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| Hearsay: |
Random House is launching a literary festival in Toronto designed to be something like the New Yorker festival in Manhattan. It’s associated with the Globe and features mostly RH authors, but will expand, they say. Sounds like fun.
“A lot of us are New Yorker readers here and we know about that festival and we thought, ‘Let’s try a variation of it for Toronto.’”
At the same time, Sellers acknowledges the inaugural edition of the Toronto festival won’t be quite as ambitious as its inspiration. No “gastronomic walking tours,” in other words, or visits to art galleries or book-themed brunches.
These may come in the future, he says. “Right now, we’re still finding our way.”
Still, the agenda for the first-ever Globe and Mail Open House Festival and its roster of “acts” is impressive, details of which were released yesterday. Sellers has persuaded more than 25 writers, strategists, pundits and one politician (Toronto Mayor David Miller) to commit to the event. The participants include not only Canadians, such as Naomi Klein ( The Shock Doctrine), Margaret MacMillan ( Paris 1919), Elizabeth Hay ( Late Nights on Air) and thinker Thomas Homer-Dixon, but also international figures: Pulitzer Prize nominee Ha Jin, veteran New Yorker staff writers Calvin Trillin and Adam Gopnik, British novelist Zoë Heller ( Notes on a Scandal) and Oprah Book Club pick David Wroblewski ( The Story of Edgar Sawtelle), among others.
This year’s roster is heavily weighted toward individuals associated with Random House, Canada’s largest trade publisher, Sellers agrees. But “we want to do outreach in the years to come with other publishers.”
All the activities will be paid admission – proceeds are earmarked for PEN Canada and the Frontier College literacy organization – and occur at the University of Toronto. Tickets go on sale Feb. 21 through UofTtix and the U of T Bookstore.
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January 22nd, 2009 at 8:57 am
I think that’s exciting & I hope that the tickets are within the means of most bookish people.
January 22nd, 2009 at 10:22 am
“I know, let’s pretend we’re in New York! Not like icky late seventies bankrupt New York or boring contemporary New York that’s just like
Toronto New York , let’s pretend we’re in … like … the Upper East Side in an old Woody Allen movie! I’ll be in publishing and
you can be in analysis!”
January 22nd, 2009 at 12:34 pm
It’s a little strange that the Globe story waited until the eighth paragraph (of eleven) to mention that the festival is called the Globe and Mail Open House Festival.
January 23rd, 2009 at 10:59 am
Good catch, DR. Bit dicey to bury that little PR tidbit in what’s ostensibly a news story, no?