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2008
Winter- Spring Author Series
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This is our 24th year of bringing
authors to Waterloo book lovers. (See
below for
the full roster). Mark your calendars and drop by
the store for tickets. Tickets for
the readings are $8.00. One dollar from each ticket goes to The Record's Literacy
Fund.
Call 519-884-2665 or 1-888-241-7546 to reserve. All
readings take place at 7:30pm.
Knox Presbyterian
Church is at 50 Erb St West corner of Erb and Caroline in Waterloo.
Parking is available beside the church (enter via Dupont) or across Erb St. at Waterloo
Town Square.
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Chris Turner |

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Tuesday February 19
Princess Twin Cinema 7:00 pm $8
46 King St N, Waterloo
Chris did a slide
show from his global search for enviro-friendly solutions to a crowd of
over 100. We hope he'll come back next fall when the paperback is released.
After the fierce warnings and grim predictions of The Weather Makers
and An Inconvenient Truth, acclaimed journalist and national
bestselling author Chris Turner finds hope in the search for a sustainable
future.
Point of no return: The chilling phrase has become the ubiquitous mantra of
ecological doomsayers, a troubling headline above stories of melting
permafrost and receding ice caps, visions of catastrophe and fears of a
problem with no solution. Daring to step beyond the rhetoric of panic and
despair, The Geography of Hope points to the bright light at the end
of this very dark tunnel.
With a mix of front-line reporting, analysis and passionate argument, Chris
Turner pieces together the glimmers of optimism amid the gloom and the
solutions already at work around the world, from Canada’s largest wind farm
to Asia’s greenest building and Europe’s most eco-friendly communities. But
The Geography of Hope goes far beyond mere technology. Turner seeks out the
next generation of political, economic, social and spiritual institutions
that could provide the global foundations for a sustainable future–from the
green hills of northern Thailand to the parliament houses of Scandinavia,
from the villages of southern India, where microcredit finance has remade
the social fabric, to America’s most forward-thinking think tanks.
In this compelling first-person exploration, punctuated by the wonder and
angst of a writer discovering the world’s beacons of possibility, Chris
Turner pieces together a dazzling map of the disparate landmarks in a
geography of hope.
Check out the
Geography of Hope's
website.
Chris was on CBC's
The Hour with George Stromboulopoulos on Dec. 6th.
Chris Turner is the author of the national bestseller Planet
Simpson: How a Cartoon Masterpiece Documented an Era and Defined a
Generation. His culture and technology reporting for Shift
magazine earned him four National Magazine Awards from 1999 to 2003,
including the 2001 President’s Medal for General Excellence, the highest
honour in Canadian magazine writing. His writing has also appeared in the
Globe and Mail, the Independent, the Sunday Times,
Time, Canadian Geographic and Utne Reader. He lives in
Calgary. |
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James Raffan |
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Wednesday February 20
Princess Twin Cinema 7:00 pm $8
46 King St N, Waterloo
Emperor of the North
- Sir
George Simpson and the Remarkable Story of the Hudson's Bay Company
(HarperCollins, $34.95)
The adventure-filled story of the legendary Hudson’s Bay Company is
inextricably linked to the formation of a Canadian nation stretching from
sea to sea to sea. In an absorbing and lively new book on The Bay, James
Raffan explores the forces that molded a man, a company and a country.
"James Raffan joins the ranks of Pierre Berton and Peter C. Newman with
this rollicking adventure story of the Hudson's Bay Company and its
larger-than-life governor, Sir George Simpson." --Farley Mowat
James Raffan is one of Canada’s foremost authorities on canoeing and
wilderness experience. He is the author of two bestsellers: Fire in the
Bones: Bill Mason and the Canadian Canoeing Tradition and Bark, Skin
and Cedar. He has also published Tumblehome, a collection of
meditations on the wilderness. He appeared at the
Princess in 2002 for his book, Deep Waters, about a canoeing tragedy
in 1978 on Lake Tamiskaming. |
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Gabor
Maté |
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Tuesday February 26
Knox Church 7:30pm $8.00
In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts
(Knopf Canada $34.95 Feb.12/08)
is a timely and profoundly original new book. Bestselling writer and
physician Gabor Maté looks at the epidemic of addictions in our
society, tells us why we are so prone to them and what is needed to
liberate ourselves from their hold on our emotions and behaviours.
