News and commentary on books and writers




Friday, March 31, 2006

Due to enormous viewer response, CBC Marketplace will repeat Wendy Mesley’s program “Chasing the Cancer Answer” this Sunday, April 2, at 7:00 p.m. on CBC Television.

After fighting the disease herself, Marketplace’s Wendy Mesley is asking questions about our rising cancer rates. For example, the Canadian Cancer Society says almost one in two Canadians will be diagnosed with cancer.

According to Picking Up the Pieces authors Sherri Magee and Kathy Scalzo, most survivors emerge from cancer treatment exhausted, struggling with fears, and uncertain of the future. Survivors speak of feeling fragmented, of needing to “pick up the pieces” of their lives once the struggle with cancer is over.

Preston Manning, Former Leader of the Official Opposition and cancer survivor, reviewed the book:
“As a cancer survivor, I have experienced many of the uncertainties and emotions that Magee and Scalzo describe so well. I highly recommend their book and their helpful strategies for coping, not only to cancer survivors, but to the families, friends, and care givers of those endeavouring to ‘pick up the pieces’.”

For more information on Sherri Magee, Kathy Scalzo and the book Picking Up the Pieces, visit
www.raincoast.com

Or buy the book from
Amazon.ca
Chapters.indigo.ca

or an independent retailer of your choice.

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Wednesday, March 29, 2006

Sherri Magee and Kathy Scalzo, authors of Picking Up the Pieces: Survivors Moving Forward After Surviving Cancer, will be lecturing at the Second International Cancer Rehabilitation Conference 2006, taking place March 30th to April 1st, 2006 in Vancouver, BC.

The theme of this year’s Conference is Survivorship: Moving Forward After Treatment. Details and program information are available at www.interprofessional.ubc.ca.

Sherri Magee and Kathy Scalzo’s session “Picking Up the Pieces: Moving Forward After Cancer” will be Saturday, April 1 from 10:30-12:00 pm.

This interactive workshop will explore the Transition Model and the Four Phase Recovery Process developed by the authors to assist survivors as they acknowledge the changes, grieve the losses, regain control of their lives, explore the possibilities for living the life they want to live, and look toward the future. Participants will learn about the tangible tasks and practical tools that assist survivors as they move from fragmentation to integration their pre-cancer old self with their post-cancer new self.

cover of picking up the piecesSherri Magee, PhD, (Vancouver) has a doctorate in Interdisciplinary Studies, specializing in the short- and long-term effects of cancer and its treatments. She designs personal cancer recovery programs and trains health care professionals to work with survivors. She is the co-founder of the Abreast in a Boat Dragon Boat Society and past executive director of the Hope House Cancer Centre.

Kathy Scalzo, MSOD, (Vancouver) is president of a consulting group specializing in change and transition management. She serves on the board of directors of the BC Rehabilitation Society and is a faculty member of the Canadian Medical Association’s Physician Management Institute. Magee and Scalzo are regular lecturers at UBC’s School of Rehabilitation Sciences.

Sherri Magee and Kathy Scalzo are the authors of Picking Up the Pieces

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Monday, March 27, 2006

Several newspapers last week and on the weekend reviewed Nathan Sellyn’s debut short story collection Indigenous Beasts.

View results on Google News

Here’s a quick round-up of what the reviews of Indigenous Beasts had to say:

Torontoist: Tall Poppy Interview: Nathan Sellyn, Author, Wunderkind, Habs Fan
Torontoist, 23 Mar 2006, said “... we admire him because it’s pretty special to be able to write a short story collection that includes murder by baseball bat, soon-to-be deadbeat dads and a guy who gets beaten up at a strip club before visiting his elderly mom, yet doesn’t make us revulse in anger and disgust.”

