin Clarke’s More. This celebrated and compelling novel – winner of the 2009 Toronto Book Award – strikes me as the perfect community read. It’s filled with the sights and sounds of the city. And it offers so much to discuss and debate – the new immigrant experience; the portrayal of black Canadians in the media; Please join me in participating in this year’s Keep Toronto Reading, and in our One Book initiative. Help me celebrate our rich literary culture and the communities that make our city great. Toronto Public Library thanks all of our 2010 Keep Toronto Reading sponsors and partners. Mayor David Miller Media Sponsors: in this wonderful novel, and we hope you’ll join the discussion, either at one of our many One Book events, through your own book club or online. Every day, in every neighbourhood in the city, Toronto Public Library offers free access to books and culture – whether you borrow books, music or video from your local branch, or visit us online. Once a year, though, we host a special festival – Keep Toronto Reading – where we invite you to join us in celebrating the books you love. This April, come out and meet an author, listen to poetry, find out why vampire fiction is so popular, enjoy some food and wine, or join in a book exchange. And bring the kids to meet TVO’s Gisèle, or take part in some hands-on activities provided by Toronto’s top museums. And of course we invite you to get on the same page with your fellow Torontonians by reading our One Book, More, by Austin Clarke. There is so much to talk about Come to the library this April, and share the books you love as we celebrate our fifth year of Keep Toronto Reading. Jane Pyper, City Librarian Matthew Church, Library Board Chair Program Partners: spacing 2 3 KEEP TORONTO This April at the Library is all about sharing the books you love. READING FESTIVAL 2010 Join us for a month-long celebration of the joy of reading with free special events all over town. Share the Books You Love 99 journals around the city. If you find one, pick it up, write about a book you love, and pass it on! Bring a book you love to our book exchange at the Appel Salon, have a drink and get ready to swap reads! Alexander McCall Smith Catherine Gildiner Guy Gavriel Kay Jack Whyte Margaret Wente Michael Crummey and more. April 1-30 We’re scattering Ian McEwan Pick up a recommended reading bookmark at your local branch. Write a short review of a book you love on the back and tuck it into a book you return. Celebrate the Books Kids Love • TVO’s Gisèle is bringing her Book Club to a branch near you. • Toronto’s top museums bring books to life with crafts, games and activities at library branches around the city. • Plus puppet shows, storytelling and more. Share the Love Online Visit us online for event listings, contests, recommended readings, videos, interactive fun, and more. Make a one-minute video review about a book you love. Post it on YouTube and tag it with Keep Toronto Reading. one KEEP TORONTO READING 2010 BOOK Meet the Writers You Love Join our city-wide book club this April and read Austin Clarke’s More. Celebrate More • Join our One Book launch with dramatic readings, an interview with Austin Clarke and…More. • Head to The Real Jerk restaurant for a delicious More menu • Hear a panel discussion on the book’s themes of parenthood, abandonment and the immigrant experience in More • Attend More book talks with critic Donna Bailey Nurse • Win dinner with Austin Clarke for your book club • At keeptorontoreading.ca, watch videos of famous authors, celebrities, and everyday Torontonians talking about the books they love, and then create your own. • At keeptorontoreading.ca/ onebook, read a virtual exerpt of Austin Clarke’s More, listen to a dramatic reading of the book, or explore an interactive map of Toronto as seen by More’s Idora Morrison. • Follow us on Twitter or Facebook for updates. 4 5 From book swaps to readings, cooking demos to crafts, we’ve got something for everyone with more than 80 events around the city. free special events, all over town Graphically Speaking: Jeffrey Brown’s Undeleted Scenes One of this decade’s most celebrated cartoonists launches his newest work. Monday, April 26, 6:30 pm North York Central Library Food We Love The eh List Author Series Meet the Canadian writers everyone’s reading, including Michael Crummey, Linden MacIntyre and Jack Whyte. Eight locations across the city. An evening with Food Network host and chef Anna Olson. Thursday, April 8, 6:30 pm, York Woods Share the Books You Love Book Exchange: Bring a book you love and prepare to swap it with a local celebrity. Moderated by Misha Glouberman of Trampoline Hall. Cash bar opens at 6 pm. Thursday, April 8, 7 pm Toronto Reference Library 6 Win dinner with Austin Clarke for your book club! Enter at any branch. 