Plain words, uncommon sense

Category: News: Arts & Entertainment (Page 23 of 25)

SFU Summer Workshop in New Media

One of the many hats that I wear now includes program director for the Simon Fraser University New Media summer workshops. Quite a mouthful.

Information about the SFU New Media workshop is now online:
http://www.ccsp.sfu.ca/pubworks/newmedia/index.html

The site is a work in progress so full session descriptions and bios will be available soon, but the preliminary info is up and registrations are now being accepted.

SFU NEW MEDIA WORKSHOP DATES: July 31 to August 3

LOCATION:
Summer Publishing Workshops
Simon Fraser University @ Harbour Centre
515 West Hastings Street
Vancouver, BC V6B 5K3

For more info:
T 604 291 5241
pubworks@sfu.ca
www.sfu.ca/pubworks

Who should attend? Who is the workshop for?
Marketing, sales and publicity folks; designers and writers wanting to better understand the web; any business leader who wants to figure out this blogging thing, podcasting, wikis; managers and anyone in charge of a budget and figuring out how to make or spend money online.

The speaker line up is fantastic and the sessions are going to be great and informative.

I will post more about the speakers and the sessions, but for now check out the website:
http://www.ccsp.sfu.ca/pubworks/newmedia/index.html

Congratulations Team Canada!

Hailey WickenheiserIn June I got to meet Hayley Wickenheiser at BookExpo Canada. She was signing copies of Hayley Wickenheiser: Born to Play by Elizabeth Etue (Kids Can Press).

Hayley is formidable.

The first woman to play professional hockey (clarification–in a men’s league–thanks DB).
Member of the Canadian Olympic hockey team: Silver in Nagano, gold in Salt Lake City, and gold today in Torino.
In 2003, she played professional hockey in a men’s league in Finland.

Watching the game was very exciting, and listening to the crowd belt out O Canada at the medal ceremonies was my moment of patriotism today.

Congratulations to the Canadian women’s olympic hockey team. Diamonds may be a girl’s best friend, but gold is pretty damn sweet too.

Graphic Design and Typographer David Carson Comes to Vancouver

Passing on a press release:

Graphic designer and typographer David Carson will be speaking at a public seminar on Thursday, March 2 at 6:30 pm in The Art Institute of Vancouver’s soundstage at 3054 Beta Avenue in Burnaby. There will be a book signing, as well as the opportunity to win books and limited-edition, signed posters by Carson. Info on David and his work can be found at davidcarsondesign.com. This is a free event, but we are expecting a sizeable turn-out, so an RSVP is required.

David Carson
Thursday, March 2 at 6:30

The Art Institute of Vancouver
3264 Beta Ave.
Burnaby, BC V5G 4K4

Phone: 604-298-5492 x. 5268 or 1-800-661-1885
www.aiv.aii.edu

Save Joy Kogawa’s Childhood Home

My friend Ann-Marie is helping The Land Conservancy of BC (TLC) fundraise to rescue the childhood home of author Joy Kogawa, which happens to sit around the corner from her home in a lovely neighbourhood in Marpole.

On November 3, 2005, Ann-Marie and others convinced Vancouver City Council to delay approval of a demolition permit on the house until March 31, 2006. Now they are working to raise money to buy the property at 1450 West 64th Street so they can designate it as a heritage property.

The idea is to establish a writers’ retreat at Kogawa House, where established writers could stay while completing manuscripts for publication, as they do at Berton House in Dawson City, Yukon, and at Wallace Stegner House in Eastend, Saskatchewan.

What they need now is private donations and attendees for Saturday’s reading at Chapters Robson in Vancouver.

Date: Saturday, February 11, 2006
Time: 2pm to 4pm
Location: Chapters Bookstore, 788 Robson St., 3rd Floor
*Free admission*

The Land Conservancy of BC along with the Save Kogawa House Committee are hosting an up-close and personal reading & book signing with award-winning Canadian author and poet, Joy Kogawa. Kogawa will read from her second novel Emily Kato (formerly Itsuka). Other guest authors will include Roy Miki, Governor General Award Winner for Poetry, reading from Redress: Inside the Japanese Canadian Call for Justice and Daphne Marlatt, Vancouver poet, novelist and oral historian, reading from Steveston. Retired school teacher and counsellor, Ellen Crowe-Swords will also speak to her familyís past experience of being interned at Hastings Park.