Georgia Straight’s John Burns Reviews Indigenous Beasts by Nathan Sellyn
John Burns, Georgia Straight, 23 Mar 2006, said “For all that wounded pride and dumb longing are the language of the modern man, Vancouverite Nathan Sellyn manages to put some lovely words into the mouths of the men in his first collection of stories. And there’s nary a metrosexual or yoga devotee among them.”

Ivy League talent: Nathan Sellyn honed his writing to a fine edge at Princeton
Rebecca Wigod, Vancouver Sun, 25 Mar 2006, said “The 15 stories in Indigenous Beasts are the type you’d describe with words like ‘taut’ and ‘muscular.’ The action is splashed with violence and sex, and the writing is far more knowing than you’d expect from someone born in 1982.”

Fatherless yarns linger in mind. Philip Marchand considers a debut story collection freighted with ever-present violence
Philip Marchand, Toronto Star, 26 Mar 2006, said “Sellyn, a graduate of the creative writing program at Princeton University, has clearly been well coached. He leaves no wasted words on the page. He adds the kind of extra detail or phrase to a sentence that gives it a particular sting or vibrancy ...”

What RUF beast?
Fiona Foster, Globe and Mail, 24 Mar 2006, said “Indigenous Beasts is, though, sharply perceptive, rendering the interactions between characters, and the exchanges wherein they construct and protect their fragile egos, especially well.”

UPDATE:
Michael Schaub on the literary blog bookslut.com also mentions the Torontoist article and Raincoast’s podcast of Nathan. Link to Bookslut.com posting
Michael Schaub, Bookslut.com, 23 Mar 2006, said “ ... Sellyn’s publisher, the great Raincoast Books, has a podcast of the young author reading from his work. Violence is certainly part of what ties this ...”
Listen or subscribe to the podcast.



If you’re a blogger and would like to review Indigenous Beasts on your blog, email a request to monique at raincoast dot com. Please include your blog’s URL. 

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Join Your Favourite Hay House Authors for a Weekend Retreat in Toronto.
ENTER TO WIN
two full weekend passes.

I Can Do It! 2006
Date: April 21, 2006 - April 23, 2006
Sponsored by: Hay House
Location: Metro Toronto Convention Center

About the I Can Do It Conference
24 World-Renowned Authors Gather for One Spectacular Event!

Hay House is North America’s leading inspirational publisher. Hay House is bringing 24 of their most dynamic authors and speaker to Toronto for one amazing, empowering weekend.

I Can Do It! is a chance for participants to learn techniques for developing and deepening their relationships, spirituality, health, wealth, intuition, self-esteem and passion.

Keynote Speakers at I Can Dot It are Dr. Wayne W. Dyer, Loretta LaRoche, Sylvia Browne, Dr. Masaru Emoto and Robin Sharma.

There are over 20 workshops with other well-known authors, including Crystal Andrus, Sonia Choquette, and Immaculee Ilibagiza.

For full details including conference schedules and speaker bios visit HayHouse.com

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Saturday, March 25, 2006

Author Nathan Sellyn reads from his collection of short stories Indigenous Beasts.

A short podcast teaser of Nathan Sellyn reading from Indigenous Beasts:
LISTEN NOW

The full podcast, including Robert Ouimet’s interview with Nathan Sellyn:
LISTEN NOW


Subscribe to the Raincoast podcasts via RSS at
http://feeds.feedburner.com/raincoast

Subscribe to the podcast directly from iTunes. From iTunes simply search in the podcast section for “Raincoast Books”.

To find out more about Nathan Sellyn and Indigenous Beasts visit the Raincoast Books website:
www.raincoast.com/indigenousbeasts/

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Thursday, March 23, 2006

Torontoist, a website about Toronto and everything that happens in it, has interviewed Raincoast author Nathan Sellyn about his new work Indigenous Beasts.

Read the article

Ron Nurwisah’s interview touches on the violence present in Indigenous Beasts, Nathan’s Princeton days and his mentorship with Joyce Carol Oates, his literary influences, travel and Toronto. It is a good article with great insights into Nathan’s character.