For over seven years Gabor Maté has been the staff physician at the
Portland Hotel, a residence and harm reduction facility in Vancouver’s
Downtown Eastside. His patients are challenged by life-threatening drug
addictions, mental illness, Hepatitis C or HIV and, in many cases, all
four. But if Dr. Maté’s patients are at the far end of the spectrum, there
are many others among us who are also struggling with addictions. Drugs,
alcohol, tobacco, work, food, sex, gambling and excessive inappropriate
spending: what is amiss with our lives that we seek such self-destructive
ways to comfort ourselves? And why is it so difficult to stop these habits,
even as they threaten our health, jeopardize our relationships and corrode
our lives?
Beginning with a dramatically close view of his drug addicted patients, Dr.
Maté looks at his own history of compulsive behaviour. He weaves the
stories of real people who have struggled with addiction with the latest
research on addiction and the brain. Providing a bold synthesis of clinical
experience, insight and cutting edge scientific findings, Dr. Maté sheds
light on this most puzzling of human frailties. He proposes a compassionate
approach to helping drug addicts and, for the many behaviour addicts among
us, to addressing the void addiction is meant to fill.
Gabor Maté, M.D. is the author of the bestselling books Scattered Minds
and When the Body Says No–published in ten languages on five
continents–and co-author, with Gordon Neufeld, of Hold On To Your Kids.
Former medical columnist for the Globe and Mail, where his byline continues
to be seen on issues of health and parenting, Dr. Maté has had a family
practice, worked as a palliative care physician and, most recently, with
the addicted men and women in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver. He last
appeared at Words Worth for When the Body Says No in June 2002.
.Click here for his website.
Read Dr. Maté's comments on
aboriginal
addictions, following the recent death of two girls on a Saskatchewan
First Nations settlement.
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Karolyn Smardz Frost,
Lorna Goodison, Carol Duncan |

Karolyn Smardz Frost

Lorna Goodison

Carol Duncan |
Our annual Black History event
Thursday February
28
Luther Village
7:30pm $10.00
proceeds to Production Cooperatives Haiti, a local Haitian
NGO. Dr. Carol Duncan, a professor at WLU will also be presenting her book
Black Church Studies. There will be a display of Haitian folk art as well.
Karolyn Smardz Frost
just won the Governor General’s Award for Non-fiction for her page-turner
I’ve Got a Home in
Glory Land (Thomas Allen,$21.95).
This fascinating book follows Thornton Blackburn and his wife Lucie as they
escape to Canada on the Underground Railroad. Thornton plans a successful
daylight escape once he learns that his new bride is to be sold “down the
river”. The couple reach Michigan, only to be caught by slave catchers.
Once the Black community in Detroit heard of the Blackburns plight, the
first racial uprising in Detroit’s history occurred. The couple was able to
escape again, this time to Canada, where they settled in Toronto and
started the city’s first taxi business. Then the US government insists that
they be extradited back to the States. This was the first serious legal
dispute between Canada and the US regarding slavery. Ultimately Canada’s
Lieutenant Governor’s impassioned defense saves the Blackburns from the US.
Thorton and Lucie resolved to assist as many other slaves as possible and
made their home a refuge for escaped slaves. Smardz Frost spent two decades
piecing together this incredible story from artifacts that are almost two
centuries old. I enjoyed reading Smardz Frost book not only for the
Blackburn's story but also for the wealth of information regarding the
Underground Railroad. (Bronwyn Addico).From Harvey River
(McClelland & Stewart, $29.99) by Lorna Goodison
In this spellbinding memoir of her Goodison's forebears, we meet a cast of
wonderfully drawn characters, including George O’Brian Wilson, the Irish
patriarch of the family who married a Guinea woman after coming to Jamaica
in the mid-1800s; Doris’s parents, Margaret and David, childhood
sweethearts who became the first family of Harvey River; and their eight
children. In lush, vivid prose, textured with the cadences of Creole
speech, Lorna Goodison weaves together memory and mythology to create a
vivid tapestry. She takes us deep into the heart of a complete world to
tell a universal story of family and the ties that bind us to the place we
call home.
Lorna Goodison’s
From Harvey River: A Memoir of My Mother and
Her People has won the
2008 B.C. Award for Canadian Non-fiction. This national prize is
Canada’s largest literary non-fiction award ($40,000).
She is the
author of eight books of poetry, including Travelling Mercies,
Controlling the Silver, and Goldengrove: New and Selected Poems,
and two collections of short stories. She has received much international
recognition, including the Musgrave Gold Medal. Born in Jamaica, Goodison
has taught at the University of Toronto and now teaches at the University
of Michigan. She divides her time between Ann Arbor and Toronto.
