Search


Search for Authors
Newsletter
Sign up for our free
newsletter!

Featured Authors
Europa Tweets
fb_button

  • You are here: Home | News | October 2009

Boualem Sansal on Tour

The internationally acclaimed Algerian author presents his latest novel, The German Mujahid. In this groundbreaking story the author describes his country’s turbulent political issues in a daring juxtaposition with the Holocaust’s moral implications. In October he will meet his readers to discuss his book in Toronto, Ottawa, and New York.

Toronto

Friday the 23rd of October at 8:00 p.m.
Toronto – International Festival of Authors
Reading with Sarah Dunant, Paul Durcan, Andrew O'Hagan, and Joyce Maynard. Powerful poetry and fiction from England, Ireland, the US, Scotland and Algeria. Rachel Harry hosts. Event will be followed by a signing.
International Festival of Authors
Lakeside Terrace
235 Queens Quay West
Toronto


Ottawa

Saturday the 24th of October at 4:00 p.m.
Ottawa – International Writers Festival
Join us for an afternoon of exciting new fiction from the Islamic diaspora featuring acclaimed voices from around the world. Qaisra Shahraz, (Pakistan/UK) Laleh Khadivi (Iran/USA) and Boualem Sansal (Algeria). A moderated on-stage conversation, including audience questions follows the readings. A signing concludes the event.
International Writers Festival
Saint Brigid’s Center for the Arts and Humanities
314 Saint Patrick Street
Ottawa


New York

Monday the 26th of October at 7:00-8:00 p.m.
New York – Idelwild Books
Reading and conversation with Europa Editions editor Michael Reynolds, with special guest, translator Frank Wynne. Followed by audience Q&A, book signing and reception.
Idlewild Books
12 W 19th St.
New York
For more Information: (212) 414-8888

Tuesday the 27th of October at 8:00 p.m.
New York – Primo Levi Center Symposium
In Arabic and Farsi: The Universality of Suffering
The recently published Arabic and Farsi translations of If This Is a Man open a new world of references and possible readings of Primo Levi’s books and pose a new challenge to the appreciation of  Levi’s humanism. In which ways is his voice relevant to an Arabic- and Farsi- speaking readership  And does this new world of readers  test the universality of Levi’s understanding of suffering and of human nature? Speakers: Boualem Sansal, Abraham  Radkin (Aladdin Project,  France); Salem Joubran (writer; translator of If This Is a Man) Moderator: Talal Asad (CUNY Graduate Center); Respondent: Ammiel Alcalay  (CUNY Graduate Center)
Primo Levi Center Symposium at CUNY Graduate Center
365 Fifth Avenue, (Segal Theatre and Proshansky Auditorium)
New York

Wednesday the 28th of October at 7:00 p.m.
New York – French Institute - Alliance Francaise
Public Reading and Conversation in FIAF’s Skyroom. Reading and literary talk with Paul Berman and Boualem Sansal.
FIAF
22 East 60th St.
New York


This tour is made possible with generous support from the Primo Levi Center, the French Institute - Alliance Francaise, and the French Consulates General of  Toronto and Ottawa.




October 19 2009
 

Eric-Emmanuel Schmitt on Tour

Eric-Emmanuel Schmitt is one of Europe's best-selling and best loved authors. His most recent collection, "stories of redemption and reconciliation that carry a slight pleasant aftertaste, a lingering hint of delight" according to The Boston Globe, was published by Europa Editions last month. This October he will be on tour to meet his North American readers and to promote The Most Beautiful Book in the World. He will be making stops in New York, Calgary, Vancouver, and Toronto.



New York


Wednesday the 14th of October at 7 p.m.
New York - McNally Jackson Bookstore
As part of McNally Jackson's Author/Editor series, Eric-Emmanuel Schmitt in conversation with Europa Editions editor Michael Reynolds. Reading, conversation, book signing. Event in English.
McNally Jackson
52 Prince St.
(b/t Lafayette & Mulberry)
New York
For more information: 212.274.1160


Calgary

Friday the 16th of October at 7:30p.m.
Calgary - Alliance Française
“Presenting Eric-Emmanuel Schmitt” 
Reading, conversation, Q&A followed by book signing. Please note that this is a French-language event.
The Alliance Française of Calgary
Memorial Park Building
1221, 2nd St. S.W.
Calgary, AB, Canada
(P)403-245-5662

Saturday the 17th of October at 1:15p.m.
Calgary - Alliance Française
L' adaptation cinématographique des oeuvres littéraires. Readings by Dany Laferrière, Monique Proulx, Eric-Emmanuel Schmitt followed by a discussion on film adaptations of novels. Event in English.
The Alliance Française of Calgary
Memorial Park Building
1221, 2nd St. S.W.
Calgary, AB, Canada
(P)403-245-5662


Vancouver

Tuesday the 20th of October at 8:00p.m.
Vancouver International Writers Festival
The Alma Lee Opening Night Event: GRAND OPENINGS
Group reading with Bonnie Burnard, Amit Chaudhuri, Dany Laferrière, Joan London, Lisa Moore, and Kathy Reichs.
Vancouver International Writers Festival
202 - 1398 Cartwright Street
Vancouver, BC, Canada
+1 604-681-6330