7 Adult and Youth Programs Tuesday, April 6 More Food night at The Real Jerk One Book Kickoff Celebrate More with Austin Clarke at The Real Jerk Caribbean Restaurant. Join a cooking demonstration! Find out where to shop and what to buy for a great Caribbean home cookup. Music, dramatic readings by Trey Anthony, onstage interview with Austin Clarke. 7 pm, Toronto Reference Library, Appel Salon The eh List: Catherine Gildiner Reading from the latest Installment of her memoir, After the Falls. 7 pm, Taylor Memorial Let’s Talk Food Local food columnist and chef Eric Vellend shares his favourite foods, recipes and local restaurants. 7 pm, Davenport Wednesday, April 7 The eh List: Margaret Wente Globe and Mail columnist Margaret Wente reads from You Can’t Say that in Canada! 12:30 pm, Toronto Reference Library, Atrium 6 pm, The Real Jerk, 709 Queen St. East (at Broadview) 416-463-6055 Poems We Love (and know not why) Toronto’s Poet Laureate, Dionne Brand, hosts a panel of poets including Lynn Crosbie, Paul Vermeersch and Glen Downie as they reveal the inner workings of the poems they love. 7 pm, Toronto Reference Library Atrium 150th Anniversary of the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam Actor David Calderisi recites the celebrated poem translated by Edward Fitzgerald. 7 pm, Beaches Food We Love An evening with Food Network host and chef Anna Olson. 6:30 pm, York Woods Friday, April 9 One Book Talk Join writer and critic Donna Bailey Nurse for a discussion of More and Austin Clarke’s body of work. 2 pm, Malvern Thursday, April 8 Meet Poet Desi Di Nardo Di Nardo will read from her latest book of poetry, The Plural of Some Things. 2 pm, North York Central Library BSR: Bring, Share, Read for Teens Bring your favourite book, graphic book, comic, magazine or newspaper article and create a collage of the materials to share with others. Prizes! 4 pm, Gerrard/Ashdale Share the Books You Love – Book Exchange Bring a book you love and prepare to swap it with local celebs including Damian Abraham. Moderated by Misha Glouberman (Trampoline Hall) 7 pm. Cash bar opens at 6, Toronto Reference Library, Appel Salon 8 Are you on Facebook? Share the books you love by updating your status with a review of the book you’re reading, or an all-time fave. Then link to our website. Update often and spread the word! torontopubliclibrary.ca/facebook Saturday, April 10 Tea & Books for Everyone Borrow staff’s all-time favourite books, make a bookmark, and enjoy refreshments. Tuesday, April 13 The eh List: Jack Whyte Reading from Order in Chaos, the final instalment in his immensely popular “Templar Trilogy.” 7 pm, North York Central Library Good Reads Book Club Rita Cox, internationally renowned storyteller, reads from More by Austin Clarke and participates in a discussion of the novel. 7 pm, Mt. Pleasant One Book Talk Join writer and critic Donna Bailey Nurse for a discussion of More and Austin Clarke’s body of work. 7 pm, Bloor/Gladstone Meet Jill Edmondson Local author Jill Edmondson reads from her newly published mystery, Blood and Groom. 7 pm, Jones Meet Pat Capponi Author of the mystery Last Stop Sunnyside. Refreshments will be served. Limit of 40 people. 7 pm, Port Union 11 am, Agincourt 9 We’re scattering 99 journals around the city - one for every Toronto Public Library branch. If you find a journal, write about a book you love, and pass it on! We’ll collect the results and publish them in an online booklist. Wednesday, April 14 Thursday, April 15 Performance Poetry Sunday, April 18 Take a Tasty Tour of China! The eh List: John Bemrose Ian McEwan Renowned traveller and cookbook author Naomi Duguid takes you on a culinary tour of China. Reading from The Last Woman, which deals with wounds and losses, both human and environmental. Featuring Spoken Word Artist Michelle Muir. An evening for adults and teens. 2 pm, Guildwood 2 pm, Richview Meet Maureen Jennings The eh List: Jack Whyte Meet Sharon Doyle Driedger Reading from Order in Chaos, the final instalment in his immensely popular “Templar Trilogy.” Local author Driedger reads from An Irish Heart. Popular mystery writer visits the branch. Join writer and critic Donna Bailey Nurse for a discussion of More and Austin Clarke’s body of work. 7 pm, Don Mills Monday, April 19 2 pm, Elmbrook Park (Not so Nice) Italian Girls We Love Mysteries Reading with Your Children Toronto women poets reveal their not so nice sides. With Desi Di Nardo, Giovanna Patriarca and Giovanna Riccio. Vicki Delany discusses her latest mystery, Winter of Secrets. Followed by a tour of the Arthur Conan Doyle Collection. 7 pm, Spadina Road 7 pm, Toronto Reference Library, Beeton Auditorium Join Ruowen Wang, a ChineseCanadian children’s author, for an informative session on how to turn a child into a lifelong reader. Program in English & Mandarin. 6:30 pm, Agincourt Books, Food & Wine Chef Lucy Waverman and Wine Doctor Edward Finstein guide you through three delicious tastings. Limited tickets are $35, on sale March 8. To order: torontopubliclibrary.ca/appelsalon. Presented with The Cookbook Store (cook-book.com) and Authentic Wine and Spirits Merchants (awsm.ca). 