Wilfrid Laurier professor Dr. Carol Duncan, will be presenting
Black Church Studies (Abingdon $27.99) a book that she co-wrote
examining African-American perspectives within Christian theology. Dr.
Duncan, a professor in the Religion & Culture Dept. at Laurier, has long
been recognized as a major contributor to both the local and national Black
community. She has received various awards for her contributions and
recently spent a year as a Research Associate Professor at Harvard Divinity School.
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Sandra Gulland
the dress!

Mary Swan

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Monday March 3
Knox Church 7:30pm $8.00
Sandra appeared in an historical gown designed by costumer, Susan
Dicks, originally from Kitchener. who designed costumes for the movies,
Chicago and Glitter.
Mistress of the Sun (HarperCollins $32.95) is the
newest book by the author of the internationally acclaimed Josephine B.
trilogy/ This is another deeply enchanting historical novel, this one based
on the life of an extraordinary horsewoman, Louise de la Vallière, the
brave and spirited child of minor nobility who, against all odds, grows up
to become one of the most mysterious consorts of France’s King Louis XIV,
the charismatic Sun King.
Set against the magnificent decadence of the 17th-century
court of the Sun King, Mistress of the Sun begins when the eccentric
young Louise falls in love with a wild white stallion and uses ancient
magic to tame him. This one desperate action of youth shadows her
throughout her life, changing it in ways she could never imagine.
Unmarriageable and too poor to join a convent, she enters the court of the
Sun King as a maid of honour, where she captures— and then tragically
loses—the King’s heart. Mistress of the Sun illuminates, through the
resurrection of a fascinating female figure from the dark corners of
history, both the power of true love and the rash actions we take to
capture and tame it.
Sandra Gulland’s previous work brought Josephine Bonaparte magnificently to
life in three bestselling novels beginnihg with The
Many Lives & Secret Sorrows of Josephine B.
Gulland spent many years researching Mistress of the Sun. She and her husband live half the year near Killaloe, Ontario,
and half in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. Visit her online at
www.sandragulland.com.
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The Boys in the Trees (Henry Holt, $15.50)
'This is a mesmerizing novel, that can truly claim to be
filled with a 'terrible beauty.''-Alice Munro
Newly arrived to the countryside, William Heath, his wife, and two
daughters appear the picture of a devoted family. But when accusations of
embezzlement spur William to commit an unthinkable crime, those who
witnessed this affectionate, attentive father go about his routine of work
and family must reconcile action with character.
A doctor who has cared for
one daughter, encouraging her trust, examines the finer details of his
brief interactions with William, searching for clues that might penetrate
the mystery of his motivation. Meanwhile the other daughter's teacher
grapples with guilt over a moment when fate wove her into a succession of
events that will haunt her dreams.
In beautifully crafted prose, Mary Swan
examines the volatile collisions between our best intentions-how a passing
stranger can leave an indelible mark on our lives even as the people we
know most intimately become alienated by tides of self-preservation and
regret. In her nuanced, evocative descriptions a locket contains
immeasurable sorrow, trees provide sanctuary and refuge to lost souls, and
grief clicks into place when a man cocks the cold steel barrel of a
revolver.
A supreme literary achievement, The Boys in the Trees offers a
chilling story that swells with acutely observed emotion and humanity.
Mary Swan was born in Wingham
and has lived in Guelph, Ont. since 1982. She
won the O.Henry short story award in 2001. Her
first novella, The Deep, was published in 2002.
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Raj
Patel |
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Wednesday
March 12 Knox Church 7:30pm $8.00
$2 per ticket for
Beyond Borders
totalled $250 for Catherine Christo's trip to Ghana May - July 2008
Why is it that
there are 800
million people on earth who are starving, but at the same time there are a
billion who are obese?
For those with enough money—and that’s most of us in wealthier
countries—life is good. We can eat almost anything we want, regardless of
where it comes from, what season it is or how much it costs. The world is
our dish, laden with more foods than we’ve ever seen in history and more
calories than we know what to do with. A continent away, there are more
bloated bellies, but this time from malnutrition—seemingly due to a
scarcity of food. But these two contrasting worlds are linked, deeply and
inextricably. In a timely look at the entire global food chain, Stuffed
and Starved (HarperCollins, $32.95) asks us to think about the way our
food comes to us, to understand how our supermarket shopping makes us
complicit in denying freedom to the world’s poorest and to recognize how we
ourselves are poisoned by our choices.
