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Explore every episode of the podcast Further Reading
Dive into the complete episode list for Further Reading. Each episode is cataloged with detailed descriptions, making it easy to find and explore specific topics. Keep track of all episodes from your favorite podcast and never miss a moment of insightful content.
| Title | Pub. Date | Duration | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Further Reading_S3 E03_Donna Kane | 01 Jan 2025 | 00:33:20 | |
On today’s show, we talk to Donna Kane.
Donna Kane is a writer who divides her time between Rolla, BC on Treaty 8 Territory and Halifax, NS in Mi’kma’ki, the ancestral and traditional lands of the Mi’kmaq people. Her poems, short fiction, reviews, and essays have been published widely in journals such as Science Today, Scientific American, The Walrus, The Fiddlehead, and The Malahat Review, as well as in several anthologies including Best Canadian Poetry 2013 (Tightrope Books, 2013), I Found it at the Movies: An Anthology of Film Poems (Guernica Press 2014), In This Together: Fifteen True Stories of Real Reconciliation (Brindle and Glass, 2016), Beyond Earth’s Edge: The Poetry of Spaceflight (University of Arizona Press, 2020) and, most recently, Outer Space: 100 Poems (Cambridge University Press, 2022).
She has published four books of poetry, Somewhere, a Fire, (Hagios Press, 2004), and Erratic (Hagios Press, 2007), both finalists for the ReLit Award, Orrery (Harbour, 2020), a finalist for the Governor General’s Award, and Asterisms (Harbour, 2024). She is also the recipient of the Lina Chartrand Poetry Award (2000) and in 2010 she was a winner in Geist’s Annual Literal Literary Postcard Story Contest. Her poetry has been featured on CBC’s Daybreak North and North by Northwest, and in 2011, her poem, Summer Solstice, was featured on Garrison Keillor’s The Writer’s Almanac. “The Gaze,” one of the chapters from Summer of the Horse (Harbour Publishing, 2018) was shortlisted for the Edna Staebler Personal Essay Contest and published in the 2016 summer issue of The New Quarterly. An excerpt from Orrery, was published as a chapbook titled Pioneer 10, I Hear You by JackPine Press in October, 2016.
Find Donna at the links below.
Website: https://www.donnakane.com/
Instagram: @ donnakaneishere
You can find Donna’s book Asterisms, here: https://harbourpublishing.com/products/9781990776717?srsltid=AfmBOopdldaLTIrAVTvho51fJXuCh5KMVJHYfdUhNKkORjvW14-_fxDT
If you're interested in creative writing, the University of King's College MFA in Creative Writing might be for you. Find out more at: https://ukings.ca/area-of-study/writing-and-publishing/
Subscribe to Further Reading:
feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundclo…480/sounds.rss
Contact us:
kingsfurtherreading@gmail.com
Thanks as always to our friends at the King’s Co-op Bookstore. https://kingsbookstore.ca/ | |||
| Further Reading_S3 E02_Martin Bauman | 25 Dec 2024 | 00:34:56 | |
On today’s show, we talk to Martin Bauman.
Martin Bauman is a writer, podcaster, and the award-winning author of Hell of a Ride (Pottersfield Press). As a broadcast journalist, his work has been featured on-air in Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary, Ottawa, Halifax, London, Waterloo Region, and overseas in Cardiff, Wales. His writing has also appeared in the Globe and Mail, Calgary Herald, Waterloo Region Record, The Coast, Capital Daily, DARBY, and Canadian Mennonite, among other places.
In addition to his writing, he’s also passionate about mental health. In the summer of 2016, he cycled across Canada to raise funds for mental health initiatives across the country and in his home of Waterloo Region, and he continues to speak publicly about the importance of community mental health resources.
Find Martin at the links below.
