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@PrismLitMag announces the winners of the 2012 nonfiction contest! http://t.co/TZzHPehF Thursday February 9, 2012
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“Vancouver 2010” may be remembered by Canadian booklovers as the year of the death of the independent bookseller.
Perhaps the not so distant memory of the dissolution of The Granville Book Company, with its unique combination of technical and literature books, has already faded from our minds, which after 20 years of service “fell on its own word” in 2005.
After 53 years of operation, the last location (on 4th Avenue) of the family owned Duthie’s Books closed its doors early this year.
Sophia Books, an excellent resource for multilingual magazines, novels and poetry in a “bilingual” country, has closed its doors on Hastings Street to focus more on school, library and mail orders.
Obviously, there are different factors at play here, including the widespread transition from print to electronic media and the competition presented by online ordering. However, the chief reason expressed for these closures has been the inability of booksellers to keep up with the escalating price of commercial space in Vancouver. Thus, whatever independence means for the customer, it resides in the control of larger book chains that appear to be more interested in selling patio accessories and potpourri holders than actual books.
This brief review of closures is a reaction to the most recent threat to over 30 years of business, which is a bailiff’s “notice of distress” posted on the door of This Ain’t The Rosedale Library in Toronto demanding $40,000 owed to the landlord plus costs. An enforcement agency will either collect the money or seize the property.
Just last year, there was a celebration with readings by bill bissett, Stuart Ross and others in honour of the fact the iconic bookstore was keeping afloat.
Poet and reviewer Natalie Zina Walschots has given out a general call for mobilization, asking the literary community and readers to unite to help the much beloved independent bookstore survive. Join Friends of Ain’t The Rosedale Library to stay updated on how to help.
Read more about this closure (and others in Toronto).

Thursday February 9, 2012 in Meta-Talon
Suffragette City: The Fighting Days
(Marina Stephenson Kerr plays Nellie McClung, on one side of an ethical split within the suffrage movement in Wendy Lill’s The Fighting Days)
In the play, Francis Beynon, who is passionately antiwar, clashes with Nellie McClung over military conscription, and over McClung’s position that the vote should be withheld from “non-Empire” immigrant women during the war.
Thursday February 2, 2012 in Meta-Talon
How to Bank Your Life on Speculative "Futures"
Jonathan Ball interviews Garry Thomas Morse about various speculative “futures”:
In two volumes of The Chaos! Quincunx, I use what William S. Burroughs called the “fold-in” method, which feels rather like battering some batter in a bowl. This process is exciting, because of its sense of immediacy. I’m never quite sure what the characters are going to do next!
Thursday January 26, 2012 in Meta-Talon
For the Pleasure of Seeing Her Again Comes to Kamloops
Michel Tremblay’s For the Pleasure of Seeing Her Again comes to Kamloops:
They may seem like everyday moments — and in many ways they are — but, with Lorne Cardinal and Margo Kane playing the only two characters, the play becomes “an homage to his mother,” Leyshon said.
Monday January 23, 2012 in Meta-Talon
Anis Shivani Interviews Michael McClure
Anis Shivani interviewed Beat Poet Michael McClure On Jim Morrison, The Doors, Allen Ginsberg, and Jack Kerouac for The Huffington Post on March 03, 2011:
Shivani: Is Olson the major figure in American poetry after Pound?
McClure: I do not like seeing poetry as literature rather than art and I’m not happy with the separation of Poetry and the sister arts, I prefer to see Art as Art. I perceive that a major figure after Pound would be Jackson Pollock, and instead of looking at “American” Poetry as William Carlos Williams exhorted all to do, I would look worldwide at the poetry of D.H. Lawrence, Federico Garcia Lorca, Vladimir Mayakovsky, and of course Charles Olson, and all.
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