Raj Patel, an author uniquely qualified to take a long, broad view of world
food production, looks at food systems—the machine most of us don’t even
know exists—and the web made up of corporations, the World Bank, the World
Trade Organization, farmers’ groups, government agencies and corporate
lobbyists. From farm to fork, Patel travels to rural collectives in Brazil,
investigates the all-powerful distribution networks, serves up the specific
journeys of coffee, soy and high-fructose corn syrup, and visits the
kitchens of fast-food restaurants. What he uncovers is the shocking story
of commercial greed and helpless hunger that is a key ingredient in
everything we eat.
Stuffed and Starved is one of the most shocking investigations into the
“haves” feeding off the “have-nots” and a compelling look at how we all
suffer the consequences of a food system cooked to a corporate recipe.
RAJ PATEL was educated at Oxford, the London School of Economics and
Cornell University. He is currently a fellow at the Institute for Food and
Development Policy in Oakland, California, a visiting researcher at the
University of KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa and a visiting scholar at the
Center for African Studies at the University of California at Berkeley. He
has worked for the World Bank, interned at the WTO, consulted for the UN
and been involved in international campaigns against his former employers.
This is his first book. Visit Raj Patel at
www.stuffedandstarved.org. Watch
a trailer for the book
here.
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Alison Pick, Tim Lilburn & James Gordon |
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Alison Pick

Tim Lilburn

James Gordon

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Wednesday April
9
Princess Twin Cinema 7:00pm $8.00
46 King St N, Waterloo
Alison Pick, who grew up in Kitchener-Waterloo read from her second poetry
collection, The Dream World. She was joined by Tim Lilburn, one of Canada's
best-known poets, and Guelph folksinger, James Gordon. The Q&A was
facilitated by Susan Scott, from The New Quarterly.
Alison Pick’s writing has appeared in The Walrus, The
Globe and Mail, The National Post, and enRoute Magazine. Her first
collection of poems, Question & Answer, was a finalist for the
Gerald Lampert Award and the E.J. Pratt Newfoundland and Labrador Book
Award. In 2002, Pick won the Bronwen Wallace Award for most promising
Canadian poet, and her poetry has gone on to win the National Magazine
Award and the CBC Literary Award. Her first novel, The Sweet Edge,
was a Globe and Mail Top 100 Book of the Year. Alison Pick lives in
Toronto.
The Dream World (McClelland & Stewart, $17.99) was written over a
five-year period during which my partner and I moved from the mainland to
Newfoundland and back again. To change place is to stir up the concept of
home, both real and imagined: homes inhabited, homes lost, homes we only
ever longed for. Landscape is a door that opens onto desire, and many of
these poems come from the struggle for belonging, in a particular location
and in the physical world in general. This is my third book, and I was
interested in exploring the frontiers of language, the place where words
fall down in the face of the numinous, where both our feelings and what
lies beyond human experience seem fundamentally unsayable. Finally, I was
reading as widely as possible in the Humanities during the writing process,
and I wanted to push the life of the mind up against poetry (which for me
had previously been an intuitive and visceral enterprise). The Dream
World is a collision of thought, feeling, and imagination, a world with
borders wide enough–I hope–to encompass it all. -- Alison Pick
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I wrote the poems in Orphic Politics (McClelland & Stewart,
$17.99) between 2003 and 2007. This was a difficult time for me. I got
quite ill, was hospitalized, and had a number of surgeries. I also
developed an auto-immune condition that made walking difficult. I had never
been sick like this before, never lived in the country of the ill, and my
health problems went on for a couple of years. The poems respond to all of
this. After a while, being sick felt like an orphic immurement. I began to
think of other diseases in me that might be in need of healing, noological
disorders — a loneliness for things, for example, the residue of
colonialism. How to transform these? I subjected myself to the theurgic art
of poetry. -- Tim Lilburn
Tim Lilburn’s six previous poetry collections include Kill-site,
winner of the Governor General’s Award, and To the River, winner of
the Saskatchewan Book Award for Book of the Year. His poems have been
widely anthologized. His latest collection of nature essays is Going
Home - ecology, desire and identity (Anansi $19.95). He lives in
Victoria, where he teaches at the University of Victoria.
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Based in Guelph, Ontario, James
Gordon is known to many North Americans as the founder of Canada's
premier folk group Tamarack. With this durable trio he toured every corner
of the continent, recorded fourteen albums, and made countless television
and radio appearances. He has become well-known for his original songs
about Canada's identity and heritage. He was a regular songwriting
contributor to the CBC radio programmes "Ontario Morning" and "Basic
Black". He has also released numerous solo albums for adults and children,
composed works for symphony orchestras, co-written a popular series of "Jim
and Dave" family musicals and written music for theatre, dance and film.
