GB
  
You are currently viewing the United Kingdom version of the site.
Would you like to switch to your local site?
20 MIN READ TIME

Accessing New Views

FESTIVALS

WITHIN THE INSTITUTION OF CanLit, deaf and disabled authors have long occupied a marginal position. While diversity is often part of publisher and festival mandates, deafness and disability are seldom considered, and there continues to be a lack of accessible venues. Thankfully, some publishers and event organizers are actively creating space for deaf and disabled authors to share their work.

Read the complete article and many more in this issue of Quill & Quire
Purchase options below
If you own the issue, Login to read the full article now.
Single Digital Issue October 2019
 
£5.99 / issue
This issue and other back issues are not included in a new subscription. Subscriptions include the latest regular issue and new issues released during your subscription. Quill & Quire

This article is from...


View Issues
Quill & Quire
October 2019
VIEW IN STORE

Other Articles in this Issue


Quill and Quire
Editor’s Note
IN OCTOBER 2020, the Canadian publishing industry will
FRONTMATTER
Lost Identity
Written while homeless, Mohamed Abdulkarim Ali’s queer coming-of-age memoir illuminates a young immigrant’s struggles
The pressure to pre-order
Pre-orders can launch a bestseller, yet some publishers say they remain an unreliable predictor of success
Language may offend
Consider this before using terms that have fallen out of favour
Beyond the border
Canadian indie publishers are taking risks – and finding new readers – in the United States
Personal taste
Chef Shane Chartrand and photographer Cathryn Sprague reveal their favourite images from Tawâw: Progressive Indigenous Cuisine
Small But Mighty
A solid catalogue and a strong identity help Bologna Prize–winning press Comme des géants stand out in a saturated market
What Publishers Need To Know Before Frankfurt 2020
The real work begins now, say representatives from previous Guest of Honour countries
FEATURE
Pages in time
Maria Campbell speaks about the new edition of her seminal memo ir, Halfbreed, and why her words are still urgently necessary today
Ascend To The Top
How literary mountain books and their Canadian publishers are reaching the height of success
The Long Road
Wayde Compton launches a graphic-novel adaptation of his 1999 short story “The Blue Road,” with artist April dela Noche Milne
Stella Says
Montreal author and illustrator Marie-Louise Gay on the 20th anniversary of Stella and Sam
They Wrote And Now You Write
The lives and poetry of Jamaica’s Louise Bennett Coverley and Cape Breton’s Rita Joe inspire a new generation of storytellers
Shifting the narrative
Following the success of Turtle Island, authors Eldon Yellowhorn and Kathy Lowinger continue to reframe the history of North America
REVIEWS
Foreign correspondent
A major new volume of Martha Gellhorn’s letters proves the journalist and fiction writer to be a major literary force in her own right
Family matters
Emma Donoghue’s latest novel is about history uncomfortably repeating itself
Story time
New collections from Ian Colford and Seyward Goodhand feature different aesthetic approaches to the short form
A literary menagerie
Debut story collections from Julie Roorda and J.R. McConvey testify to the protean nature of the genre
BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
Artists’ inspiration
Kyo Maclear and Julie Morstad’s new biographical children’s book pays tribute to a groundbreaking author-illustrator
The sincerest pumpkin patch
The first collaboration from Rainbow Rowell and Faith Erin Hicks is a sweet, Halloween-themed workplace comedy
Chew on this
Silly, retro, diverse, sophisticated, and sturdy – this crop of books appeals to everybody and every baby
Space oddities
Two new picture books approach astronomy from a unique perspective
BOOK MAKING
Portraits of the artists
Canadian authors reflect on their most formative landmarks and pose for revealing portraiture in Many Lives Mark This Place