News

Inverness Mod in full swing

Posted by on October 14, 2014

DSCN2425The Royal National Mod, this year in Inverness, Scotland, kicks into high gear later today. CBU Press will launch two new books here on Wednesday – which is Gaelic literature day at the Mod. Dr Heather Sparling, author of Reeling Roosters and Dancing Ducks: Celtic Mouth Music, arrived Monday evening and took part in a press conference this morning. She’ll spend much of the week observing performance, which is an area of research interest.

Later today, Lewis MacKinnon arrives as well. Lewis is of course just finishing up his 3-year term as Bard to the annual Mod (the first poet laureate from outside Scotland). Lewis’s new collection of Nova Scotia Gaelic poetry, Rudan Mì-bheanailteach is an Cothroman, Dàin / Intangible Possibilities, is hot off the press as well. We’ll be launching both books at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Inverness Library.

Intangible Possibilities9781927492987_FC

 

The Royal National Mod, this year in Inverness, Scotland, kicks into high gear later today. CBU Press will launch two new… Continue»

Halifax author hits the road this week

Posted by on October 13, 2014

A.J.B. JohnstonA.J.B. Johnston, author of the Thomas Pichon novels will be reading at a number of Maritime venues in the coming weeks, visiting Liverpool, Fredericton and Sackville, NB.

On October 15, at 7 p.m., Johnston will be hosted by the Liverpool Literary Society and the Read & Share Corner of the Vogler’s Cove Community Hall. The hall is located at 8544 Highway 331, Vogler’s Cove, Lunenburg County, NS.

October 22, 3 p.m., in the Windsor room in Tilley House, the Atlantic Canada Studies Centre at University of New Brunswick, will host a reading and a talk about the background to the Thomas Pichon project and how I transitioned from a historian to a novelist. At 7 p.m., Johnston will be at Westminster Books in Downtown Fredericton.

A presentation on October 23, 4 p.m. in Hart Hall, at Mount Allison University will be followed by a reception at the Centre for Canadian Studies.

These are all open to the public. Some funding was provided by a Canada Council for the Arts Author Promotion Tour Grant.

A.J.B. Johnston is a well-known historian and writer who has published, to wide acclaim, two works of fiction based on the life of Thomas Pichon (1700-1781): Thomas, A Secret Life (2012) and The Maze, A Thomas Pichon Novel (2014), both by CBU Press.

 

 

 

A.J.B. Johnston, author of the Thomas Pichon novels will be reading at a number of Maritime venues in the coming… Continue»

CBC Mainstreet interview with William Roach

Posted by on September 12, 2014

William-Roach-1Thanks to CBC Radio One Cape Breton Mainstreet and host Wendy Bergfeldt, for a great interview with William Roach (Sept. 10, 2014). William D. Roach, Folk Artist is now in stores.

Link to the podcast here: http://www.cbc.ca/video/news/audioplayer.html?clipid=2514542359

 

Thanks to CBC Radio One Cape Breton Mainstreet and host Wendy Bergfeldt, for a great interview with William Roach (Sept. 10,… Continue»

Two CBU Press books to be launched at Scottish Mod next month

Posted by on September 9, 2014

9781927492987_FCIntangible PossibilitiesWe are delighted that two new books will see their first light in Scotland next month, part of the Highland Homecoming and Royal National Mod (Mòd Nàiseanta Rìoghail), Inverness, October 10-18.

Cape Breton and Nova Scotia have close ties with the Highlands and Islands of Scotland, in no small part due to thousands of Gaelic-speaking migrant Scots.

Bolstering our list of Celtic- and Gaelic-centred titles, CBU Press’s new offerings have direct connection with those Highland roots.

Reeling Roosters & Dancing Ducks: Celtic Mouth Music, by Celtic scholar Dr. Heather Sparling, brings together years of research, observations on both sides of the Atlantic and analyses of melodies and lyrics.

Rudan Mì-bheanailteach is an Cothroman / Intangible Possibilities is a collection of new Gaelic poetry by Nova Scotian Gaelic poet Lodaidh MacFhionghain /Lewis MacKinnon.

MacKinnon is the current holder of the Scottish Bardic Crown, official bard (poet laureate) of the Royal National Mod. He is the first poet to the appointment from outside of Scotland and his three-year term will culminate at the forthcoming Mod in Inverness. He has appeared in numerous literary events and festivals in Scotland and Ireland, most recently the Queen’s Baton Relay (Commonwealth Games) in Stornoway sponsored by Scottish PEN.

Mr. MacKinnon is also Executive Director of the Nova Scotia Office of Gaelic Affairs.

