What’s going on in Canada’s fisheries libraries?
Sal Robinson
There’ve been a lot of ups and downs on the literature front for Canada this year: on the one hand, Alice Munro, the second Canadian to win Nobel Prize for… Read more »
There’ve been a lot of ups and downs on the literature front for Canada this year: on the one hand, Alice Munro, the second Canadian to win Nobel Prize for… Read more »
Last week, Margaret Atwood was scheduled to appear at Symphony Space in New York to host a celebration of Alice Munro’s receiving the Nobel Prize in Literature. Munro hasn’t made… Read more »
The relatively small degree of overlap between the Canadian and U.S. literary scenes is one of the mysteries of American publishing: we all live on the same continent, after all,… Read more »
Alex Shephard: Hello Dustin, you “real heterosexual guy,” you. Read any good books lately? Dustin Kurtz: Aw, Alex, that’s the nicest thing you’ve ever said to me. I must say,… Read more »
In the face of the rise of digital publishing, a librarian at the University of Toronto’s Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library is holding an exhibition that celebrates the book as… Read more »
Barb and Doug Minett, owners of The Bookshelf in Guelph, Canada, opened their bookstore forty years ago. Today, The Bookshelf is still going strong after rising above the competition and… Read more »
Oh, Canada, Canada, Canada. A furor has erupted there in the past few days over a new code of conduct issued by Library and Archives Canada, which is the governmental… Read more »
There’s some sad news from our friends to the north, as one of Canada’s indie bookstores announced this week that it would be closing down for good. Bookseller Nicholas Hoare… Read more »