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Canadian Writers in Person continues with Kaie Kellough’s collection of stories

Canadian Writers in Person continues with Kaie Kellough's "Dominoes at the Crossroads" 

Canadian Writers in Person continues with Kaie Kellough’s Dominoes at the Crossroads

If you love meeting talented writers and hearing them read from their published work, or just want to soak up a unique cultural experience, don’t miss the opportunity to attend the Canadian Writers in Person Lecture Series.

The series gives attendees an opportunity to get up close and personal with an eclectic group of 11 authors while having the unique opportunity to engage with them in a dialogue about their work.

Canadian Writers in Person is a for-credit course for students. It is also a free-admission event for members of the public. All readings take place at 7 p.m. on select Tuesday evenings via Zoom. Links for each reading can be found here: https://cltr.huma.laps.yorku.ca/canwrite/.

This year’s lineup consists of a unique selection of emerging and established Canadian writers, whose writing explores a broad range of topics and geographical and cultural landscapes. Featuring seasoned and emerging poets and fiction writers, the series highlights Canada’s ever-growing literary talent.

The series will continue on Feb. 23 with a reading of Kaie Kellough’s Dominoes at the Crossroads (Vehicule Press).

Kellough is a novelist, sound performer and poet. His novel Accordéon (2016) was shortlisted for the Amazon Foundation First Novel Award. His work migrates between poetry and fiction, between Canada and the Caribbean, and between text and sound. He lives in Montreal.

Dominoes at the Crossroads maps an alternate Canada, one crisscrossed by a Caribbean diaspora seeking music, futures and portals to their past. In this collection of stories, Kellough’s characters navigate race, history and coming-of-age by way of their confessions and dreams. Through the eyes of jazz musicians, hitchhikers, quiet suburbanites, student radicals, secret agents, historians and their fugitive slave ancestors, Kellough guides us from the cobblestones of Montreal’s Old Port to the foliage of a South American rainforest, from a basement in wartime Paris to an underground antique shop in Montreal during the October Crisis, allowing the force of imagination to tip the balance of time like a line of dominoes.

Other presentations scheduled in this series are:

Canadian Writers in Person (AP/CLTR 1953 6.0A) is a course offered in the Culture & Expression program in the Department of Humanities in York University’s Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies. For more information on the series, visit yorku.ca/laps/canwrite, or email Professor Gail Vanstone at gailv@yorku.ca or Professor Leslie Sanders at leslie@yorku.ca.