Want to listen to an interview of Nathan? Listen to the Raincoast podcast.

A short podcast teaser of Nathan Sellyn reading from Indigenous Beasts was released March 16, 2006:
LISTEN NOW

The full podcast, including Robert Ouimet’s interview with Nathan Sellyn, released March 22:
LISTEN NOW


Want to be notified whenever a new podcast is available?

Subscribe to the podcast via RSS at
http://feeds.feedburner.com/raincoast

Or subscribe to the podcast directly from iTunes. Search the podcast section for “Raincoast Books”.

To find out more about Nathan Sellyn and Indigenous Beasts visit the Raincoast Books website:
www.raincoast.com/indigenousbeasts/

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French actress-turned activist Brigitte Bardot returned to Canada yesterday to appeal for an end to the Canadian seal hunt.

Google News

Rex Weyler, in Greenpeace: The Inside Story, writes that in 1977, the Greenpeace Foundation in Vancouver turned its focus to the Canadian seal hunt. In the section “Vive Ecologie”, Weyler describes Brigitte Bardot’s arrival in Blanc Sablon.

Brigitte Bardot’s appearance in the normally quiet harbour town spun the Greenpeace media plan wildly out of control. Bob Cummings staged a press conference at the Alexander Dumas Hotel, but journalists no longer wanted to talk to him or [Paul] Watson; they wanted to talk to Ms. Bardot. Canadian journalists vilified the actress in beer parlours. “The idle rich,” they laughed. “Second-rate movie actress trying to revive a dead career.” Her opening news conference was as much a bloodbath as the scene on the ice floes.

Bardot had arrived with her boyfriend, Sygma photographer Miroslav Brozek, and Swiss conservationist Franz Weber. Weber had raised $240,000 by selling toy seals and used the money to fly journalists and Bardot to Canada. He met with Fisheries Minister Romeo LeBlanc and offered to build a $2.5 million fake fur plant in Newfoundland to offset the loss of income if Canada ended the seal hunt. The factory, he said, would employ 600 Newfoundlanders, year-round. “Blackmail,” scoffed LeBlanc. “Canada refuses to be intimidated by pressure from abroad.” In Newfoundland, Richard Cashin, the union leader who had cut a deal with [Bob] Hunter the year before, also dismissed Weber’s offer.

Weyler’s depictions of that time continue with the antics at the press conference, the details of the Seal Protection Act, the difficulties they faced getting out to the ice floes and the campaign itself.

Miroslav Brozek’s photographs of Bardot and the seals circled the globe. In Paris Giscard d’Estaing’s government announced that France would ban the importation of harp seal pelts. The ensuing European ban on harp seal pelts eventually led to the current moratorium on the killing of the infant whitecoats.

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Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Raincoast Books and At Large Media are pleased to launch the next installment of Raincoast’s literary podcast series. In episodes 2 and 3, author Nathan Sellyn reads from his collection of short stories Indigenous Beasts.
Nathan Sellyn is an extraordinary storyteller and a bold, young writer whose work is energetic, shocking and disturbing. Joseph Boyden, author of the Governor-General’s award-nominated Three-Day Road, describes Nathan’s stories as “shockingly good.” He says, “This is a fine, fine first collection with a dark heart.”

What will draw readers to this chilling collection? Raincoast’s Internet Marketing Manager Monique Trottier says, “the podcast allows readers to discover an author without having to invest a lot of time and money. For those new to an author, the podcast is like a movie trailer. But for those who have already read the book and are looking for more, the podcast acts like the special features on a DVD, which allows the reader--including librarians, booksellers and the media--to get a better sense of behind the scenes--who the author is, what informed the work, the voice behind the words.”

Trottier adds “the short story format works perfectly for a podcast. There are longer stories that are a couple of pages and then there are short stories that are only a few paragraphs. The podcast episodes dedicated to Nathan’s work allow for the same types of discovery--short teaser podcasts and longer, interview-style podcasts.”