His original folk opera "Hardscrabble Road" debuted in 2003. These days
James tours North America and Great Britain as a solo act or accompanied by
Sandy Horne on bass and Marion Linton on fiddle. He produces CDs for other
artists at his Pipe Street Studios.
James will be sharing his latest project, a
five-CD collection of stories and songs form his career touring: The
Highway and I. ($30.) Visit his
website.
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Carl Honoré |
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Monday April 14 Knox
Church 7:30pm $8.00 Under
Pressure-
Rescuing Childhood from the
Culture of Hyper-Parenting (Random $32)
From the bestselling author of In Praise of Slow
comes a fascinating and urgent look at childhood today and how we are
raising a generation of overprogrammed, overachieving, exhausted children.
For generations of children, growing up was a pretty simple business: you
went to school for a few hours a day, you dabbled in hobbies and sports,
and the rest of the time you played. Or maybe you just day-dreamed. Carl
Honoré explains how our modern approach to children is backfiring: our kids
are fatter, more myopic, more injured, more depressed and more medicated
than any previous generation. By using children as a way to relive our own
lives, or as a way to make up for our personal shortcomings, we have
destroyed the magic and innocence of childhood. Under Pressure is not a
parenting manual but a call to action; we must do better for our children.
Using fascinating anecdotes about obsessive parents (including one about
the father of a tennis player who drugged all his child’s opponents), solid
research and personal insight, Honoré explains the over-parenting
phenomenon, dispels myths and rallies for change in clear and persuasive
prose. Topics explored include the use of technology as babysitting, how
enrolling children in hours of extracurriculars every week can do more harm
than good and how we underestimate the resilience of our children at the
expense of their freedom.
Carl Honoré is the bestselling author of In Praise of Slow.
Originally from Edmonton, he lives in London, England, with his wife and
two children.
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Germaine Greer |
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Saturday April 19 Knox Church 7:30pm
CANCELLED
Shakespeare's Wife (McClelland & Stewart, $36.99,
April 8) is a polemical, ground-breaking study of Elizabethan England that
reclaims Ann Hathaway’s rightful place in history.
Little is known about the wife of the world’s most famous playwright; a
great deal, none of it complimentary, has been assumed. The omission of her
name from Shakespeare’s will has been interpreted as evidence that she was
nothing more than an unfortunate mistake from which Shakespeare did well to
distance himself.
Yet Shakespeare is above all the poet of marriage. Before him, there were
few comedies or tragedies about wooing or wedding. And yet he explored the
sacrament in all its aspects, spiritual, psychological, sexual,
sociological, and was the creator of some of the most tenacious and
intelligent heroines in English literature. Is it possible, therefore, that
Ann, who has been mocked and vilified by scholars for centuries, was the
inspiration?
Until now, there has been no serious critical scholarship devoted to the
life and career of the farmer’s daughter who married England’s greatest
poet. Part biography, part history, Shakespeare’s Wife is a fascinating
reconstruction of Ann’s life, and an illuminating look at the daily lives
of Elizabethan women, from their working routines to the rituals of
courtship and the minutiae of married life. In this thoroughly researched
and controversial book, Greer steps off the well-trodden paths of
orthodoxy, asks new questions, and begins to right the wrongs done to Ann
Shakespeare.
Germaine Greer is a writer, academic, and critic whose bestselling books
include The Female Eunuch and The Whole Woman. Greer's
ideas have created controversy ever since her ground-breaking The Female
Eunuch became an international best-seller in 1970, turning her
overnight into a household name and bringing her both adulation and
criticism. She is also the author of Sex and Destiny: The Politics of
Human Fertility (1984); and The Change: Women, Ageing and the
Menopause (1991). She gained her Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge
in 1967 with a thesis on Shakespeare’s early comedies and has taught
Shakespeare at universities in Australia, Britain, and the United States.
She lives in northwest Essex, England.
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Barrie Wilson |
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Friday May 2
Siegfried Hall, St.Jerome’s University 7:30 pm free
slideshow and on-stage interview with Neil Carver
How Jesus Became Christian
(Random House $32.95)
How did a Jewish rabbi from
Galilee become a Gentile God-human? Who was Paul, really? Since he
never met Jesus and rarely quotes him, what connection does Paul have
to the movement? Why did early Christianity separate from its parent
religion, Judaism? Would Jesus recognize the religion that bears
his name today? Why was Mary the Mother of Jesus elevated and
Mary Magdalene demoted within early Christianity? Why did
Christianity espouse anti-Semitism?