Website: https://martinbauman.com/
Instagram: @shotbymartin
You can find Martin’s book Hell of a Ride: Chasing Home and Survival on a Bicycle Voyage Across Canada at: https://www.indiebookstores.ca/book/9781990770470/
If you're interested in creative writing, the University of King's College MFA in Creative Writing might be for you. Find out more at: ukings.ca/area-of-study/writing-and-publishing/
Subscribe to Further Reading:
feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundclo…480/sounds.rss
Contact us:
kingsfurtherreading@gmail.com
Thanks as always to our friends at the King’s Co-op Bookstore. https://kingsbookstore.ca/ | |||
| Episode 5: Amy Fung | 30 Mar 2021 | 00:37:26 | |
On today’s show, we talk to Amy Fung. As a curator, Amy has spent much of her time in the art world, challenging the colonial practices governing institutional art exhibition. In 2019, she turned that work into a book, titled Before I Was a Critic I Was a Human Being. The volume, published by Book*hug, examines Canadian mythologies of multiculturalism and settler colonialism. Amy was the co-founder of MICE Magazine and the Artistic Director of IMAGES Festival. She has worked across many art disciplines, channeling her energy into criticism, visual art, performance art, and film, and is now a PhD candidate at Carleton University. She joins us today to talk about criticism, performing your work, and collaboration in writing.
Transcript coming soon.
Find Amy at the links below.
Website: https://amyfung.com/
Twitter: @anotheramyfung
You can find Amy’s book, Before I Was A Critic, I Was A Human Being here: https://bookhugpress.ca/shop/author/amy-fung/before-i-was-a-critic-i-was-a-human-being-by-amy-fung-audiobook/
If you're interested in writing nonfiction, the University of King's College MFA in Creative Nonfiction might be for you. Find out more at https://ukings.ca/area-of-study/master-of-fine-arts-in-creative-nonfiction/.
Subscribe to Further Reading:
https://feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundcloud:users:952114480/sounds.rss
Contact us:
kingsfurtherreading@gmail.com
If you'd like to hear more book-related conversations, check out Bookings, the podcast of our friends at the King's Coop Bookstore. | |||
| Episode 4: Eternity Martis | 23 Mar 2021 | 01:04:14 | |
On today’s show, we talk to Eternity Martis. Eternity is a Toronto-based Instructor in Journalism whose work has been featured in Vice, Chatelaine, Maclean’s, Complex, Refinery 29, and The Walrus. She holds a Bachelor’s from the University of Western Ontario and a Master’s of Journalism from Ryerson University, where she now teaches the first-ever course on Reporting on Race called Black Communities in the Media – a course that came about as a response to a Ryerson student petition earlier this year. At its core, Eternity’s writing challenges us to dismantle our preconceptions and stereotypes, especially around young, black womanhood. She has written about feminism, racism, sexual assault, domestic violence, and reproductive rights, earning many accolades, including a Canadian Online Publishing Award for her work. Her new book, They Said This Would be Fun: Race, Campus Life, and Growing Up is a searing examination of racism and misogyny on Canadian university campuses, and is already destined to be a central part of the growing canon of 21st-century literature on anti-Black racism. Today, Eternity joins us on Further Reading to talk about writing craft, memoir, and the hard work of getting your first book into the world.
Transcript coming soon.
Find Eternity at the links below.
Website: https://www.eternitymartis.com/
Twitter: @eternitymartis
Transatlantic: https://www.transatlanticagency.com/clients/speakers/eternity_martis/
You can find Eternity’s book, They Said This Would Be Fun: Race, Campus Life, and Growing Up here: https://www.penguinrandomhouse.ca/books/605288/they-said-this-would-be-fun-by-eternity-martis/9780771062186
If you're interested in writing nonfiction, the University of King's College MFA in Creative Nonfiction might be for you. Find out more at https://ukings.ca/area-of-study/master-of-fine-arts-in-creative-nonfiction/.