For more information about this event or to donate, call (604) 733-2313 or visit www.conservancy.bc.ca.

AAP and Google Lawsuit

This is mostly a link I want to remember, but if you’re in publishing, you’ll be interested too:

John Battelle’s Searchblog has a good post on what’s at stake for publishers and Google.

Quote: First, who is making the money? Second, who owns the rights to leverage this new innovation – the public, the publisher, or … Google? Will Google make the books it scans available for all comers to crawl and index? Certainly the answer seems to be no. Google is doing this so as to make its own index superior, and to gain competitive advantage over others. That leaves a bad taste in the publisher’s mouths – they sense they are being disintermediated, and further, that Google is reinterpreting copyright law as they do it.

Battelle also points out that this is not just about books. Why couldn’t Google or anyone else scan and index video. “Look at who owns the book companies that are suing – ahhh, it’s Newscorp (Harper Collins), Viacom (Simon&Schuster), Time Warner (Little Brown).”

Kidsbooks Annual Sale

My favourite Vancouver kids bookstore is having its annual sale.

Thursday, January 19 to Sunday, January 22
Kidsbooks: 3083 West Broadway, Vancouver, or 3040 Edgemont Blvd., North Vancouver
20% off all stock plus further reductions on selected items.

If you’re a teacher or librarian or parent, this is the sale for you. Also the staff at Kidsbooks are incredibly knowledgeable. Ask them many questions. You don’t even have to put your hand up. It’s madness.

Harper Collins Canada First Look

Are you a Canadian resident? Do you want to preview and review books before they hit the bookstore? Check out HarperCollins Canada’s First Look program.

Quote: First Look
Read and review tomorrow’s books today

This is a very cool idea. Partly because I want to read and review tomorrow’s books today, but also because I think Harper does a good job from a user point of view. The sign up was easy. The books on offer are clearly displayed, and once logged in, it looks like it is easy to request a copy. The reviews are also organized in an interesting way. Check out the reader reviews.

I’ve lobbied to review Justine Picardie’s My Mother’s Wedding Dress. It is a nonfiction memoir about Picardie’s garments, in particular how clothes create narrative, for example, how tight plastic pants say just a little something about you.

Is there a garment lurking in your closet that you’d rather no one know about? Why not publicly rejoice the misguided nature of that purchase? Post a photo on your blog or a comment below with a description. Articles that have made it to the Salvation Army, but once existed in your closet, still count.

Macworld San Francisco

In the geek work today I watched the live transcript of Steve Jobs’ keynote address at Macworld.

I learned the following:
10:41 am Shows pic of Jobs and Woz. will be 30 years in 4-1-2006.
10:33 am Demoing the new MacBook Pro.

I want one. Ships in February. Has a small camera in it, the isight. Hair thinner than the 17″ but is the fastest notebook ever. iWork and iLife are awesome, and now there’s iWeb. I can barely breathe. The crowd goes wild.

Apple also released Mac OS X 10.4.4 along with a number of other software (iTunes 6.0.2, Quicktime 7.0.4, iLife ’06, iWork ’06).

So I like the 12″ iBook, which is where I was going to put my money, but now …

If money wasn’t an option, which it is, but ignore that for now, which one would you choose? From a tech geek perspective rather than a fashion accessory perspective.

Daniel Isn’t Talking but the Author Is

Here’s another plug for Women Who Blog, but also for Marti Leimbach, author of Daniel Isn’t Talking. See my book review.

In the comments field of my review, Marti posted:
Quote: … Daniel Isn’t Talking is a very special novel to me because it is drawn, in part, from my own real life as a mother of an autistic boy.

I have a written a little about the novel on my website www.martileimbach.com if ever you want to have a look. I am also reading at the Harbourfront Centre on Wednesday April 26 at 7:30. If you happen to be there, please come and introduce yourself afterwards!

So not only is Marti talking on my blog, and at Harbourfront Centre, she also has a blog:
http://www.martileimbach.com/forum.asp

If you want to get an idea of her novel’s style, read the post about her son Nicholas learning to skate. She seems to post once a month. I didn’t see an RSS feed, which means I’ll have to remember to keep visiting instead of subscribing, also the Harbourfront website doesn’t seem to be updated yet for 2006, but here’s the link to events.

The book is coming, in the meantime, read the blog.

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2026 So Misguided

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