6:00 pm, Toronto Reference Library, Appel Salon 2 pm, Toronto Reference Library, Appel Salon 7 pm, Long Branch 7 pm, S. Walter Stewart One Book Talk 6:30 pm, Humberwood On stage with Ian Brown. Part of the Globe and Mail Open House Festival. Tickets required (www. randomhouse.ca/openhouse). The eh List: Guy Gavriel Kay Friday, April 16 Meet Martha Baillie Reading from Under Heaven, at this title’s world-wide launch. Meet the author of The Incident Report, set in a fictitious library near you. 7 pm, Toronto Reference Library, Atrium 2 pm, Eatonville More: A Taste of the Caribbean Friday Nights with Diaspora Dialogues Experience the savoury tastes of the Caribbean as made by Claire Bisram, along with a discussion of Austin Clarke’s More. Refreshments served – bring your own fire extinguisher! 7 pm, Brookbanks Readings by Edeet Ravel, Glenn Sumi, Julia Zarankin, Kerri Sakamoto, Yiwei Hu and Yvette Nolan. Special short performances by Martha Baillie, Fides Krucker, Nik Beeson and Waawaate Fobister. Tuesday, April 20 Zorgamazoo: Rhyme & Rhyme Local author Robert Paul Weston discusses the fulfillment and frustration of being a poet. 1:30 pm, Palmerston Poetry Reading Allan Rose, Toronto poet and teacher, reads selections from The Greatest Canadian Love Poem and Other Treasures of the Heart. 2 pm Jane/Sheppard 7 pm, Palmerston 10 11 Book Swap: If you love a book, set it free…bring a book you love April 8th, at 7 pm to the Toronto Reference Library, Appel Salon, and get ready to swap with fellow book lovers! Poetry Out Loud! Poetry lovers of all ages are invited to participate. Pick a poem you can read in five minutes or less! 6:30 pm, Beaches The eh List: Michael Crummey Reading from his new book, Galore, a multi-generational family saga. 7 pm, Barbara Frum The eh List: Margaret Wente Globe and Mail columnist Margaret Wente reads from You Can’t Say That in Canada! 7 pm, Runnymede Hard Surface: In Search of the Canadian Road Peter Unwin, popular Canadian history writer and author of In Search of the Canadian Road, provides a reading, with musical accompaniment. 7 pm, High Park Meet Cathy Buchanan Buchanan presents an illustrated talk about the story behind her novel, The Day the Falls Stood Still. 7 pm, Beaches The eh List: Michael Crummey Monday, April 26 Featuring author/chef Judy Lynn Fleming. Graphically Speaking 2010: Jeffrey Brown’s Undeleted Scenes 6:30 pm, York Woods The Toronto Comic Arts Festival (torontocomics.com) presents Jeffrey One Book: Where are the Men? Brown, one of the most celebrated autobiographical cartoonists of the Panel discussion on black families, past decade. He returns to Toronto to youth and gangs, featuring Dalton Higgins (More than a Haircut); Audette launch his newest work, Undeleted Scenes. Shephard (United Mothers Against Violence Everywhere) and Pastor 6:30 pm, North York Central Library, Orim Meikle (Toronto Argos Stop the Auditorium Violence Foundation). Moderator: Norman Otis Richmond. Tuesday, April 27 7 pm, Maria Shchuka Thursday, April 22 Tea & Books Wednesday, April 21 Changing to a Raw Food Lifestyle Award-winning Toronto author Elizabeth J. Duncan reads from The Cold Light of Mourning. Books We Love with Dave Bidini Local author and musician Dave Bidini shares the books he loves and why he loves them. 7 pm, Bloor/Gladstone Meet Sandra Sabatini Meet the author of Dante’s War. 2 pm, Deer Park One Book Talk Join writer and critic Donna Bailey Nurse for a discussion of More and Austin Clarke’s body of work. Reading from his new book, Galore, a multi-generational family saga. 2 pm, Alderwood 12:30 pm, Toronto Reference Library, Atrium Earth Day Book Exchange Celebrate Earth Day with a book swap. The author of The Outlander talks about books she loves. 7 pm, North York Central Library The eh List: Linden MacIntyre 2 pm, Beaches 7 pm, Morningside Meet Cordelia Strube MacIntyre reads from his prescient Giller prize-winning novel, The Bishop’s Man. Tea and Murder Friday, April 23 With special guest author Maureen Jennings. Friday Nights with Diaspora Dialogues Local author Strube introduces and reads from her new coming-of-age novel, Lemon. 7 pm, North York Central Library Books We Love with Gil Adamson 2 pm, Wychwood Spoken Word Poetry for Teens Join Matthew Jones for a two-hour performance and workshop. 6 pm, Agincourt 7 pm, Beaches Musical performance by Brenda MacIntyre. Excerpted play reading of Spin Alley by Donna-Michelle St. Bernard. Readings by Jaspreet Singh and Monica Rosas. Spoken word by Heather Hermant. 