Subscribe to Further Reading:
https://feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundcloud:users:952114480/sounds.rss
Contact us:
kingsfurtherreading@gmail.com
If you'd like to hear more book-related conversations, check out Bookings, the podcast of our friends at the King's Coop Bookstore. | |||
| Episode 3: Lauren McKeon | 16 Mar 2021 | 01:06:17 | |
On today’s show, we talk to Lauren McKeon. Lauren is a graduate from the King’s MFA program in Creative Nonfiction, and has worked as an editor with This Magazine, Toronto Life, and The Walrus. Now the Deputy Editor at Reader’s Digest, Lauren hasn’t shied away from difficult topics in her writing, tackling issues like the prison system, sexual assault, human trafficking, and of course feminism. Her first book, F Bomb: Dispatches from the War on Feminism, was nominated for the Kobo Emerging Writer Prize. And her latest book, No More Nice Girls: Gender, Power, and Why It’s Time to Stop Playing by the Rules, explores how the myth of the nice girl has driven women to certain modes of behaviour in settings where structural barriers will only change if we respond more aggressively. Today, Lauren joins us to talk about writing, editing, and the work of putting big research projects into book form.
Transcript coming soon.
Find Lauren at the links below.
Website: https://www.laurenmckeon.net/
Twitter: @mckeonlauren
You can find Lauren’s book, No More Nice Girls: Gender, Power, and Why It’s Time to Stop Playing by the Rules here: https://houseofanansi.com/products/no-more-nice-girls
Her new book, Women of the Pandemic, will be available from McClelland and Stewart on April 27. https://www.penguinrandomhouse.ca/books/670900/women-of-the-pandemic-by-lauren-mckeon/9780771050398
If you're interested in writing nonfiction, the University of King's College MFA in Creative Nonfiction might be for you. Find out more at https://ukings.ca/area-of-study/master-of-fine-arts-in-creative-nonfiction/.
Subscribe to Further Reading:
https://feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundcloud:users:952114480/sounds.rss
Contact us:
kingsfurtherreading@gmail.com
If you'd like to hear more book-related conversations, check out Bookings, the podcast of our friends at the King's Coop Bookstore. | |||
| Episode 2: Omar Mouallem, Part 2 | 09 Mar 2021 | 00:33:00 | |
On today’s show, we talk to Omar Mouallem. At any given moment, Omar is splitting his time across many diverse projects not only in his written work but also in filmmaking and education. His book Inside the Inferno: A Firefighter’s Story of the Brotherhood that Saved Fort McMurray was co-authored with Damian Asher, who was a fire captain in the city during the 2016 wildfires. Last week, Omar talked to us about pitching, interviewing, and working as a writer. Today, our conversation continues from where we left off, and Omar will tell us about the process of writing his book, his new project Pandemic University. And, we’re going to start the episode with some of his best writing tips.
Transcript coming soon.
Find Omar at the links below.
Website: https://omarmouallem.com/
Twitter: @OmarMouallem
Pandemic U: https://pandemicuniversity.com/
Twitter: @PandemicSchool
Every Freelance Writer Needs A Pitch Bank: https://omarmouallem.medium.com/every-freelance-writer-needs-a-pitch-bank-feel-free-to-steal-mine-e898959a68c1
You can find Omar’s book, Inside the Inferno: A Firefighter’s Story of the Brotherhood that Saved Fort McMurray here: https://www.simonandschuster.ca/books/Inside-the-Inferno/Damian-Asher/9781501171123
If you're interested in writing nonfiction, the University of King's College MFA in Creative Nonfiction might be for you. Find out more at https://ukings.ca/area-of-study/master-of-fine-arts-in-creative-nonfiction/.