Wednesday the 21st of October at 8:00p.m.
Vancouver International Writers Festival
But Who's Counting?
Three authors, who have each sold millions of copies of their works, tell stories of their lives, both before and after fame and discuss how, or whether, success has changed them. With Audrey Niffenegge and Kathy Reichs. Hosted by Vicki Gabereau.
Vancouver International Writers Festival
202 - 1398 Cartwright Street
Vancouver, BC, Canada
+1 604-681-6330

Thursday the 22nd of October at 7:00p.m.
Vancouver International Writers Festival
Vous m'en lirez tant
An author roundtable. Event in French.
Vancouver International Writers Festival
202 - 1398 Cartwright Street
Vancouver, BC, Canada
+1 604-681-6330


Toronto

Saturday the 24th of October   
International Festival of Authors, Harbourfront
(Lakeside Terrace, 235 Queens Quay West)
Happy Sad: Writing Your Way through the Good and the Ugly
Authors at Harbourfront Centre
235 Queens Quay West
Toronto, Ontario, Canada  
Phone: 416-973-4760

Sunday the 25th of October at 2:00p.m.
International Festival of Authors, Harbourfront
(Lakeside Terrace, 235 Queens Quay West)
Reading: Mysteries and Deception. With Quintin Jardine, Linden MacIntyre and Mark Sinnett. Hosted by Nathan Whitlock.
Authors at Harbourfront Centre
235 Queens Quay West
Toronto, Ontario, Canada  
Phone: 416-973-4760



Many thanks to The French Consulates General of Vancouver and Toronto, the Book Office of the French Cultural Services, New York, and The Alliance Francaise, Victoria (BC) for their valuable support.



October 04 2009
 

Publishers Weekly Profile of Jane Gardam

Few novelists produce their best work in their 80s. Yet the English writer Jane Gardam, 82, has done just that with her new novel The Man in the Wooden Hat (Europa, November). It comes on the heels of her critically acclaimed Old Filth, which was shortlisted for Britain’s prestigious Orange Prize.

Gardam, who published her first adult fiction at 47 and has published 29 books since then, traveled up to London for this interview from the pretty seaside town of Sandwich in Kent, where she and her barrister husband retired several years ago.

Asked if she regrets her late start as a writer, she says firmly, “I couldn’t have written any earlier. I wasn’t ready. I was a very anxious sort of woman.” There were practical obstacles as well: after marrying a young barrister, Gardam had three children, and the demands of her husband’s work specializing in construction litigation—cases that took him as far afield as Singapore and Hong Kong for months at a time—meant she often found herself looking after them singlehandedly.

But she always knew that she would write, a conviction planted firmly in childhood by her mother, who was largely uneducated but loved language and writing. Gardam grew up in Yorkshire, in the north of England, where her father was a math teacher at a boy’s boarding school. And although she went south to London for college and stayed, she remains deeply attached to the landscape of her birthplace and only recently gave up the cottage she and her husband owned there for more than 40 years in the Pennine Mountains (“that was a wrench,” she says).

Gardam’s work was well-received from the beginning, and she is the only writer to have won Britain’s Whitbread Prize twice, for her children’s book The Hollow Land (1981), available from Walker Books, and for The Queen of the Tambourine (1991), reissued by Europa in 2007. Yet she remains relatively unknown to American readers, although publisher Kent Carroll is out to change that. “Old Filth was one of the first books I bought when we started Europa [although he had published Gardam before, at Carroll & Graf]. It had already been nominated for the Orange Prize, but to my surprise and delight it was still available for the U.S.”

Gardam has never worked the London literary scene, though writer friends include Alison Lurie and Margaret Drabble. Her work, moreover, defies easy categorization. Marked by a prose style of compelling descriptive power, her novels often draw on her own past—teachers and schools and Yorkshire, and she is especially intrigued by the interplay between memory and fiction.

This fascination with the recollected past is a mainstay of The Man in the Wooden Hat, which goes hand in hand with Old Filth. The earlier novel told the story of Edward Feathers, a recently widowed barrister who has spent his career in Hong Kong (his nickname, “Filth,” coming from an old adage, 'Failed in London, Try Hong Kong’). Now retired in the English countryside, he finds himself mentally reliving his complicated hidden past, including a war-time childhood of great emotional deprivation.

The new novel is told from the point of view of Feather’s wife, Betty. “I felt I’d missed out on her,” Gardam explains. “She seemed [in Old Filth] so ordinary and dull. But nobody is ordinary and dull.” Betty’s own history, only hinted at in the earlier novel, proves as exotic (and damaged) as her husband’s, and gradually we begin to see the pair’s marriage as an unspoken pact to try and move beyond the wounds of the past. The two novels can be enjoyed independently, but they are best appreciated as a kind of literary duet.

Gardam is done for the moment with the Featherses, though she has a new book in mind: “it’s brewing.” She tends to write in waves of intense concentration: having mulled a story over endlessly in her head, she says she finally reaches a point where “it’s now or never,” and the writing begins. Looking back at her 35 years as a novelist, she muses that she’s written too much. Told that most readers would demur, she smiles. “That’s a wonderful thing to know.”

By Andrew Rosenheim

October 03 2009
 
Browse Articles
 
 
 
Articles by Month