7 pm, Palmerston 12 13 On Twitter? Tweet about a book you’re reading or an all-time fave. Add the hash tag #ktr2010. Tweet often and spread the word! KTR for Kids Wednesday, April 28 Thursday, April 29 Saturday, April 3 The eh List: José Latour We Love Vampires Graphically Speaking for Kids Latour reads from Crime of Fashion, a tale of heart-stopping action, deceit, and desperation. Fantasy writers Tanya Huff (Vicky Nelson, Investigator vampire series) and Robert Knowlton, world authority on dark fantasy, sink their teeth into this genre’s enduring popularity. Followed by a tour of the Merril Collection of Science Fiction, Speculation and Fantasy. Comic book creators Brian Evinou and Julie Faulkner teach kids 12 and under to create their own comic strip. Space is limited; register at 416395-5630. Presented with Toronto Comic Arts Festival (torontocomics. com). 12:30 pm, Northern District Short Story Contest Gala Meet the winners of the Toronto Star short story contest. MAP – Museum of Inuit Art: Inuit Fun Hear Inuit stories, see Inuit art, play Inuit games and decorate your own ajagak. For kids ages 5-10 and their caregivers. Call 416-395-5630 to register. 7 pm, Lillian H. Smith 2 to 3:30 pm, North York Central Library, Room 1 Friday, April 30 Wednesday, April 7 2 pm, North York Central Library An Evening with Alexander McCall Smith Media and Graphic Techniques in Children’s Books MAP – Casa Loma: Knights in Armour 6:30 pm, Danforth/Coxwell Part of the Globe and Mail Open House Festival. Tickets required (www.randomhouse.ca/openhouse). Learn about the process of making illustrated books with internationally known illustrator Dusan Petricic. Hear a story about knights, then get a hands-on lesson in medieval armour and weaponry. For kids ages 5-10 and their caregivers. 7 pm, Toronto Reference Library, Appel Salon 1:30 pm, North York Central Library 2 pm, Maria A. Shchuka Local Book Launch Thursday, April 8 Tuesday, April 13 Meet Laurel Dee Gugler Meet Shane Peacock Meet author and illustrator Shane Peacock, author of the Boy Sherlock Holmes series. 7 pm, Toronto Reference Library, Appel Salon Meet Maureen Jennings On writing historical mysteries in Toronto and how her books were turned into a successful TV series. Local author Lorraine Williams launches Memories of the Beach: Reflections on a Toronto Childhood. Friday Nights with Diaspora Dialogues 7 pm, Beaches Fiction readings by Drew Hayden Taylor, Ibi Kaslik and Deepa Shankaran. Poetry readings by Kaie Kellough and Rachel Zolf. Excerpted play reading of A Song for Tomorrow by Christina Wong. Kids’ writer (A Piece of Forever) and storyteller. 7 pm, Palmerston Gisèle’s Reading Adventure Meet Merle Nudelman Nudelman’s first book, Borrowed Light, won the Canadian Jewish Book Award for Poetry. The book follows the lives of her parents, who were Holocaust survivors, and their profoundly transformative experiences. 7 pm, Don Mills 2 pm, Lillian H. Smith Saturday, April 10 Come join Gisèle and her Big Backyard friends as they sing, dance and read. And help her find Bookmark, Sir Readsalot’s trusty horse. 1:30 pm, Highland Creek Saturday, April 17 Stagehand Puppets Stagehand Puppets present The Three Little Pigs. 11 am, Leaside 10:30 am and 1:30 pm, York Woods 14 15 Gisèle’s Reading Adventure Meet Joanne Schwartz Come join Gisèle and her Big Backyard friends as they sing, dance and read. And help her find Bookmark, Sir Readsalot’s trusty horse. Local Davenport author talks about her latest children’s book Our Corner Grocery Store, which is based on a real grocery store in the area. 10:30 am and 1:30 pm, Parkdale MAP – Bata Shoe Museum: All About Shoes Hear a story about shoes, then take a look at shoes from around the world. For kids ages 5-10 and their caregivers. 11 am to 12 pm, Malvern MAP – Gardiner Museum: Clay Animals Hear a story about animals, then make one out of clay. For kids ages 5-10 and their caregivers. 2 pm, Davenport one KEEP TORONTO READING 2010 BOOK Toronto museums bring the books kids love to life with crafts, activities and more. Reader’s Guide Everybody’s reading one book this April, and it’s Austin Clarke’s More. Join us for author events, book discussions and other programs that will bring this exceptional book to life. Saturday, April 24 Chantal’s Storytime Use this guide to enhance your enjoyment of More. Here’s what you’ll find inside: This bilingual interactive theatre performance promotes the love of reading. In English & French. 11 am, Dufferin/St. Clair • An introduction to More by Austin Clarke MAP – Black Creek Pioneer Village: From Sheep to Shawl • About the author Hear a story about shearing sheep and spinning wool in pioneer days. Spin your own yarn. For kids ages 5-10 and their caregivers. • An exerpt from More • Questions for discussion 2:30 to 3:30 pm, York Woods • An historical essay about the Caribbean peoples in Toronto Wednesday, April 21 Monday, April 26 We Love Detectives • Related recommended readings Meet Andrew Larson – And Learn About Writing 2 pm, St. James Town Shane Peacock (The Boy Sherlock Holmes series) shares his research methods from tight-rope walking to trapeze flying. Followed by a tour of the Osborne Collection of Early Children’s Books. 10 am, Lillian H. Smith Meet the author of Bella and the Bunny and The Imaginary Garden. For children ages 7 to 9. 