Food as the Great Conversation Starter: Christina Loucas blog

When asked to write a little blog about combining the idea of discourse and some element of my book, what came to mind first is how food is one of those topics that seems to engage most people. No matter whether I was a lawyer practising in Singapore, out for a client lunch years ago […]

Talking with Alta Lake: A blog by Cornelia Hoogland

Swimmers in wet suits, the fins of their arms rhythmic, choreographed, elbowing up, splashing down. The sounds paddles make––the boarders and kayakers who dip them into, then stroke them out of the water. Sounds in miniature. Blue jay skirts over the cedar rail, its nails clicking. Blueberry Hill on the east side of the lake, […]

Yvonne Blomer on Discourse

“Yvonne!” “Hi, how’s it going?” “Great, but you won’t believe this. Refugium has a review in Pacific Yachting!” “What?!” “I know, right!” A friend and subscriber to Pacific Yachting had called with this news. As a kid, growing up in land-locked Alberta, the most I knew of the Pacific was my dad’s yearly trips to […]

What will the neighbours think? Blog by Amber Cowie

Last September, I waved goodbye to the moving truck with relief. Not only did our new neighborhood seem to be friendly—many of the residents had come by to say hello as we were unpacking—our house was also located on a dead end street. With two kids under the age of six, the safety of a […]

A Very Long Gestation Period. Blog by Tim Wynne-Jones.

I’m thrilled to be visiting the Whistler Writers Festival with my new book The Starlight Claim. It’s a sequel… well, sort of. My first novel for young adults, The Maestro, came out in 1995, winning The Governor General’s Award and going on to be published around the world. Wherever I’ve talked to readers about it […]

Wade in the Water – Poetry as an Invitation to Speak Together Differently

Review by Mary MacDonald When we enter into poetry we are like two strangers in the park, making an invitation, and listening to each other with curiosity. Something starts to happen. I emerge beyond my certainties and my feet gripping the familiar ground. My circle of beliefs widens and my ears bend with inquisitiveness. Through […]

At the Mountain’s Edge by Genevieve Graham

Book Review by Alli Vail At the Mountain’s Edge is the latest historical novel from bestselling author Genevieve Graham. The author, known for exploring slivers of Canadian history and giving them fresh life on the page, tackles the Klondike Gold Rush from 1897 onwards, just as gold fever is taking off. Told from two points […]

Whistler Author’s Third Novel Stirs a Longing for Home

Book Review: Finding Callidora by Stella Leventoyannis Harvey By Karen McLeod It’s your castle, your plot of land. It’s where you hang your hat. Home. In Stella Leventoyannis Harvey’s new novel, Finding Callidora, home means this and more to the four generations of the Greek Alevizopoulos family. The prologue, an enchanting moment in the present, […]

Feet on the Ground: Chef James Walt & the Evolution of Fine Dining at Whistler

To begin, James Walt came to his unique style of modern mountain cookery naturally, even organically. It was an evolution that has taken place over decades, and that has many component parts – his love of the farms and ranches in the nearby Pemberton Valley, his close connectivity to the coastal fishery first earned while […]