Barrie specializes in investigating puzzles such as these
about early Christian origins. His book, How Jesus Became
Christian, explores the fascinating Christification process that
explains many of the mysteries of early Christianity -- how the image
of Jesus was made over as a Christ and how the religion of
Jesus was hijacked by a religion about the Christ.
Wilson is a Professor of Humanities &
Religious Studies,
York
University. He has taught biblical studies for the past twenty years.
This is his first book for a general audience.
Visit
BarrieWilson.com.
Michael Valpy profiled the book in the
Globe & Mail ,March 15 (subscription required).In
it, Wilson claims the differences between Jesus' and Paul's teachings
point to two different religions. "One of the merits of my book is
that I try to show how Luke in the Book of Acts tries to marry the
two." ..." I distinguish three early forms of Christianity, all of
which have different impressions of Jesus - the Jesus Movement or
Ebionites [lead by his brother James], the Gnostics and then Paul's
form of early Christianity."
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James Orbinski |
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Tuesday May 13 Knox
Church 7:30pm $8.00 An Imperfect Offering - Humanitarian
Action for the 21st Century (Doubleday, $35)
“As Albert Camus wrote, the doctor’s role is as a
witness–to witness authentically the reality of humanity, and to speak out
against the horrors of political inaction. . . . The only crime equaling
inhumanity is the crime of indifference, silence, and forgetting.”
—James Orbinski
In 1988, James Orbinski, then a medical student in his twenties,
embarked on a year-long research trip to Rwanda, a trip that would change
who he would be as a doctor and as a man. Investigating the conditions of
pediatric AIDS in Rwanda, James confronted widespread pain and suffering,
much of it preventable, much of it occasioned by political and economic
corruption. Fuelled by the injustice of what he had seen in Rwanda,
Orbinski helped establish the Canadian chapter of Médecins Sans Frontières
(Doctors Without Borders/MSF). As a member of MSF he travelled to Peru
during a cholera epidemic, to Somalia during the famine and civil war, and
to Jalalabad, Afghanistan.
In April 1994, James answered a call from the MSF Amsterdam office. Rwandan
government soldiers and armed militias of extremist Hutus had begun
systematically to murder Tutsis. While other foreigners were evacuated from
Rwanda, Orbinski agreed to serve as Chef de Mission for MSF in Kigali. As
Rwanda descended into a hell of civil war and genocide, he and his team
worked tirelessly, tending to thousands upon thousands of casualties. In
fourteen weeks 800,000 men, women and children were exterminated. Half a
million people were injured, and millions were displaced. The Rwandan
genocide was Orbinski’s undoing. Confronted by indescribable cruelty, he
struggled to regain his footing as a doctor, a humanitarian and a man. In
the end he chose not to retreat from the world, but resumed his work with
MSF, and was the organization’s president when it was awarded the Nobel
Peace Prize in 1999.
An Imperfect Offering is a deeply personal, deeply political book.
With unstinting candor, Orbinski explores the nature of humanitarian action
in the twenty-first century, and asserts the fundamental imperative of
seeing as human those whose political systems have most brutally failed. He
insists that in responding to the suffering of others, we must never lose
sight of the dignity of those being helped or deny them the right to act as
agents in their own lives. He takes readers on a journey to some of the
darkest places of our history but finds there unimaginable acts of courage
and empathy. Here he is doctor as witness, recording voices that must be
heard around the world; calling on others to meet their responsibility.
Dr. James Orbinski is a past international President of
Médécins sans Frontières (MSF). He accepted the
Nobel Peace Prize in 1999 on behalf of MSF. He is a Research Scientist
and Associate Professor of Family and Community Medicine and Political
Science at St. Michael’s Hospital and the University of Toronto. He is a
founder of the Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative, a not-for-profit
pharmaceutical research and development entity focused on the diseases of
the South. He recently founded Dignitas, an organization focused on
community based treatment, care and prevention of HIV in the developing
world. Dr. Orbinski lectures internationally on humanitarianism and global
health. He's also the subject of a new NFB
documentary - "Triage".
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autographed books available
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Collecting First Editions
A signed first edition from our author
events can be a valuable investment. The attention heaped on Joseph
Boyden’s novel Three Day Road may point
to its future value.
Signed copies of titles in the first edition from
past authors who have appeared at Words Worth such as
Yann Martel, Andrew Pyper and Miriam
Toews now routinely trade at many times more than
their initial cover price.
What is
a first edition?