9:30 am, Forest Hill Kickoff Event Celebrate More with dramatic readings by Trey Anthony, an interview with Austin Clarke and…More. Tuesday, April 6, 6 pm - cash bar reception; 7 pm - onstage event, Toronto Reference Library, Appel Salon, 2nd floor. 16 17 About Austin Clarke Although she has been in Toronto for 30 years, former Barbadian Idora Morrison is in crisis, in a dream-like state for four days in her basement apartment. Abandoned by “that man” Bertram, her former husband; sick with worry over her missing teenage son, BJ; but supported (if conflicted) by her two churches, the West Indian community and her white friend, Josephine, Idora struggles. Clarke’s capable and evocative writing draws one easily into Idora’s world, a world of complicated race relations, contradictory emotions and mixed messages. ❝ I am decidedly excited by this honour: that More has been chosen as the Toronto Public Library’s One Book. It is an obvious stamp of acknowledgement of my work, writing novels about Toronto, a city I have been living in for more than fifty years. Those of you who live here know the beauty and the sweet diversity of Toronto. And of the Public Library! Praise for More ❝ Clarke’s shift in focus to the complexity of race and poverty in present-day Canada makes More a perfect follow-up to The Polished Hoe’s poetic historicism.... By choosing to write Idora’s story as Toronto’s story, at the height of his literary power, Clarke boldly challenges, and transforms, Canadian sense and sensibility. ❝ ❝ Prolific Canadian novelist Clarke finally found fame with his 2002 novel, The Polished Hoe. In this follow-up, Clarke stays true to his politically charged style, reporting various manifestations of racism through the life of a Caribbean immigrant living in Canada… An introspective examination of cultural racism and the life of minorities, this detailed (though loaded) narrative should strike a chord with Clarke’s audience. – The Globe and Mail ❝ (More) tackles the shame, anger and ❝ – Canadian Periodicals, Sept. 2009 frustrations of black immigrants dealing with prejudices prevalent not only in (Clarke has painted) a vivid and powerful their new country, but also within their own communities.... Clarke is able to portrait of a black woman’s four-day use Idora’s story to give his personal journey as she relives her life in Canada State of the Union on race, poverty and as an immigrant from the West Indies. immigration in Canada.” Her enduring sorrow balanced by hard – Montreal Gazette work and short bouts of gaiety and joy ensure her presence as a memorable and powerful figure in Canadian literature. ❝ ❝ ❝ – 2009 Toronto Book Award Jury 18 ❝ Introducing More by Austin Clarke – Austin Clarke Austin Clarke is the author of ten novels and six short story collections. His novel, The Polished Hoe, won the Giller Prize in 2002, as well as the Commonwealth Writer’s and Trillium Prizes. More won the Toronto Book Award in 2009. Clarke was born in Barbados and lives in Toronto. An Interview with the Author 1.What inspired you to write More? The inspiration came from the newspaper articles about violence in the black community, the street on which I live, where I see the homeless and other poor immigrants, and the population of the park across the street from which I live. The idea of multiculturalism is portrayed and paraded all around me. 2.The original title of this novel was “Where are the men?” Why did you change it? I thought that implicit in the title “Where are the men?” was a mistaken idea of the solution to cut down on, and erase, “black-onblack” violence. That to use that catchphrase, the title of a Star article and the point made to the Mayor by the black American expert who visited Toronto a few years ago, as an adviser, would have been to add to the misconception regarding 19 Got a Flickr account? Post your photos of our events and activities – even a shot of you reading our One Book selection – to our group on the photosharing website: flickr.com/groups/keeptorontoreading the cause of this violence. More important than this, I thought I would have given, by implication, the wrong image. 3.Could this novel have been set anywhere but Toronto? How is Toronto intrinsic to the storyline? It could not have...As I said earlier, I am privileged to have lived so close to the sufferers of the immigrant trauma that More discusses; seeing men and women, and their children every day, passing my house to go farther east to their homes. And especially in the mornings, in winter, I see the expression of anxiety, the image of unemployment, and still the dignity of the black immigrant, as they all carve out the most honourable kind of life in a society which they feel is aggressively geared towards their discomfiture. I got the impression that they not all, as a racial group, have the confidence in “multiculturalism” that Toronto believes is the case. 4.Music is an