BC and Yukon Book Prizes Shortlist

“Darrel J. McLeod (left) is among the authors shortlisted for a BC & Yukon Book Prize this year. Read details on all the shortlisted authors here.FULL STORY

 

Kishkan zoom talk on essays

October 07th, 2022

Theresa Kishkan will be delivering a talk: “The Essay as Carrier Bag, as Gathering Basket,” via zoom at 7PM PST, Thursday, November 3rd through the Canadian Authors Association.

For more information, visit this link: https://canadianauthors.org/bc/2022/10/07/november-3rd-authors-talk-theresa-kishkan/

Kishkan’s most recent book of essays is Blue Portugal and Other Essays (University of Alberta Press, 2022).

Her path to writing essay collections was circuitous: “I began my writing life as a poet in the 1970s and thought that I’d return to poetry after the births of my 3 children in the 1980s. But I found poetry wasn’t willing to have me back. I think I found my true calling when I started to write essays in the 1990s. My first collection of them, Red Laredo Boots, was published in 1996,” she writes on her website.

“And what do I think of the essay? I guess I was taught that they can be descriptive, narrative, expository, analytical or reflective, which is maybe why it took me some time to find my own way to write them. They can be all those things, certainly, but also they can be terse and elliptical, lyrical, notes towards something larger, they can be mosaics, maps, juxtapositions of imagery and meaning. They can function in the spirit of Ursula LeGuin’s capacious carrier bag, holding string, seeds, bright feathers, little scraps of dialogue, bones for soup, poetry, music. Fact and ideas can sing themselves in long symphonic phrases, grateful to have the time and space to go off-topic. Carrier bag, gathering basket, magpie nest, the essay is an opportunity to (as John D’Agata observed) capture the activity of human thought in real time.”

ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Theresa Kishkan lives on the Sechelt Peninsula with her husband, John Pass, in a house they built and where they raised their 3 children. She has published 16 books, most recently Euclid’s Orchard, a collection of essays about family history, botany, mathematics, and love (Mother Tongue Publishing, 2017); a novella, The Weight of the Heart (Palimpsest Press, 2020), in which a young graduate student attempts to create a feminist cartography with the works of Ethel Wilson and Sheila Watson; and Blue Portugal and Other Essays (University of Alberta Press, 2022), a collection of lyrical essays. Her books have been nominated for many awards, including the Hubert Evans Award and the Ethel Wilson Prize. Her interests include textiles, ethnobotany, music, human and physical geography, and colour theory, strands of which are braided together in Blue Portugal.

Visit Theresa’s website at: www.theresakishkan.com

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