A first edition is the first printing of a book. First editions differ
from subsequent printings as they are by definition the closest edition to
the author's original work. Publishers vary in the ways they identify their
first editions. A signed first edition can become a special and valuable book
for the owner.
Readers sometimes become interested in collecting when books become important
objects that they wish to own admire and preserve. These bibliophiles develop
a passion for an author's work or subject area wishing to create a fine and
complete collection of work. To collectors the first edition is the most desirable
and valuable edition. Regular patronage of our spring and fall reading
series (and of course regular visits for signed editions!) is an excellent
way to build and maintain a library of both enduring quality and value.
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Twenty-Four Years of Author Events
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It was November of 1984 when the late WO
Mitchell read for us at Waterloo Public Library. We had dinner with him before the
reading at the restaurant at what was then The Seagram Museum. He was
impressed with the large hall there and suggested we use it for future
readings. We took his suggestion and held many events there even some with
a breakfast time slot. Over the years we've used The Canadian Clay and
Glass Museum Waterloo Stage Theatre and uptown churches: Emmanuel First
United and more recently Knox Presbyterian. On many occasions we linked a
new author (e.g. Jane Urquhart in 1986) with someone more established
(Timothy Findley). Almost 200 authors
(not counting kids' authors) have been hosted by Words Worth Books.
Here's a chronological list of most of the authors of adult books. Many of these names are
displayed as a border around the ceiling of the bookstore.
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1984 1990 W.O.Mitchell
1984 Ken Danby
1984 Glen Loates
1984 1994 Elizabeth Baird
1985 Robert Bateman
1985 Susan Musgrave
1986 Sheila Copps
1986 Thomas York
1986 1991 Peter Gzowski
1986 1990 1993 1995 Timothy Findley
1986 1993 1997 2001 Jane Urquhart
1986 Keith Davey
1986 Maureen Forrester
1986 Charles Templton
1986 W.P. Kinsella
1987 Peter Newman
1987 Sean Virgo
1987 Peter Newman
1987 Erika Ritter
1987 Edward Greenspan
1987 Jame Dubro
1987 Karen Patkau
1987 Hugh Brewster
1987 1989 1992 1996 2006 David Suzuki
1988 Janet Lunn
1988 Don Harron Martha Harron
1988 R.D. Lawrence
1988 Fred Dahms
1989 1992 2002 Eric McCormack
1989 1992 Guy Vanderhaege
1989 Lois Wilson
1989, 2001 Sandra Birdsell
1989 Ken Dryden
1989, 1991, 1993 Arthur Black
1989, 1992 Stuart McLean
1989 Marion Fowler
1989 Michelle Landsberg
1989 Elly Danica
1989 Margaret Atwood
1989 Diane Francis
1989 Robert Fulford
1989 Mary Jo Leddy
1989 Jeff McInnes
1989 Leon Rooke
1990 John Irving
1990 1996 Veronica Ross
1990 Libby Schier
1990 Dionne Brand
1990 Edna Staebler
1991 Michael Bliss
1991 Courtney Milne
1991 Greg McDonell
1991 Margaret Visser
1991 Patrick Jenkins
1991 Mel Hurtig
1992 Laurier LaPierre
1992 Jay Ingram
1992 Rosemary Sullivan
1992 W.D. Valgardson
1992 Ronald Wright
1992 Sam Osherson
1992 Jay Ingram
1992 Trisha Romance
1992 Witold Rybczynski
1993 1997 Nino Ricci
1993 2003 Isabel Huggan
1993 Marion Fowler
1993 Barry Callaghan
1993 Greg Gatenby
1993 Graeme Gibson
1993 Marjorie Harris
1993 Sarah Sheard
1993 Paul Kropp
1994 Robertson Davies
1994 Stuart MacKinnon Tony Urquhart
1994 Paul Quarrington
1994 John Steffler
1994 M.G. Vassanji
1995, 2002 Rohinton Mistry
1996, 2003 Katherine Govier
1996 Geoff Pevere
1996 David Foot