Rudan Mì-bheanailteach is an Cothroman is MacKinnon’s second full-length collection of original poetry. His first, Famhair / Giant and Other Gaelic Poems was published by CBU Press in 2008, and launched during the Mod in Falkirk.

In Reeling Roosters & Dancing Ducks, Heather Sparling brings together years of research into puirt-a-beul – the Scottish Gaelic term for mouth music – including an array of historical references, interviews with Gaelic singers in both Scotland and Nova Scotia, observations of puirt-a-beul performances on both sides of the Atlantic as well as on recordings, and analyses of melodies and lyrics.

Sparling’s Nova Scotia viewpoint allows her to consider puirt-a-beul in both its Scottish and diaspora contexts, a perspective that is often absent in studies of Gaelic song.

Dr. Sparling is Associate Professor of Ethnomusicology and Canada Research Chair in Musical Traditions at Cape Breton University.

CBU Press will launch the books during the annual Mod, being held this year in Inverness, where we will be part of the Gaelic Showcase (Eden Court), October 10-18. Inverness-shire is celebrating 2014 as the year of Highland Homecoming.

MacKinnon and Sparling will make a presentation at the Inverness Library on Wednesday, October 15, at 2 p.m. Following the Mod, they will be making presentations in Aberdeen (20), Edinburgh (21), Glasgow (22) and Skye (23).

Reeling Roosters & Dancing Ducks: Celtic Mouth Music and Rudan Mì-bheanailteach is an Cothroman / Intangible Possibilities will be available for sale during these events and available to the public shortly thereafter. They will be available in Canada and the U.S. at the end of October.

 

 

We are delighted that two new books will see their first light in Scotland next month, part of the Highland Homecoming… Continue»

The Coast 89.7 to broadcast Frank Macdonald interview

Posted by on September 7, 2014

Frank MacdonaldPaul MacDougallWe’ll be listening to The Coast 89.7 this evening (6 p.m., Sept. 7, 2014) for an interview with Frank Macdonald, on “The Good Sentence” with Paul MacDougall, a regular feature of The Coast’s Dialogue program.

The wide-ranging interview, which discusses Frank’s new novel Tinker & Blue (#tinkerandblue), his previous two best-selling novels A Forest for Calum and A Possible Madness, was recently recorded at Cape Breton University.

That interview will soon be on CBU Press’s YouTube channel, cbupressmedia.

Paul MacDougall is the author of Distinction Earned: Cape Breton’s Boxing Legends 1946-1970. Paul is also a playwright and very active in Cape Breton’s literary scene.

Dialogue can be heard Sundays at 6 p.m. and is re-broadcast Tuesday and Thursday at 10 p.m. You can listen on-line at: http://www.coastalradio.ca/about/listen-live/

 

We’ll be listening to The Coast 89.7 this evening (6 p.m., Sept. 7, 2014) for an interview with Frank Macdonald,… Continue»

Historian muses on the warp and weft of an economy that includes culture

Posted by on September 5, 2014

Ijim-st-clairen a kind of follow-up to his enthusiastic reviews of three recent historical publications in Cape Breton, community historian Jim St. Clair broadcast a thoughtful commentary on the relationship between economic development and cultural activity (CBC Cape Breton Information Morning, Friday, Sept. 5, 2014). Those recent books, including two from CBU Press, remind us of our past and urge us onward.

Using an analogy of weaving, Jim states that the fabric of our lives is made up of such things as geography, climate and education that form the warp, but cultural activity is the weft; theatres, galleries and books give the fabric strength and colour.

We are remiss in developing imaginative partnerships between development agencies and arts institutions to put the coloured threads on the woof, says St.Clair.

Unsaid, but perhaps implied, is that institutions – Cape Breton University, museums, historical societies and archives – have long been at the centre of the cultural tapestry in an essential way. St.Clair points out that such activities (theatre, publishing, archives and galleries) do not make money and should not be expected to; continuing institutional support, such as from CBU for the past 40 years, is essential.

Write on, Jim!

Listen to a podcast of the commentary here: http://www.cbc.ca/informationmorningcb/2014/09/03/jim-st-clair—celtic-threads/

In a kind of follow-up to his enthusiastic reviews of three recent historical publications in Cape Breton, community historian Jim St…. Continue»

“A vivid temporal tapestry”: Review

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MacLeod-MacInnes-WeavingDo we dare squeeze in another review of Celtic Threads: A Journey in Cape Breton Crafts? Sure, we do.

Hot on the heels of historian Jim St.Clair’s glowing review (September 3, 2014) Celtic Life International magazine describes Celtic Threads as a “vivid cultural tapestry.”

