uTOpia

Oct 15 | Edible City editor Christina Palassio at Mount Pleasant Library

Oct 15

Co-editor of The Edible City: Toronto's Food from Farm to Fork (as well as several other Coach House uTOpia volumes), Christina Palassio, will be at the Mount Pleasant branch of the Toronto Public Library as part of their fall fair.

At an event co-sponsored by the Culinarium, Palassio will speak about the book The Edible City, and about Toronto as a city of food.

Location: 
Toronto Public Library, Mount Pleasant Branch
599 Mount Pleasant Road
Toronto, ON
Canada
See map: Google Maps
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Panel discussion from The Edible City book launch

Length: 59:16

On November 15th, 2009, we launched The Edible City: Toronto's Food from Farm to Fork with a panel discussion and cookie-decorating contest in the Gladstone Hotel Ballroom. Herewith, a recording of that panel, moderated by CityBites editor Dick Snyder, and featuring Edible City contributors Sasha Chapman, Joshna Maharaj, Lorraine Johnson, Steven Biggs and Sarah B. Hood.

Surface & Symbol reviews The State of the Arts

By Stephanie Dickison
Surface & Symbol
Feb/March 2007

There's a new book out that you should have a look at.

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Quill & Quire starred review of The State of the Arts

By Adair Brouwer
Quill & Quire
January 2007

Thoughtful, inspired, inclusive, careful to avoid deadly academicism as well as showoffy wackiness, and above all infused with a kind of I’ll-be-in-your-band-and-you-can-be-in-mine boho largeness of spirit, this second volume of musings on Toronto (after 2005’s uTOpia: Towards a New Toronto) focuses explicitly on the city’s arts scene and is part of the culture it celebrates.

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uTOpia reviewed by Women's Post

By Anthony Banks
Women's Post
February 9 3200

uTOpia

Edited by Jason McBride and Alana Wilcox

Coach House Books

287 pages

$24.95

In the past few years, Toronto has suffered from the folly of the grand vision. Projects like Dundas Square, the Distillery District and the Sheppard Subway have offered up massive fixes to problems that never really existed. The idea, one can only guess, is to hasten growth and burnish the city's image.

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