{"id":2134,"date":"2017-11-01T17:16:28","date_gmt":"2017-11-01T17:16:28","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.porticomagazine.ca\/?p=2134"},"modified":"2020-10-28T14:40:21","modified_gmt":"2020-10-28T18:40:21","slug":"new-chapters","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/porticomagazine.ca\/2017\/11\/new-chapters\/","title":{"rendered":"New Chapters – Spring 2018"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Strangers w<\/i>ith the Same Dream<\/i> is set in a fledgling kibbutz in 1921 Palestine. A small group of young Jewish pioneers are determined to bring a utopian ideal to life on a plot of land that, 25 years later, becomes part of the State of Israel.<\/p>\n Described as a story told with sensitivity, intelligence and beauty, the novel delves into the dark side of utopian longing, and has been hailed by critics as stunning and riveting.<\/p>\n Born in Toronto and raised in Kitchener, Pick received her BA in psychology from the University of Guelph in 1999. She completed a master\u2019s degree in philosophy at Memorial University in Newfoundland.<\/p>\n Her previous novel, the best-selling Far to <\/i>Go<\/i>, was nominated for the Man Booker Prize and won the Canadian Jewish Book Award. It was published around the world. Her memoir, Between Gods<\/i>, also won the Canadian Jewish Book Award.<\/p>\n Pick has also written two poetry collections. She teaches at Humber School of Writers and the Sage Hill Writing Experience.<\/p>\n Mr. Singh Among the Fugitives <\/i>(Linda Leith Publishing) came out in the spring. The Path of the Jaguar (<\/i>Thistledown Press) was published in late 2016.<\/p>\n Henighan has said in interviews that he began his latest novel as a short story, written in response to several Ontario publishers that praised his Path of the Jaguar<\/i> manuscript but declined to publish it due to its satirical perspective on the literary establishment and multiculturalism.<\/p>\n Mr. Singh <\/i>Among<\/i> the Fugitives<\/i> follows the ambitions of R.U. Singh, who is driven by a desire to live the life of an English country squire. He settles into a comfortable life as a small-town Ontario lawyer, but is accepted only at the whim of the establishment.<\/p>\n Henighan has a doctorate in Spanish American literature from the University of Oxford. Since 1999, he has taught Hispanic studies in the School of Languages and Literatures at the University of Guelph.<\/p>\n He has published five novels, three books of short stories and six works of non-fiction. He is a frequent contributor to numerous publications.<\/p>\n Professors emeritae Mary Rubio and Elizabeth Waterston began delving into the 10 journals more than three decades ago, and published abridged versions of them starting in 1985.<\/p>\n Those books proved popular, leading to the publication of unabridged volumes of the journals more recently by Oxford University Press. L.M. Montgomery\u2019s Complete Journals include reproductions of Montgomery\u2019s own photographs, as well as newspaper clippings, postcards and portraits of the author.<\/p>\n Since June 2016, three volumes covering Montgomery\u2019s years in Ontario have come out, including two this year. Montgomery lived in Leaskdale, northeast of Toronto, as well as in Norval and Swansea, both also in Ontario. She died in 1942.<\/p>\n His correspondence with the individual playwrights who submitted those hundreds of scripts is the subject of a new book by Jessica Riley, who has a PhD in literary studies\/theatre studies in English from the University of Guelph. She graduated in 2015.<\/p>\n A Man of Letters: The Selected Dramaturgical Correspondence of Urjo Kareda (Playwrights Canada Press) explores the values and preoccupations that drove Kareda to help playwrights. His frank and detailed letters, most of them rejections, helped shape the writing process for many playwrights.<\/p>\n Riley\u2019s book makes public more than 300 of Kareda\u2019s responses to and ongoing communications with playwrights, some relative unknowns, others celebrated.<\/p>\n<\/a>Alison Pick, a Canadian Jewish Book Award winner and Man Booker Prize nominee, has a much-anticipated new novel out.<\/p>\n
Stephen Henighan<\/b><\/h3>\n
Mr. Singh Among the Fugitives<\/h4>\n
<\/a>Prof. Stephen Henighan, a prolific writer and translator, had his second novel in six months published earlier this year.<\/p>\n
Mary Rubio and Elizabeth Waterston<\/b><\/h3>\n
L.M. Montgomery\u2019s Complete Journals<\/h4>\n
<\/a>Lucy Maud Montgomery\u2019s handwritten journals and major collections are a prized part of U of G\u2019s McLaughlin Library archives. The fabled author of Anne of Green Gables, and many other books that follow heroine Anne Shirley, revealed a great deal about herself in the journals.<\/p>\n
Jessica Riley<\/b><\/h3>\n
A Man of Letters.<\/h4>\n
<\/a>Unsolicited scripts sent to theatre companies can pile up. That wasn\u2019t the case for the late Urjo Kareda, artistic director of Toronto\u2019s Tarragon Theatre from 1982 to 2001, who was legendary for giving thorough notes to those script writers. In the process, Kareda has had a major influence on English-language theatre in Canada.<\/p>\n
Andrew Waldron<\/b><\/h3>\n
Exploring the Capital: An Architectural Guide to the Ottawa-Gatineau Region.<\/i><\/h4>\n