The latest issue of (vol. 28, no. 5, October 2014, p. 74) also calls the book “engaging, enlightening and entertaining” – a great goal for any book!

Do we dare squeeze in another review of Celtic Threads: A Journey in Cape Breton Crafts? Sure, we do. Hot… Continue»

Two CBU Press books finalists for major national prize

Posted by on September 4, 2014

Me & Mr. Bellstellings-managerTD Canadian Children’s Literature Awards shortlists announced

The Canadian Children’s Book Centre (CCBC) announced the shortlists for their annual awards in a September 3 release.

Among the five books shortlisted for the Geoffrey Bilson Award for Historical Fiction for Young People are two books from Cape Breton University Press.

The Manager, by Caroline Stellings, and Me and Mr. Bell, by Philip Roy – both published in 2012 – are shortlisted for the $5,000 prize, to be awarded in Toronto on November 6.

Both books were earlier selected for inclusion in the CCBC Best Books for Kids and Teens publication. Me and Mr. Bell was also a finalist for the Canadian Library Association’s Book of the Year and is on the Hackmatack children’s choice award list for 2014-15.

CBU Press editor-in-chief Mike Hunter is delighted for the authors and says it’s gratifying when Cape Breton University Press books are being recognized nationally.

“Both Mr. Roy and Ms. Stellings are great writers who understand their audience; we were delighted to work with them in the telling of these Cape Breton stories. Through the creative process, local stories and the local knowledge to execute them can make good things happen,” Hunter said.

“We are also grateful to the Canadian Children’s Book Centre and the Bilson award for their continued interest in historical fiction for young readers,” he added.

“This is an area of publishing that suits our mandate and the fact that Me and Mr. Bell and The Manager, both historical fiction, are being honoured at this level is a big deal for us.”

Philip Roy is also the author of the popular historical fiction, Blood Brothers in Louisbourg (also CBU Press) and of the best-selling Submarine Outlaw series. He is a native of Antigonish, NS.

This was Caroline Stellings’s fifth project with CBU Press, including the best-selling Malagwatch Mice and the Church that Sailed. Stellings is also an accomplished artist and illustrator. She is from Ontario.

The Geoffrey Bilson Award was established in 1988 in memory of the respected historian and children’s author, Geoffrey Bilson. The $5,000 prize is awarded annually to the Canadian author of an outstanding work of historical fiction for young people. In 2005, the Bilson Endowment Fund was created to support this award.

The Canadian Children’s Book Centre is a national, not-for-profit organization dedicated to encouraging, promoting and supporting the reading, writing, illustrating and publishing of Canadian books for young readers. Its programs, publications, and resources help teachers, librarians, booksellers and parents select the very best for young readers.

TD Canadian Children’s Literature Awards shortlists announced The Canadian Children’s Book Centre (CCBC) announced the shortlists for their annual awards… Continue»

Historian praises “Celtic Threads”

Posted by on September 3, 2014

MacLeod-MacInnes-WeavingNice to hear CBC Cape Breton Information Morning’s community historian Jim St.Clair’s glowing praise for Celtic Threads: A Journey in Cape Breton Craft by Eveline MacLeod and Daniel W. MacInnes (CBU Press 2014).

During his weekly “Then and Now” column, St.Clair noted the two well-integrated voices present and is “excited by the people met in this book.”

Another aspect he enjoyed in particular is the “calm, clear explanation of tartan,” it’s “one of the delights of the book.”

Cape Breton appears to be “experiencing a sort of renaissance of interest – a new appreciation – for the island’s history” in a number of new and “very fine publications” this summer.

Thanks Jim!

You can listen to a podcast of the column here: http://www.cbc.ca/informationmorningcb/2014/09/03/jim-st-clair—celtic-threads/

Nice to hear CBC Cape Breton Information Morning’s community historian Jim St.Clair’s glowing praise for Celtic Threads: A Journey in… Continue»

CB Rail history “book-of-the-year”

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Cape Breton RailwaysCongratulations to Herb MacDonald, author of Cape Breton Railways: An Illustrated History (CBUP 2012) on winning the national book award of the Canadian Railroad History Association (CRHA).

The accompanying citation says the book “gives a fascinating and comprehensive examination or railways and their critical role in moving resources and people … fully cited and extremely well illustrated….”

The award recognizes and honours an individual whose endeavours in the previous year have contributed significantly to the recording and/or preservation of artifacts of historical value related to Canada’s railways.

Cape Breton Railways was a finalist for the (2013) Evelyn Richardson Non-Fiction Award.

Congratulations Herb!

Congratulations to Herb MacDonald, author of Cape Breton Railways: An Illustrated History (CBUP 2012) on winning the national book award… Continue»