ongoing theme throughout the book – how does music influence your writing and what were you intending with your particular choices (Coltrane’s “A Love Supreme” comes to mind first)? Music is the background, and the environment, the taste and the smell of the literary cave in which I live, when I am writing. The kind of music changes to suit my mood, and the mood of the novel I am writing. Beethoven in the morning, the Violin Concerto; jazz in the afternoon, and very late at night, listening to Miles, Coltrane, Aretha Franklin, Barry White, Billie Holiday and Sarah Vaughan; and calypso late at night, when I am in the development of West Indian characters, especially when they use their own “nation language.” Mainly to catch the mood and the rhythm and the spirit of their speech. 5.You’ve certainly written lots of both, but which do you prefer to write – fiction or non-fiction? I prefer fiction. It allows me more space, energy, invention; and I can hide my feelings in the liberty of fiction. “So this is the Kensington Market!” Josephine said. “The former Jewish Market? How come I go to classes less than three blocks from here and I never knew this place existed?... And so many visible minorities, and –” “Don’t say that! Don’t call them visible minorities. Don’t call us visible minorities. I am not any damn minority. Visible or invisible!” “People of all colours, then. Various colours. And cultures. Do you shop here every day? The same as I would go to the supermarket?” “Special occasions,” Idora said. “But when I show you where I shop, you’ll understand.” “My God!... as you always say!” Josephine said. “My God! This is a different world!” “Isn’t it, eh!” The shop had a display of plantains in baskets at the front, on the sidewalk. Some were ripe to a colour of yellow; others were speckled yellow and black, and were softer; and Idora fried these in oil, and floured them in white flour and in cornmeal. And green bananas, for boiling: and for giving men stamina, so Idora told Josephine. “Truly?” “Trust me, girl! Or ask any of these Jamaican men in this store!” “My God!” Scotch Bonnet peppers, in colours of yellow and green and red, were displayed in large paper bags; and there were sweet golden apples from Barbados, and fresh ginger, and pieces of sugar cane, one or two feet long, bottles of hot sauce, from Barbados and Jamaica, and looking like bottles of cosmetics from fairy-tale islands in the Pacific Ocean; and when she placed her hand on Josephine’s waist, to usher her into the shop itself, the smells of this food struck them in the face, and the level of conversation, and the sounds of voices, each person talking at the same time, and giving advice to the owner of the store, and getting back advice, “Not tummuch water, now, when you boiling the breadfruits, sister! Not too much!”; and Josephine got into the mood, and was touching women as she moved past them, asking them pardon, and saying, “Oh! Sorry!” And one woman, thin and beautiful and with a fierce face, if you watched her eyes too long, said, “What you sorry for, girl!” – excerpt from More by Austin Clarke (Thomas Allen Publishers, 2008) reprinted with permission of the author and Thomas Allen Publishers. 20 More questions for discussion 1) In an interview with CBC News Austin Clarke stated: “I’d always felt that the writers who went before me, had neglected the character of Toronto in their books and felt that it was more in literary style to describe Paris or London.…I could not understand the neglect of the city.” Do you agree that Toronto has been neglected by other authors? Why do you think Clarke feels this way? 2) How does the Toronto depicted in More compare with the view you have of the city? Did the novel change the way you look at your own community – its past, present and future? 3) Why is Idora so affected by the assassination of Mr. Albert Johnson? 4) What does the sermon at the Apostolical Holiness Church represent for Idora? What role does her sermon play in the book? 5) Discuss the role of family in More. On page 163, Idora asks, “Where are the blasted men to protect us: mother and child? Where any o’ those men is?” Do you think Idora blames Bertram for BJ’s retreat into gangs and his eventual disappearance? 6) The author makes numerous references to 22 Idora wanting “more”. On page 77, she refers to not being aware of gifts from the Lord – and she wants more. On page 161, she laments the portrayal of black men in the media – why aren’t young black men shown achieving ‘more’? Why do you think this book is entitled More? What was the author trying to accomplish? What is the “more” that Idora is seeking? 7) Why is Idora reluctant to report her son’s disappearance to the police? Why does she feel so differently about police “at home” and police in Toronto? 8) Music figures prominently throughout the book – from frequent references to the Buffalo radio station WBLK, to John Coltrane’s piece “A Love Supreme”. Why does the author use music and what role does it play in Idora’s world? In the culture at large? 