A short podcast teaser of Nathan Sellyn reading from Indigenous Beasts was released March 16, 2006:
LISTEN NOW

The full podcast, including Robert Ouimet’s interview with Nathan Sellyn, releases March 22:
LISTEN NOW

Readers who want to be notified whenever a new podcast is available can subscribe to the podcast via RSS or directly from iTunes.

Subscribe to the Raincoast podcasts via RSS at
http://feeds.feedburner.com/raincoast

Or subscribe to the podcast directly from iTunes. From iTunes simply search in the podcast section for “Raincoast Books”.

To find out more about Nathan Sellyn and Indigenous Beasts visit the Raincoast Books website:
www.raincoast.com/indigenousbeasts/

------------
About Raincoast Books’ literary podcast series:

On November 16, 2005, Raincoast and At Large Media officially launched Raincoast’s literary podcast series. The launch of the podcast series made the Vancouver-based company one of the first publishers in Canada to experiment with podcasting.

A podcast is an Internet-delivered audio show that can be listened to by any portable media player or computer.

The latest installments feature Nathan Sellyn’s Indigenous Beasts. Indigenous Beasts is a daring new collection of stories: raw and seething, bloody and beautiful, intense with despair and depravity. Joyce Carol Oates calls Indigenous Beasts, “an impressive debut. These are powerful stories, suspenseful and unpredictable, aimed for the jugular.”
www.raincoast.com/indigenousbeasts/

About At Large Media:
At Large Media works with world-class companies and organizations to build meaningful connections with the consumers. They work across a variety of media platforms to provide clients with the strategic support they need to succeed as leaders in today’s Information Economy.
www.atlargemedia.com

About Raincoast Books:
Raincoast Books is a Canadian publisher and distributor based in Vancouver, BC. Raincoast Publishing, which includes the Polestar imprint and key titles from Press Gang Publishers, produces a wide range of fiction and non-fiction titles for adults and children. Raincoast Distribution is the exclusive Canadian distributor for publishers from the U.K., the U.S. and Canada.

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Monday, March 20, 2006

There was a good article posted last week on BBC about Fantagraphics’ MOME publications—along with images from some of the comics, plus an interview with many of the Mome contributors—their takes on what MOME and comics are all about.

Links to the images and the interview transcript are at the top of the page. The direct link to the interview (which is the best part) is:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/collective/A10125064

How some MOME contributors explain MOME:

Martin Cendreda: MOME is like a bunch of cartoonists gathered at a party, all talking about different things. But the party is in the form of a comic anthology ...

Paul Hornschemeier: ... MOME updates the dictionary, so to speak. No language is static, and this language of symbols is furiously evolving ...

More details on MOME 1-4.

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The find of today is Found magazine. I’m sure many of you are aware of FOUND, but those who aren’t, you should check out the site.

FOUND is about found stuff.

We collect found stuff: love letters, birthday cards, kids’ homework, to-do lists, ticket stubs, poetry on napkins, doodles—anything that gives a glimpse into someone else’s life. Anything goes.

Jason Bitner, co-founder of FOUND, is now promoting LaPorte, Indiana (Princeton), a publication detailing his find in the small town of LaPorte, Indiana.

Not long ago, in the back room of a small Midwestern diner, Bitner stumbled upon a forgotten archive: over 18,000 studio portraits, taken from the 1940s to 1960s, of the people of LaPorte, Indiana.

Jason and the Found crew will be in Canada this summer:
May 31, 2006 in Toronto, ON
July 1, 2006 in Vancouver, B.C.
July 2, 2006 in Roberts Creek, B.C.

(Details still to come.)

Here’s what Jason had to say in a recent email newsletter:

“The photos are these amazing studio portraits all taken by one photographer, Frank Pease, back in the 50s and 60s. He archived an entire town in beautiful black-and-white photos-- it’s like a huge yearbook of the Midwest.

