Preparing for our Granville Island Field Trip!
Preparing For Our Granville Island Field Trip!
Part one: Researching about the history of the Vancouver Writer's Festival
This festival was founded all the way back in 1988 by an artistic director named Alma Lee! Since then, it's brought all sorts of authors from all over the world to come speak at events/ workshops they hold every year.
As I was looking through the past events from last year's writer's festival, I found one that sounds super fascinating. It's called "Bestseller to Blockbuster" and it's held by Tom Perrotta and Iain Reid, who have had their bestselling books turned into movies. In the description for this event, it says that the two authors discuss about how they managed to do that and how other authors could potentially do that for their books. I wish I could have gone to that event because I want to hear about their experiences bringing the stories they wrote to life through cinema. I feel like it would have been really cool to hear about their reactions when they got the movie deal, or what their role on set was like.
Link to that event: 58: Bestseller to Blockbuster | Vancouver Writers Fest
Part Two: Researching Other Writer's Festivals
LiterASIAN Festival: LiterASIAN 2023 – Join us for the 11th anniversary of the LiterASIAN Writers Festival
This festival sounded really cool because it was the first literary arts festival to feature writers of Asian descent! They have a really cool lineup for May 2023 and so many events (there's even one where you could have a Dim Sum and wine tasting with the authors)
That would one of the events I would want to go to. It's called "Wine and Words: Dim Sum with the Authors". Although there aren't any details posted yet, I would assume there are authors that talk about their new books and while listening, you also get to have a nice dinner. It's very appealing to me because It just sounds very interactive and like a good time.
Another event from this festival that sounds very interesting to me is called "Identity and the Writing Process with David Mura: The Writing Process and how writing interfaces with politics, activism, and social justice." It's held by an author whose published a lot of books about identity and I just think it would be so important to hear about how his writing process is for those types of non-fiction topics.
Whistler Writer's Festival: WHISTLER WRITERS FESTIVAL - Whistler Writers Festival
This festival sounded really fun because a lot of their workshops are focused on helping new and emerging authors. They also have lots of author panels and when you look at their page, there are so many different speakers (more than 50).About this book: This is a Jewish historical horror novel set in Lithuania, 1943. When a father grieves his daughter killed by the Nazis, he decides to use ancient magic to awaken her.
This book sounds so appealing to me because I have never come across a book that was both historical fiction and horror. This book could be a little confusing to me if I read it because I don't know anything about Jewish history and there are some words in the description (such as Golem) that I have no idea what they mean.
This would be such a perfect but scary book to read during Halloween season or even at night. The cover is very creepy in a way that wouldn't really appeal to me, but after reading the summary, I would still pick it up during Halloween.
Author: Naben RuthnumVish is a young Indian-Canadian boy that one day gets mistaken for a relative of the weird local bookseller, which leads him to be pulled into a magical world to stop an interdimensional invasion. (The premise of this book seems very confusing, but the reviews say that the world-building is very interesting and it would be better to just dive straight into the book blind.)
The Second Event: Bestselling Teen Fiction For A ReasonAuthor (of this book and the next one): Cherie Dimaline
Author: Jen Ferguson
Jen, a Métis author, a has a PhD in English and Creative Writing. A feminist and activist herself, she believes that writing is a political act. Her very first debut novel won a Governor General's Literary award!
When three teens (one is an over-achiever, one dropped out of high school, and one always gets labelled as the rich girl) come together at their small town pizza shop, they tackle one of their friends going missing.
The review says there are a lot of topics being discussed, such as violence against Indigenous women, teen pregnancy and more. I find that really important because it is not talked about enough. It could be unappealing to some people because of those topics, but for me I would definitely read this.


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Excellent work discussing the various festivals and events. I sure would love the dim sum event! :)
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