Subscribe to Further Reading:
https://feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundcloud:users:952114480/sounds.rss
Contact us:
kingsfurtherreading@gmail.com
If you'd like to hear more book-related conversations, check out Bookings, the podcast of our friends at the King's Coop Bookstore. | |||
| Episode 1: Omar Mouallem | 01 Mar 2021 | 00:38:32 | |
On today’s show, we talk to Omar Mouallem. At any given moment, Omar is splitting his time across many diverse projects not only in his written work but also in filmmaking and education. His book Inside the Inferno: A Firefighter’s Story of the Brotherhood that Saved Fort McMurray was co-authored with Damian Asher, who was a fire captain in the city during the 2016 wildfires. Omar also has a new book on the way, titled Praying to the West, a travel memoir about Muslims in the Americas, and writes about an array of topics including food, masculinity, fatherhood, Islamophobia, and art. But it is perhaps his most recent project that is of special interest to writers: shortly after we all went into quarantine, Omar started Pandemic University School of Writing, a writer’s university that gathered authors and their eager students into an online community. It wasn’t long before graduating classes formed and the community grew, at a moment when the writing field was going through one of its most uncertain times. Today, Omar joins us to talk about crafting your best work by gathering together and collaborating.
Transcript coming soon.
Find Omar at the links below.
Website: https://omarmouallem.com/
Twitter: @OmarMouallem
Pandemic U: https://pandemicuniversity.com/
Twitter: @PandemicSchool
Every Freelance Writer Needs A Pitch Bank: https://omarmouallem.medium.com/every-freelance-writer-needs-a-pitch-bank-feel-free-to-steal-mine-e898959a68c1
You can find Omar’s book, Inside the Inferno: A Firefighter’s Story of the Brotherhood that Saved Fort McMurray here: https://www.simonandschuster.ca/books/Inside-the-Inferno/Damian-Asher/9781501171123
If you're interested in writing nonfiction, the University of King's College MFA in Creative Nonfiction might be for you. Find out more at https://ukings.ca/area-of-study/master-of-fine-arts-in-creative-nonfiction/.
Subscribe to Further Reading:
https://feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundcloud:users:952114480/sounds.rss
Contact us:
kingsfurtherreading@gmail.com
If you'd like to hear more book-related conversations, check out Bookings, the podcast of our friends at the King's Coop Bookstore. | |||
| Further Reading_S3 E01_ElliottGish | 19 Dec 2024 | 00:35:36 | |
On today’s show, we talk to Elliott Gish.
Elliott Gish wants to creep you out. A writer and librarian from Halifax, Nova Scotia, she grew up on a steady diet of Tamora Pierce books, trashy teen romcoms, and bad pop punk. She loves all of those things to this day. She holds a Bachelor of Arts in English from Memorial University of Newfoundland and a Master of Library and Information Studies from Dalhousie University. Elliott is a 2020 graduate of the Simon Fraser University Writer’s Studio program, where she was mentored by Jen Sookfong Lee and Paul Headrick. Her stories have been published in several journals, including Vastarien, the Baltimore Review, Wigleaf, Psychopomp Magazine, and the New Quarterly. Her debut novel, Grey Dog, was published by ECW Press in 2024. She lives in Halifax’s North End with her partner and, when not writing, spends her time watching too many sitcoms and reading too many listicles.
Find Elliott at the links below.
Website: https://www.elliottgishwrites.com/
Instagram: @elliottgish
You can find Elliott’s book Grey Dog at https://ecwpress.com/products/grey-dog
If you're interested in creative writing, the University of King's College MFA in Creative Writing might be for you. Find out more at: ukings.ca/area-of-study/writing-and-publishing/
Subscribe to Further Reading:
feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundclo…480/sounds.rss
Contact us:
kingsfurtherreading@gmail.com
Thanks as always to our friends at the King’s Co-op Bookstore. https://kingsbookstore.ca/ | |||
| S2E6: Richard Van Camp | 07 Dec 2021 | 01:25:24 | |
On today’s show, we talk to Richard Van Camp. Richard is the author of a stunning 26 books, which cross genre, format, and age categories, appealing to a broad readership. Anchoring Richard’s work is his childhood in Fort Smith, Northwest Territories, where his connection to his community continues to provide inspiration. While Richard now lives in Edmonton, he has drawn for us a vibrant cast of characters who cross between his short stories and graphic novels, and along the way he’s brought fellow authors and visual artists to collaborate with him. Among his many accolades are The Blue Metropolis First Peoples Literary Prize and The CODE Burt Award for First Nations in Young Adult Literature. He has been the Storyteller in Residence for Calgary Public Library, and the Writer in Residence at the Metro Federation of Edmonton Libraries. In his most recent book, Gather: Richard Van Camp on the Joy of Storytelling, Richard compels us to think about how we connect with our communities, share story, memory, food, music, and culture, at a moment when we are all craving it. Today, Richard talks to us about writing in different formats, collaboration, and the joy of telling stories.