9) Why do you think Clarke chose to write the character of BJ as an “offstage” presence? 10) How successful is the author at writing from a woman’s perspective? 11) Idora (along with many others in the black community) is highly critical of media reports related to blacks. Has the way that the media depicts young black men changed in recent years? Caribbean Peoples in Toronto The Caribbean region is multicultural, a mixture of European, Asian and Middle Eastern origins, combined with a long African legacy. Many Caribbean people are black, Toronto’s third largest ‘visible minority’ group in 2006 (behind South Asians and Chinese). (One half of Torontonians belong to a ‘visible minority’, but only blacks are categorized by skin colour rather than geographic origins.) The Caribbean Experience in Canada A Statistics Canada study found that Canadians of Caribbean origin are more likely to have a community college diploma and somewhat more likely to be employed than their counterparts in the rest of the population. They are also younger and their children are more likely Immigration to Canada During the first period of Caribbean immigration to Canada, 1900 to 1960, Canada accepted about 21,500 people, only one-third of whom were black. The West Indian Domestic Scheme (1955-60) allowed 100 black women a year to immigrate as domestics, like Clarke’s Idora. This pattern of women coming alone was typical of early Caribbean immigration to Canada. Canada’s new Immigration Act (1962) eliminated discrimination based on race, religion and national origin, and in 1967 established a points system to determine eligibility. Under the Family Reunification policy, many who immigrated after 1970 were family of the women who had come earlier. The mid-1970s saw a general decline in Caribbean immigration to Canada, but it was still significant. Caribana, 2009. Courtesy Clive Sewell. 23 Austin’s on Book Buzz: Visit http://bookbuzz.torontopubliclibrary.ca, to chat online with Austin about More. April 22, 7 to 8 pm than other Canadians to be living in lone-parent families and in low-income households. The large majority belongs to a Christian religious group (41% mainstream Protestant, 29% Catholic and 9% another Christian group) and local religious organizations have played a key role in welcoming new arrivals. A 2002 survey showed that the majority (82%) of Canadians of Caribbean origin has a strong sense of belonging to Canada, and many are involved in Canadian society, through voting and community organizations. Despite this, many also have experienced discrimination, based on race or skin colour. Torontonians of Caribbean heritage continue to fight political battles to counter racism and prejudice in areas including employment, education, accommodation and policing. Fruit stand in Kensington Market. 24 Caribbean Contributions to Toronto Although Caribbean culture is not homogeneous, with class, race and regional differences, Caribbean people have a strong and dynamic presence in Toronto. They have established social organizations and services, opened businesses, and inaugurated cultural events. The annual Caribana Festival, started in 1967, displays Caribbean culture in costume, dance and music (steel bands, calypso and reggae). Further Reading Other Books by Austin Clarke A Passage Back Home: A Personal Reminiscence of Samuel Selvon, 1997 Choosing His Coffin: The Best Stories of Austin Clarke, 2003 In This City, 2008 Pigtails ‘n Breadfruit; The Rituals of Slave Food, A Barbadian Memoir, 1999 In literature, Toronto’s most prominent authors of Caribbean origin are Austin Clarke, Dionne Brand and Afua Cooper, with many emerging writers gaining attention of late. Toronto Public Library’s Black and Caribbean Heritage Collection, now in four branches, was started in the early 1970s, and was named for Rita Cox, a long-time librarian originally from Trinidad. Proud Empires, 1986 Caribbean food, a spicy, colourful mix of many culinary traditions, is wildly popular in Toronto. In the early days, standard ingredients such as Scotch bonnet peppers, okra and plantain were sold mostly at Kensington Market but are now available at stores and dozens of restaurants across the region. There Are No Elders, 1993 Prepared by Barbara Myrvold, with input from Vivienne James and Joan McCatty. Storm of Fortune, 1998 The Austin Clarke Reader, 1996 The Bigger Light, 1999 The Origin of Waves, 1997 The Polished Hoe, 2003 The Question, 1999 Buccaneers of the Caribbean: How Piracy Forged an Empire, 16071697 Jon Latimer, 2009 An account of maritime warfare in the Caribbean during the 17th century. Lime Tree Can’t Bear Orange: A Novel Amanda Smyth, 2009 Set in Trinidad-Tobago, a mixed-race girl flees abuse and learns about life and love. Shifting Homelands and Travelling Identities: Writers of the Caribbean Diaspora Jasbir