“Each Friday, the LaPorte Herald-Argus prints a half-dozen photos and asks readers for help identifying the subjects. Hundreds of phone calls and emails have poured in, and the mysteries are beginning to be solved.

“In the past couple weeks, we’ve tracked down over two dozen people from the book. It’s nuts-- we’ve been staring at these found photos for years, and they’ve suddenly sprung to life. And as more and more people come forward, we’re beginning to reconstruct the town and reunite some friends from across the country--the book’s becoming a real community event ... it’s the ultimate find!"

The book is in stores now, and there’s a dedicated website for LAPORTE, INDIANA, www.LaPorteBook.com

Independent booksellers
Amazon.ca
Chapters.indigo.ca

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Saturday, March 18, 2006

This weekend marks the third anniversary of US-led invasion of Iraq. Here’s our suggested reading list.

A War against Truth: An Intimate Account of the Invasion of Iraq (Raincoast)
by Paul William Roberts

This national bestseller is a passionate eyewitness account that will forever change your view of the Iraq war. A classical scholar and one of the few journalists to have interviewed Saddam Hussein, Canadian reporter Paul William Roberts knows Iraq better than most. This is his exposé of the politics behind the recent war—and the brutal reality on the ground.


Dancing in the No-Fly Zone: A Woman’s Journey through Iraq (Raincoast)
by Hadani Ditmars

As Iraq continues to weather violent occupation, theocratic thuggism and civil strife, Hadani Ditmars’ book Dancing in the No-Fly Zone serves as an eerily prescient tribute to a culture and a people at the breaking point. This Globe and Mail Top 100 Book for 2005 offers a unique perspective on Iraq, before and after the U.S. invasion.


Greenpeace: The Inside Story: How a Group of Ecologists, Journalists and Visionaries Changed the World (Raincoast)
by Rex Weyler

Greenpeace is a remarkable achievement: a gripping story; a snapshot of the mid-20th-century zeitgeist; a fascinating study of media manipulation; an uncompromising look at the sometimes brutal internal struggles of activist organizations; and above all, an inspiring call-to-arms that deepens our understanding of what it means to be politically engaged. Greenpeace shows why and how the revolution begins … and leads us through the aftermath.



Confessions of an Economic Hit Man (Berrett-Koehler)
by John Perkins

Economic hit men are highly paid professionals who cheat countries out of trillions of dollars. They funnel World Bank, government and foreign aid funds into the coffers of international businesses and a few wealthy families. John Perkins was one of these hit men, and his first-hand account contains explosive revelations on Asian, Middle Eastern and Latin American hotspots. He discloses the clandestine support received by Osama bin Laden as well as little-known facts about the relationship between the two most powerful dynasties in the world: the Bush family and the House of Saud.


Journey of the Jihadist: Inside Muslim Militancy (Harcourt)
by Fawaz A. Gerges

Renowned Middle East expert and media commentator Fawaz A. Gerges takes readers into the mindset of the jihadi—the holy warrior—that lies behind so many front-page headlines yet remains nearly impenetrable. Journey of the Jihadist puts a human face to events in the Middle East over the past thirty years, from Lebanon’s civil war—which Gerges experienced firsthand—to the war in Iraq and the terrorist attacks in London. But behind jihadism a battle is being waged for the soul of Islam itself.



If you’ve read any of these titles and have feedback, please comment on this blog or email info at raincoast dot com.

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Friday, March 17, 2006

Dede CraneSympathy is the story of Kerry Taylor, a former ballet dancer who slips into a catatonic state after a car accident claims the lives of her husband and son. The novel charts her progression through Dr. Michael Myatt’s controversial new therapy, sympathy-based healing. This is a gripping, moving and often surprisingly funny examination of the relationship between mind and body.

In February, I asked Alexis to read Dede Crane’s new novel Sympathy and suggest some interview questions for this blog. She kindly obliged, and below is the interview with Dede Crane.

