On the morning of April 8, Scott Griffin, founder of The Griffin Trust for Excellence in Poetry and David Young, trustee, announced the Canadian and International shortlist for this year’s Griffin Prize.
At a ceremony on the morning of Tuesday, October 16, the Canada Council for the Arts announced the names of the finalists for the 2007 Governor General’s Literary Awards, in English and in French, in the categories of fiction, non fiction, poetry, drama, children’s literature (text and illustration) and translation.
The repeated phrase “i don’t stop reading/deliring” is an ecstatic mantra in Nicole Brossard’s Lovhers (Amantes), which is part of her pivotal trilogy of lesbian feminist work that includes These Our Mothers and Surfaces of Sense.
Coach House will, as of February 14, offer free digital downloads with the purchase of any print edition (provided, of course, the book currently exists in e-format). You buy one of our print books, the electronic book is yours for the taking.
Sounds great, but how does it work? One of two ways:
Coach House founder and master printer Stan Bevington is this year’s recipient of the Robert R. Reid lifetime achievement award for excellence in book art. The award is given annually by the Alcuin Society, a non-profit dedicated to preserving and celebrating Canadian contributions to print culture.
Previous Robert R. Reid recipients include former Coach House typesetter and designer Glenn Goluska.
In a two-part interview with Coach House founder and master printer Stan Bevington, Nigel Beale, from the Biblio File podcast, delves into the intriguing combination of factors that inspired Bevington's passion for print culture and took Coach House to the forefront of Canadian book design.
The interview is both a journey through the history of technologies and typefaces, as well as an advice manual for collectors seeking rare pieces of Canadiana.