Transcript coming soon.
Find Richard at the links below.
Website: https://richardvancamp.com/
Twitter: @ richardvancamp
Instagram: richardvancamp
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/richard.v.camp
Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/richardvancamp
You can find Richard’s latest book, Gather: Richard Van Camp on Storytelling, at https://uofrpress.ca/Books/G/Gather
If you're interested in writing nonfiction, the University of King's College MFA in Creative Nonfiction might be for you. Find out more at ukings.ca/area-of-study/master…creative-nonfiction/.
Subscribe to Further Reading:
feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundclo…480/sounds.rss
Contact us:
kingsfurtherreading@gmail.com
If you'd like to hear more book-related conversations, check out Bookings, the podcast of our friends at the King's Coop Bookstore. | |||
| S2E5: Eufemia Fantetti | 30 Nov 2021 | 01:06:07 | |
On today’s show, we talk to Eufemia Fantetti. Eufemia is a writer and professor whose work delves into often difficult emotional territory using forthright language, a recognizable and familiar voice, and humour. Her writing work has bridged fiction, nonfiction, and playwriting, and has appeared in multiple volumes, including Love Me True, Exploring Voice, and Body & Soul. Her first book, A Recipe for Disaster & Other Unlikely Tales of Love, was runner up for the 2013 Danuta Gleed Literary Award, and a winner of the 2014 F.G. Bressani Prize. Eufemia’s memoir, My Father, Fortune-tellers & Me was released in 2019 by Mother Tongue Publishing. Today Eufemia joins us to discuss the process of turning life into art via memoir, thinking like an editor, and bringing creative practice to the classroom.
Transcript coming soon.
Find Eufemia at the links below.
Website: https://www.eufemiafantetti.com/
Twitter: @ EufemiaFantetti
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/eufemia.fantetti
Instagram: eufemia_fantetti
You can find Eufemia’s latest book, My Father, Fortune-Tellers, and Me: A Memoir, at https://www.mothertonguepublishing.com/
If you're interested in writing nonfiction, the University of King's College MFA in Creative Nonfiction might be for you. Find out more at ukings.ca/area-of-study/master…creative-nonfiction/.
Subscribe to Further Reading:
feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundclo…480/sounds.rss
Contact us:
kingsfurtherreading@gmail.com
If you'd like to hear more book-related conversations, check out Bookings, the podcast of our friends at the King's Coop Bookstore. | |||
| S2E4: Kirsteen MacLeod | 23 Nov 2021 | 01:20:11 | |
On today’s show, we talk to Kirsteen MacLeod. Kirsteen is a long-time journalist and author whose work has spanned a wide variety of subjects. In early 2021, she turned her journalist’s lens on something she’d been thinking about for many years: the idea of retreat. Examining it from a spiritual, artistic, geographical, religious, practical, and social perspective, Kirsteen wrote a comprehensive take on the idea of solitude just when we were all experiencing it ourselves. In Praise of Retreat: Finding Sanctuary in the Modern World is a book for anyone thinking about their creative and spiritual practices, and is especially helpful for the writer often scrambling to find moments of solitude to engage in their craft. Kirsteen joins us today to talk about the creative process, the business of writing, and the sometimes fuzzy lines between fiction and nonfiction.