-------------

Question 1
Did you consciously try to weave your own understanding and belief in the mind-body connection into this book or was it something that just evolved over time? How did this book evolve? Did it start with the character who was a dancer, or from wanting to talk about grief?

Dede:
I started with no idea of where this book might go, no story in mind. All I began with was a blank page and one thought: I want to explore my relationship with my mother and my history of bulimia. The catatonia was just suddenly there and, I believe now, a subconscious sense of being deeply stifled intellectually and creatively. I was kind of hoping to blame some of my struggles on my mother, but by the book’s end, realized it was the patriarchal side of things that I had to come to terms with.

Question 2
What kind of research did you have to do to be able to create the hospital of Rosewood and the experience of the catatonic character?
 
Dede: I’m afraid I did none. It was all imagined. Though when I lived in Halifax, I was invited to a clinic by a psychologist friend of mine to teach some dance moves for the patients’ upcoming dance. This took place over a several weeks. There was an assortment of characters including: manic Wolfman Jack the self-appointed DJ, a suicidal, chronically depressed but sweet young woman and a catatonic man who never spoke a word. I remember being especially curious about him and several times attempting to draw him out by dancing with him—holding his hands and gently mirroring his movements. Sadly they were all heavily medicated.

Question 3
I found this novel to be both very sad and very uplifting. What’s your take on it? Were the sad parts difficult to write? What was the most challenging thing about the book?                                                                                                             

Dede: I’m glad you found it uplifting and hope you found it funny at times too. I see a lot of humour in our foibles as humans. As for the grief part, I lost my father during the writing of this book. So part of the grief was for him and part was how losing someone that defines you in such a basic way, means losing that part of you. At this time I had also had to say good-bye to dance. I have fibromyalgia and after turning forty, a certain youthful physicality was lost to me. And I was always a fiercely physical person.

Writing and editing the funeral scene never failed to make me cry. I’m not sure why. And Hugo’s relationship with Kerry I found very touching. Hugo is my favourite character in the book. I find him deeply feeling, creative and his sense of humour comes from understanding life’s utter sadness but not being defeated by it.

The most challenging thing in writing this book was just about everything. Being my first attempt at writing, it was a huge learning curve for me. If you could have seen the first draft you would understand how far it’s come. My brain often felt like a muscle as I struggled to find the structure, the authenticity of the characters and to keep all the various threads straight.

Question 4
I understand that you’re a former dancer. How did your background in dance prepare you for writing and how did that shape your book?

Dede: My dance training probably helped a lot with the discipline and stick-to-it ness it takes to see a book through to the end and then some. As a dancer I saw how over time, practice brought results. So when the going got tough, and I was convinced this book was destined for the delete button, I could slowly tease myself around to knowing that things have to start somewhere and that knowing something’s awful means it can only get better.

As a dancer, I loved ballets with a story and emotional arc. I’ve always had a great imagination and writing brought it together with the love of story.

Question 5
How long did it take you to write this book? What’s the significance of the snipings/shooting? Is there a significance?

Dede: This book took five years in total. Two years writing nothing else. And then three years of on and off editing and revising. I write everyday, often seven days a week, which I think help allows things to percolate on a subconscious level.

I wrote the original draft of Sympathy before 9-11. After 9-11 happened I knew I couldn’t set a book in a suburb of D.C. without incorporating it. I heard stories from my family who still live in the area about the day the plane crashed into the Pentagon and how militarized life was becoming. So I set [the book] in the fall of 2002 and only later realized that was the very time of the beltway snipers. So I researched that and put it in along with real incidents reported to me from my family, such as having to pump gas behind giant tarps separating them from the streets, armed guard on street corners, having to keep their kids home from school, etc.

So I realized I had a macrocosm of PTSD happening outside the microcosm in Rosewood clinic.

Question 6
What do you feel are some of the themes of the book?
 
