Books Start Here – Launch Feb 4

February 2016

Campaign

Books Start Here Large

Local book publishers launch campaign to grow industry in partnership with the Nova Scotia government

About the Campaign

Nova Scotia book publishers are launching a campaign to heighten awareness of the importance of the industry in our province.

The campaign’s two main goals are:

Demonstrate the importance of a vibrant, locally-owned and controlled publishing industry in Nova Scotia

Bring attention to the need for a structured approach to government support.

The provincial government has identified book publishing as a creative industry to be supported through new investment, so the broad financial commitment is there. However, with this mandate moving from the department responsible for culture to a crown corporation tied to business development, we need government to come to the table and work with us to develop programs that respect book publishing as both a viable commercial and cultural industry.

The publishers’ plan to sustain and grow book publishing in Nova Scotia includes:

–        adopting a creative industry public funding approach similar to that which has found success in Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia

–        partnering with the Nova Scotia government and other arts- and culture-based organizations to create a proper provincial arts council

–        doubling industry jobs, books and sales over the next five years

–        supporting NS writers, illustrators, designers, and investing in the people who make the success of local books possible behind the scenes, such as editors and publicists.

A community is only as strong as its ability to tell its own stories. A vibrant local publishing industry is an important component of healthy communities. To this end, we want to renew and revitalize our relationship with the provincial government in a way that addresses historical deficiencies, allows publishers to play an active role in implementing effective new programs, and puts publishers here in Nova Scotia on equal footing with our counterparts across the country.

Nova Scotia Books Start Here Launch Event

The Books Start Here campaign will be officially launched at a Local Authors Meet and Greet at the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic on Thursday, February 4th at 7pm. The event is free and open to the public. In attendance will be Sheree Fitch, Lesley Crewe, Stephen Kimber, Canada’s new poet laureate George Elliott Clarke, as well as other notable Nova Scotia authors to be announced.

Truro Daily News

November 2015

Thanks to the Truro Daily News for thinking my coming to speak to a Truro book club was worth a mention in the paper.

http://www.trurodaily.com/News/Local/2015-11-18/article-4348171/An-author%26rsquo%3Bs-perspective/1

Acadian Museum / Musée Acadien

November 2015

Miscouche opening

This official opening ceremony was last week. Nonetheless, this invitation highlights a traveling exhibit prepared by Camus Productions on behalf of the Mi’kmaq Confederacy of PEI. The exhibit will be at the Acadian Museum in Miscouche, PEI until May 2016. If you’re on the Island during that span, please check it out. Miscouche is not far from Summerside.

Si vous serez à L’île de Prince-Édouard cet hiver ou printemps prochain (jusqu’au mois de mai 2016), veuillez considérez une visit au Musée Acadien à Miscouche. Cette expo itinérante, préparée par Camus Productions pour MCPEI, vous attend.

Book Club

November 2015

18th c books 2

 

I’ve been around books pretty much my entire life: reading lots, reviewing some and writing a few of my own. Yet I’ve never been to a book club.Next week I get my first experience, when I travel to Truro, NS.

A book club in the Hub Town has selected Thomas, A Secret Life and invited me to come along for the discussion and to talk a bit about the book and its background. What else they might be curious about I’m eager (and maybe a bit anxious) to find out. I’m hoping at least some of the members of the club will want to continue finding out what happens with Thomas and his friends in books two and three.

As for other book clubs, should you wish to read any or all of the Thomas Pichon Novels I’d be happy to show up and talk about them if at all possible.

Exhibit on Mi’kmaq opens again

October 2015

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I learn from Jesse Francis of MCPEI that the travelling exhibit “N’in na L’nu: The Mi’kmaq of Prince Edward Island” is now installed at the Acadian Museum in Miscouche, PEI. It opens to the public on November 2, 2015 and will be there until May 2016. The photo I am posting comes from an earlier showing of the exhibition, when it was at the Canadian Museum of History in Gatineau (across the river from Ottawa).

Encore une fois, l’exposition itinérante “N’n na L’nu : Les Mi’kmaq de l’île du Prince-Édouard” est sur l’I-P-E. Dans ce cas, elle est au Musée acadien à Miscouche, depuis le 2 novembre 2015 au mai 2016.

Halifax Central Library, Sept. 29

September 2015

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