Transcript coming soon.
Find Kirsteen at the links below.
Website: https://www.kirsteenmacleod.ca/
You can find Kirsteen’s latest book, In Praise of Retreat: Finding Sanctuary in the Modern World, at https://ecwpress.com/products/in-praise-of-retreat
If you're interested in writing nonfiction, the University of King's College MFA in Creative Nonfiction might be for you. Find out more at ukings.ca/area-of-study/master…creative-nonfiction/.
Subscribe to Further Reading:
feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundclo…480/sounds.rss
Contact us:
kingsfurtherreading@gmail.com
If you'd like to hear more book-related conversations, check out Bookings, the podcast of our friends at the King's Coop Bookstore. | |||
| S2E3: Jordan Abel | 16 Nov 2021 | 00:45:51 | |
On today’s show, we talk to Jordan Abel. Jordan is the author of many award-winning books, most recently, Nishga, an experimental, multi-media exploration of urban Indigenous identity and the intergenerational trauma wrought by Canada’s residential schools. Jordan has been working in the poetry field for many years, winning the Griffin Prize with his work Injun. Now, with a PhD from Simon Fraser University, he teaches Indigenous Literatures and Creative Writing at the University of Alberta. His work has been published in numerous journals and magazines—including Canadian Literature, The Capilano Review, and Poetry Is Dead—and his visual poetry has been included in exhibitions at the Polygon Gallery and the Oslo Pilot Project Room in Oslo, Norway. Today, he joins us to talk about his creative process, breaking the “rules” of writing, and bridging disciplinary divides.
Transcript coming soon.
Find Jordan at the links below.
Website: https://www.jordanabel.ca/
Twitter: @ jordoisdead
Instagram: jordoisdead
You can find Jordan’s latest book, Nishga, at https://www.penguinrandomhouse.ca/books/610846/nishga-by-jordan-abel/9780771007903
If you're interested in writing nonfiction, the University of King's College MFA in Creative Nonfiction might be for you. Find out more at ukings.ca/area-of-study/master…creative-nonfiction/.
Subscribe to Further Reading:
feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundclo…480/sounds.rss
Contact us:
kingsfurtherreading@gmail.com
If you'd like to hear more book-related conversations, check out Bookings, the podcast of our friends at the King's Coop Bookstore. | |||
| S2E2: JB MacKinnon | 09 Nov 2021 | 01:07:26 | |
On today’s show, we talk to J.B. MacKinnon. Many of you know J.B. from his bestselling work, The 100-Mile Diet. That book set him on course to be a prolific author who traffics in big ideas. Challenging our preconceptions, and encouraging us to try new ways of being in the world, are at the core of J.B.’s work as are his love of animals, the environment, and the natural world. He has written for The Atlantic, The National Observer, The National Post, and Orion Magazine, and his nonfiction titles include The Once and Future World and Dead Man in Paradise, which won the Charles Taylor Prize. His most recent book, The Day the World Stops Shopping, published in 2021 by Random House, challenges us to think about a post-consumption world and what that would mean for the economy, the environment, and our understanding of human nature. As with much of his work, it’s a thought experiment, one that required wrangling abstract ideas into a highly readable, engaging book. Today, J.B. talks to us about that process, and we get into how he thinks about research, his reading audience, and his character portraits too.
Transcript coming soon.
Find J.B. at the links below.
Website: https://www.jbmackinnon.com/
Twitter: @JB_MacKinnon
You can find J.B.’s latest book, The Day the World Stops Shopping: How Ending Consumerism Saves the Environment and Ourselves at https://www.jbmackinnon.com/the-day-the-world-stops-shopping
If you're interested in writing nonfiction, the University of King's College MFA in Creative Nonfiction might be for you. Find out more at ukings.ca/area-of-study/master…creative-nonfiction/.