Jain and Supriya Agarwal (eds.), 2009 Twenty essays about race, post-colonial futures and the rich Caribbean culture. I Come Through: Stories Lorna Goodison, 2009 Books on the Caribbean This Jamaican poet and Canadian resident offers stories set in her homeland. The Spice Necklace: A Food-Lover’s Caribbean Adventure Ann Vanderhoof, 2010 From Harvey River: a Memoir of my Mother and her People Lorna Goodison, 2007 Following An Embarrassment of Mangoes, Vanderhoof eats around the Caribbean. A loving portrait of four generations of a family echoing the history of Jamaica. Stories from Blue Latitudes: Caribbean Women Writers at Home and Abroad Elizabeth Nunez and Jennifer Sparrow (eds.) 2006 An anthology of 26 stories by Caribbean women writers. The Dew Breaker Edwidge Danticat, 2004 Linked stories of the Haitian Diaspora, during Duvalier’s regime. Drumblair: Memories of a Jamaican Childhood Rachel Manley, 1996 The daughter of the former President of Jamaica tells her story. Wide Sargasso Sea Jean Rhys, 1966, 2001 Rhys, a prominent West Indian writer, wrote this book as a prequel to Jane Eyre. The New Immigrant Experience Amazing Absorbing Boy Rabindranath Maharaj, 2010 Samuel, a Trinidadian teen, is sent to live with his indifferent father in Toronto. 25 Find out what book lovers in your neighbourhood are reading! Pick up a bookmark at your local branch. Write a short review of a book you love on the back, tuck it into a book you return, and we’ll create displays of your recommended reads. Rifke: An Improbable Life Rosalie Wise Sharp, 2007 From Ozarow to North Toronto, Sharp recounts growing up in two worlds. What We All Long For Dionne Brand, 2005 Interlocking lives of second-generation twenty-somethings living in urban Toronto. Under the Ribs of Death John Marlyn, 2010 Set before the Depression, young Sander struggles to become a “real Canadian.” Soucouyant David Chariandy, 2007 A son recalls his mother’s Trinidadian childhood when she develops dementia. The Innocence of Age Neil Bissoondath, 1992 Old-fashioned standards clash with ambition and power affecting father and son. Blacks, the Media and Popular Culture It’s Bigger than Hip Hop: The Rise of the Post-HipHop Generation Molefi K. Asante, 2008 Can this generation still challenge mainstream cultural ideology? Hung: A Meditation on the Measure of Black Men in America Scott Poulson-Bryant, 2005 An interesting examination of the mythologies surrounding black male sexuality. Black like Who?: Writing Black Canada Rinaldo Walcott, 2003 This incisive title gives the dirt on black culture and literature in Canada. Rude: Contemporary Black Canadian Cultural Criticism Rinaldo Walcott, 2000 An anthology of critical writing on Black Canadian culture and racial identity. Black Berry, Sweet Juice Lawrence Hill, 2001 What is black and what is white? What of the biracial experience? Food, Music and Arts Delicious Jamaica!: Vegetarian Cuisine Yvonne McCalla Sobers,1996 Out of a melting pot of influences comes an array of healthy, tasty dishes. Black Literature Criticism: Classic and Emerging Black Writers Since 1950 Jelena Krstovic, 2008 eBook An essential survey of the field covering more than 80 North American writers. Encyclopedia of Latin American & Caribbean Art Jane Turner, 2000 Examines the major artistic developments from the colonial period to the present. Caribbean: Classic & New Caribbean flavours 2008. [sound recording] A representative mix of tunes, from the warmth of the Caribbean. The Book of Salsa: A Chronicle of Urban Music from the Caribbean to New York City César Miguel Rondón, 2008 Show your love of books. Support Toronto’s Library There are so many ways to show your love for books and for your library this April. With your generous support, you can help Keep Toronto Reading. Toonies for TPL Your donation of $2 or more will help Toronto Public Library Foundation support the Library’s mission to keep Toronto reading, learning, and working. How to contribute • Visit your local branch. Make your donation at any checkout desk. • Donate online (tplfoundation.ca). With every donation, your name and favourite book will be added to our site – joined by many others, including beloved authors. Buy a book in the subway At our TTC subway books sales this April, buy a used book for just $1 each. Spend $5 or more and get a new book free. Monday, April 12 and 26, Yonge-Bloor station Monday, April 19, Finch station All events noon to 6 p.m. Presented with Friends of Toronto Public Library and Toronto Transit Commission. Thanks to Random House of Canada and Tundra Books for donating new books. A pan-Caribbean history of this addictive music. The Real Jerk: New Caribbean Cuisine Lily Pottinger, 2002 From the creators of the More menu and Toronto’s favourite roti restaurant. Your Library. Vital to you. Vital to support. Donate to Toronto Public Library Foundation today. tplfoundation.ca 26 Cert no. SGS-COC-005437 keeptorontoreading.ca