Dede: The most important theme to me is the interconnectedness of people. Whether we’re conscious of it or not, we are influencing and continually being influenced by our environment and the people in it. And in this way, we all, as individuals, help create our world and the society in which we live. A first step to understanding this is to understand that our body and mind aren’t separate from each other. And when the two are in sync, in balance—and not just conceptually so—we discover our fearlessness and our goodness, and therefore our ability to love.


Thank you to Dede and Alexis

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Law One: Always make your future bigger than your past.

Dan Sullivan and Catherine Nomura have written a little book with big, life-changing principles. The Laws of Lifetime Growth is about how you can take charge of your future.

Dan and Catherine are teachers and coaches and the book sets out 10 principles for personal and business success. The idea is to live a life of continual growth and fulfillment.

Who doesn’t want that? Well, as they note on their website, lifetimegrowth.com, there are some who believe that they’ve already gone as far as they can go. There are some who lack confidence or direction. And some who feel the sky’s the limit but are unable to get there. So step one is to read the book.

The Laws of Lifetime Growth offers remarkable, instantly usable insights, changing the way you think, and empowering you to take command of your future.” (Lifetimegrowth.com)

Lifetimegrowth.com is its own amazing resource. Check out the authors’ blog, read the laws, order the book, or sign up for the newsletter. 

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Thursday, March 16, 2006

The second podcast in Raincoast Books’ literary podcast series is now available.

Listen to the podcast of Nathan Sellyn reading from his debut short story collection Indigenous Beasts.

Want to be notified whenever a new podcast is available?

Subscribe to the Raincoast podcasts via RSS at
feeds.feedburner.com/raincoast

Or subscribe to the podcast directly from iTunes. From iTunes simply search in the podcast section for “Raincoast Books”.

(If you already have iTunes installed, you can follow this link.)

Indigenous Beasts is a chilling collection of stories from Nathan Sellyn—an extraordinary storyteller and a bold, young writer whose work is energetic, shocking and distrubing.

To find out more about Nathan Sellyn and Indigenous Beasts visit
www.raincoast.com/IndigenousBeasts.

Read an excerpt:
Download a PDF sampler of Indigenous Beasts.

To buy the book visit
Amazon.ca

Chapters.Indigo.ca

or find an Independent Bookseller

------------
About Raincoast Books’ literary podcast series:

On November 16, 2005, Raincoast, along with At Large Media officially launched its literary podcast series. See original announcement.

The inaugural podcast featured original interviews and readings by author Jim Lynch, recorded when he attended the 2005 Vancouver International Writers and Readers Festival. Listen to the podcast: Jim Lynch on The Highest Tide. Find out more about the novel The Highest Tide.

For further background on podcasting visit the CBC News page on “what is podcasting".

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Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Grab your pint and a copy of The Irish Pub Cookbook by Margaret M. Johnson (Chronicle Books).

The pub comes to your home in this beautifully photographed cookbook, which includes over 70 recipes for pub favourites like the classic Sheperd’s Pie, the modern Mushroom Risotto with Clonakilty Black Pudding and the Irish Cream Cheesecake.

A culinary celebration of pubs and pub food.

Johnson includes plenty of background and history along with her focus on the food. You’ll find traditional country-style cooking but also gastronomic surprises. For example, the recipe for Cider-Braised Chicken and Cabbage was developed by Bulmers, the Irish hard-cider maker, for restaurants and pubs. Cider has long been a popular ingredient in European cuisines, especially among Celts, Bretons and Normans, Johnson points out. “Irish chefs love to use it, often as a substitute for wine, because of the unique flavor it imparts to sauces, meat, and poultry.”

Try the below recipes to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day.