Subscribe to Further Reading:
feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundclo…480/sounds.rss
Contact us:
kingsfurtherreading@gmail.com
If you'd like to hear more book-related conversations, check out Bookings, the podcast of our friends at the King's Coop Bookstore. | |||
| S2E1: Jenn Thornhill Verma | 02 Nov 2021 | 01:11:13 | |
On today’s show, we talk to Jenn Thornhill Verma. Jenn is a journalist and graduate of the King’s Creative Nonfiction MFA. Her recent book, Cod Collapse: The Rise and Fall of Newfoundland’s Saltwater Cowboys was published by Nimbus in 2019, and was listed as one of the best Canadian Nonfiction Books of that year by The Hill. Fuelling her writing on nature, the environment and the fishing industry of the Atlantic provinces is her extensive scientific background: she also holds a Master’s of Science in Medicine from Memorial University. Jenn has written for many major publications including The Globe and Mail, Reader’s Digest, The Independent, and Salt Scapes, and was a silver finalist for Best Profile Article in both 2019 and 2020 at the Atlantic Journalism Awards. If that weren’t enough, she has also worked in film and as a healthcare executive. And she is a landscape painter – for which she has also won awards. Amidst all of this, she made time to talk to us here at Further Reading, to discuss craft, writing about home, and putting years of research into book form.
Transcript coming soon.
Find Jenn at the links below.
Website: https://jennverma.ca/
Twitter: @JenniferYVerma
Instagram: jenn_verma
You can find Jenn’s latest book, Cod Collapse: The Rise and Fall of Newfoundland’s Saltwater Cowboys at https://nimbus.ca/store/cod-collapse.html
If you're interested in writing nonfiction, the University of King's College MFA in Creative Nonfiction might be for you. Find out more at ukings.ca/area-of-study/master…creative-nonfiction/.
Subscribe to Further Reading:
feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundclo…480/sounds.rss
Contact us:
kingsfurtherreading@gmail.com
If you'd like to hear more book-related conversations, check out Bookings, the podcast of our friends at the King's Coop Bookstore. | |||
| Episode 6: Charlotte Gray | 06 Apr 2021 | 00:58:13 | |
On today’s show, we talk to Charlotte Gray. Charlotte is a prolific Canadian nonfiction author with eleven books to her name, and a background in magazine editing, newspaper writing, and political commentary. Educated at Oxford University and the London School of Economics, she has, since moving to Canada, turned her attention to some of the country’s most influential thinkers and activists, producing biographies so packed full of information, she either never sleeps or has a full-time team of researchers. Charlotte’s writing has earned her much in the way of accolades and awards, including the Toronto Book Award and the Pierre Berton Award, alongside several honorary doctorates from universities across Canada. She is an Adjunct Research Professor in the Department of History at Carleton University, and her latest book, Murdered Midas: A Millionaire, His Goldmine, and a Strange Death on an Island Paradise, about mine owner Sir Harry Oakes, is the recipient of the 2020 Arthur Ellis Award for Best Non-Fiction Book. Today, Charlotte joins us on Shelf 808 to discuss writing craft, historical non-fiction, and the long process of mining all that research for the perfect story
Transcript coming soon.
Find Charlotte at the links below.
Website: https://www.charlottegray.ca/
Twitter: @CharlotteJGray
You can find Charlotte’s latest book, Murdered Midas: A Millionaire, His Goldmine, and a Strange Death on an Island Paradise here: https://www.harpercollins.ca/9781443449342/murdered-midas/åç
If you're interested in writing nonfiction, the University of King's College MFA in Creative Nonfiction might be for you. Find out more at https://ukings.ca/area-of-study/master-of-fine-arts-in-creative-nonfiction/.
Subscribe to Further Reading:
https://feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundcloud:users:952114480/sounds.rss
Contact us:
kingsfurtherreading@gmail.com
If you'd like to hear more book-related conversations, check out Bookings, the podcast of our friends at the King's Coop Bookstore. | |||
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