douglasgibsonliterarytalks
Final Episode: Funny You Don't Look Like One, Joseph Boyden, Dany Laferriere, David Adams Richards, Alice Munro
info_outlinedouglasgibsonliterarytalks
Episode 15: Alistair MacLeod, No Great Mischief, Alan Fry and Indigenous writers Thomas King, Richard Wagamese, Eden Robinson, and Harold Johnson, Marie Claire Blais, Wayne Johnson, Newfoundland.
info_outlinedouglasgibsonliterarytalks
Episode 14: More diverse writers emerge, Michael Ondaatje, Carol Shields, Rohinton Mistry, Antonine Maillet and the Acadian Ethnic Cleansing
info_outlinedouglasgibsonliterarytalks
Episode 13: Canadian Literature in full bloom,Margaret Atwood, Leonard Cohen, Yves Beauchemin, Pierre Trudeau, Guy Vanderhaeghe, Saskatchewan
info_outlinedouglasgibsonliterarytalks
Episode 12: Paul Henderson's Goal, Mordecai Richler, Anne Hebert and Kamouraska, Alligator Pie, Jack Hodgins, Vancouver Island
info_outlinedouglasgibsonliterarytalks
Episode 11: Oscar Peterson and Martin Luther King, Margaret Laurence, De Gaulle and the FLQ, Jacques Ferron
info_outlinedouglasgibsonliterarytalks
Episode 10: The Prosperous Decade, Glenn Gould, Lester Pearson's Nobel Peace Prize, John Diefenbaker and me, Robertson Davies, James Houston and Inuit Art, Yves Theriault and Agaguk.
info_outlinedouglasgibsonliterarytalks
Episode 9: The Second World War, Gabrielle Roy, Hugh MacLennan, Roger Lemelin, W.O. Mitchell
info_outlinedouglasgibsonliterarytalks
Episode 8: The Ten Lost Years of The Depression, Barry Broadfoot, Morley Callaghan,More Joy in Heaven, Philippe Panneton/Ringuet, Thirty Acres
info_outlinedouglasgibsonliterarytalks
Episode 7: Roaring Twenties, Group of Seven, Stephen Leacock,Orilla, McGill, Prix Goncourt
info_outlineSadly. this decade marked a time when in Canadian Fiction the Old Guard was dying off. Margaret Laurence died in 1987 and the 1990's saw us lose people named Callaghan, Mitchell and Davies. But names from a new diverse Canada were emerging, like Sri Lanka's Michael Ondaatje, or Mumbai's Rohinton Mistry (or even Chicago's Carol Shields, our first Canadian Pulitzer Prize winner, matching Ondaatje's achievement as the first Canadian to win the Booker Prize). Pierre Trudeau's Memoirs became one of the greatest Canadian best-sellers ever, to my delight. And New Brunswick's Antonine Maillet won the Prix Goncourt for Pelagie La Charrette modelling her Acadian heroine on the singer Edith Butler.