Cider-Braised Chicken and Cabbage

1/3 cup all-purpose flour
Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
Six 5- to 6-ounce bone-in chicken breast halves, skin on
¼ cup olive oil
4 to 5 cloves garlic
3 carrots, peeled and thickly sliced
1 large onion, thickly sliced
3 bay leaves
½ cup golden raisins
2 tablespoons minced fresh flatleaf parsley
2 tablespoons fresh rosemary
2 cups shredded Savoy cabbage
1 cup homemade chicken stock, or canned low-sodium chicken broth, or 1 chicken bouillon cube mixed with 1 cup boiling water
1 cup dry Irish cider

Preheat the oven to 325 F.

Combine the flour, salt and pepper in a shallow bowl and dredge the chicken in it, shaking off the excess.

In a large skillet over medium heat, warm the oil. Add the chicken in batches and cook for 3 to 4 minutes on each side, or until lightly browned. Transfer the chicken to a large ovenproof baking dish.

Tuck the garlic, carrots, onions and bay leaves in between the chicken pieces. Sprinkle with the raisins, parsley and rosemary. Place the cabbage on top, season with salt and pepper, and pour the stock or broth and cider over the meat and vegetables. Cover with foil and bake for 1 ¼ to 1 ½ hours, or until the chicken is tender.

To serve, place a chicken breast in the center of each of 6 plates, and spoon the vegetables and sauce over the top.

Makes 6 servings.



Chicken Stock

1 ½ pounds chicken pieces a combination of backs, wings and necks and bones
6 cups cold water
1 onion, chopped
1 leek white part only, washed and chopped
1 carrot, peeled and chopped
1 celery stalk, chopped
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon black peppercorns
1 bouquet garni a cheesecloth bag containing 3 sprigs fresh flatleaf parsley, 1 sprig fresh thyme and 1 bay leaf

In a large stockpot or Dutch oven over medium heat, combine the chicken pieces and bones and water. Bring to a boil and skim any foam that rises to the top. Reduce the heat to medium-low, skim again, and add the onion, leek, carrot, celery, salt, peppercorns and bouquet garni. Simmer, skimming occasionally, for 2 to 2 ½ hours. Strain the stock through a fine-mesh sieve into a bowl and let cool. 

Refrigerate for several hours, remove the congealed fat, then cover and refrigerate for up to 1 week, or freeze for up to 3 months.
Makes about 5 cups.



Bread and Butter Pudding With Hot Whiskey Sauce

For the pudding:
½ cup raisins
½ cup Irish whiskey
5 large eggs
2 cups heavy whipping cream
1 cup sugar
½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
¼ teaspoon ground nutmeg
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
8 ounces 8 to 9 slices firm white bread, crust left on
4 tablespoons unsalted butter at room temperature

For the Hot Whiskey Sauce:
½ cup 1 stick unsalted butter, cut into pieces
1 cup sugar
6 tablespoons heavy whipping cream
¼ cup Irish whiskey

To make the pudding:
In a small bowl, combine the raisins and whiskey and let soak for 1 hour. Butter a 9-inch square nonreactive baking dish.
In a large bowl, whisk together the eggs, cream, sugar, cinnamon, nutmeg and vanilla. Spread one side of each slice of bread with butter. Cut the slices in half diagonally and arrange half the bread in the bottom of the baking dish, overlapping the slices. Drain the raisins and sprinkle half over the bread. Repeat with the remaining bread and raisins. Pour the egg-cream custard mixture over the bread and let it soak for 30 minutes.

Preheat the oven to 400 F.

Place the baking dish in a large baking pan. Add enough hot water to come halfway up the sides of the dish. Bake for 50 to 60 minutes, or until the pudding is set and the top is golden. Remove the baking dish from the water bath and let cool slightly on a wire rack.

To make the whiskey sauce:
In a small saucepan over medium heat, melt the butter. Whisk in the sugar, cream and whiskey. Reduce the heat to low and simmer for 4 to 5 minutes, or until the sauce thickens. Serve the pudding warm with the whiskey sauce spooned over each portion.
Makes 6 to 8 servings; about 1 cup of sauce.

Posted by Monique @ 11:48 AM · (0) Comments · (0) Trackbacks · Tell a Friend
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