1996 Lynn Johnston
1997 Sandra Steingraber
1997 Bill Richardson
1997 Eddie Shack Ross Brewitt
1997 2002 2007 Gail Anderson-Dargatz
1997 Roy Bonisteel
1997 Marilyn Bowering
1997 Sandra Steingraber
1997 Richard Thomas
1997 Bill Richardson
1997 Ernest Hillen
1998 2000 David Adams Richards
1998 2001 Dennis Bock
1998 Tomson Highway
1998 Leon Rooke
1998 Jeffrey Alford
1998 Stevie Cameron
1998 Bob Rae
1998 Carl Hiebert
1998 2004 2007Linda McQuaig
1998 Sebastian Faulks
1998 Sally Melville
1998 Shyam Selvadurai
1999 Judith Miller Nicholas Rees
1999 Bonnie McTaggart Jill Bryant
2000 Malcolm Gladwell
2000 Thomas Homer-Dixon
2000,
2005
Catherine Gildiner
2000, 2002 Wayne Johnston
2000 Bruce Meyer
2000 Lemony Snicket
2000 Jane Finlay-Young
2000 Jeffrey Lent
2000 Susan Zettel
2001 2004 Richard B.Wright
2001 Yann Martel
2001 Richard Teleky
2001 Marianne Brandis
2001 Linda Kay Marie Wallace
2001 2006 Rudy Wiebe
2001 2004 Richard Wright
2001 Dennis Bock
2001 Diana Gabaldon
2001 Frances Itani
2001 James Gardner
2002 Marnie Woodrow
2002 Dave Broadfoot
2002 Andrew Pyper
2003 Giles Blunt
2003 Alan Cumyn
2003 Peter Robinson
2003 Mary Lawson
2003 Dr.Gabor Maté
2003 John O’Donohue
2003 Oriah Mountain Dreamer
2003 Kim Vicente
2003 2004 Helen Humphreys
2003 James Laxer
2003 Ann-Marie MacDonald
2003 Alison Pick
2003 John Stackhouse
2004 Jane Jacobs
2004 Russell Smith
2004 Miriam Toews
200, 2006 Karen Armstrong
2004 Dan
Yashinksy
2004 Dave
Bidini
2004
Louis de Bernieres
2004
Beth Powning
2004
Jeffrey Moore
2004
Rhea Tregebov
2004
Katherine Barber
2004
Heather Mallick
2004
Wayson Choy
2004
Susan
Swan
2004
Ted Mahovlich Marcel Dionne
2005 James Chatto
2005 Lauren Davis
2005
Jon Kabat-Zinn
2005
Joseph Boyden
2005 David Waltner-Toews
2005 Tamas Dobozy
2005
Nelofer Pazira
2005
Camilla Gibb
2005
Oriah Mountain Dreamer
2005 Jane Urquhart
2005 Lisa Moore
2005 John Brady
2005 David Rotenberg
2005 Michael Crummey
2005 Lori Lansens
2005 Rab Maharaj
2005 Alison Pick
2005 Anne Fleming
2005 Katherine Govier
2005 Thomas King
2005 Dan Needles
2005 Naomi Duguid
2006 Ross King
2006 Lynn Coady
2006 Leah McLaren
2006 Karen Armstrong
2006 Rudy Wiebe
2006 Mary Gordon
2006 John Bemrose
2006 Madeleine Thien
2006 Judy Rebick
2006 Tom Slee
2006 Laurie Gough
2006 Barbara Kingscote
2006 John Lorinc
2006 Diane Setterfield
2006 Mary Lawson
2006 David Adams Richards
2006 Trevor Cole
2006 Wayne Johnston
2006 Anita Rau Badami
2006 Timothy Taylor
2006 Jack Whyte
2006 Carol Off
2006 Linden MacIntrye
2006 Nina Chapple
2006 John English
2006 Thomas Homer-Dixon
2006 Noah Richler
2006 Margaret Macmillan
2006 Charlotte Gray
2006 Dennis Bock
2006 Rosemary Sullivan
2006 Tony Aspler
2007 Afua Cooper
2007 Lawrence Hill
2007 David Buckland
2007 Dr. Vincent Lam
2007 Chris Banks
2007 Joseph Simons
2007 John Redekop
2007 Ishmael Beah
2007 Brian Henderson
2007 Linda McQuaig
2007 Heather Mallick
2007 Carrie Percy Ridley
2007 David Waltner-Toews
2007 Don Keith
2007 Linwood Barclay
2007 Michelle Wan
2007 Frances Westley
2007 Richard Gwyn
2007 Elizabeth Hay
2007 Bernice Morgan
2007 Tish Cohen
2007 Zoe Whittall
2007 Stephanie Nolen
2007 Frances Itani
2007 Gil Adamson
2007 Lloyd Field
2007 David Gilmour
2007 Richard B. Wright
2007 Stephen Henighan
2007 Jean Chrétien
ALSO Alan Daniels, Sandra Gwyn, Dennis Lee,
Jim Bedard,
Jean Little, Nancy-Lou Patterson
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click here for directions to our
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5 Sun.
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Ltd. All rights reserved.
last updated March 04, 2008.
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