Canada Reads 2008 chooses winning book
Spoiler alert: Celebrity panel recommends novel all Canadians could read
Last Updated: Friday, February 29, 2008 | 1:24 PM ET
CBC News
Related
Internal Links
After five days of deliberations, the Canada Reads panel made its final choice Friday for the book it recommends all Canadians should read.
The full Canada Reads panel are, from left, Steve MacLean, Zaib Shaikh, Dave Bidini, Jemeni and Lisa Moore.
(CBC)
The winner is King Leary, by Toronto author Paul Quarrington, about an aging hockey hero who is taken from his retirement home to shoot a commercial and ruminates on how he's lived his life.
"I'm thrilled for Paul. He's a brilliant writer and a great musician," said singer-songwriter Dave Bidini, formerly of the Rheostatics, who defended the book.
"Finally, humour and wit has won the day, proving that Canadian writing is about more than just dark places and poetry," he said.
Jemeni said she particularly liked the passage about two young kids skating in 1920s Ottawa who fall through the ice and are rescued by a young native man.
"It's very moving," she said, admitting that she hadn't known much about hockey before she read the book. "He introduced me to this world and gave me a peek at it."
In the final day of discussion, the celebrity panel first eliminated Thomas Wharton's Icefields, leaving a choice between King Leary and Timothy Findley's Not Wanted on the Voyage. Mavis Gallant's From the 15th District and Nalo Hopkinson's Brown Girl in the Ring were eliminated earlier in the week.
"Timothy Findley has created a whole world with animals talking, fairies and dragons are living and breathing and angels come down the earth," actor Zaib Shaikh said in defence of Not Wanted on the Voyage, a retelling of the Noah's Ark story.
He defended the generally unpleasant character of Noah as a man who was burdened with too heavy a responsibility.
Jemeni praised Findley's imagination but said she felt as if he "dropped me into a new world and ran away. I almost felt abandoned at the end of the book."
'Evenly matched'
Findley's book has more of an international reputation, but either of the books could have won, said astronaut Steve MacLean, who ultimately voted for King Leary.
"There may be a perception that it was a David and Goliath struggle, but the past five days have proved that these books are evenly matched."
King Leary, first published in 1987, was not widely available until it was chosen as one of five Canada Reads choices.
Now it's undergone a reprinting and seems destined, if past Canada Reads winners are anything to go by, for bestseller status.
Last year's winner, Heather O'Neill's Lullabies for Little Criminals, became a bestseller.
The final Canada Reads discussion can be heard Friday at 7:30 p.m. (half an hour later in Newfoundland and Labrador) on CBC Radio One or downloaded on podcast.
Share Tools
Whitney Houston's final song Celebrate debuts by Jessica Wong May. 23, 2012 2:46 PM It seems fitting that Whitney Houston's final release is an upbeat and uplifting duet in which she passes the torch to a younger singer with vocal powerhouse potential. In the high energy song Celebrate, from the upcoming film Sparkle, Houston duets with singer and former American Idol Jordin Sparks.
Top News Headlines
- Canadian Pacific Railway strike leads to 2,000 layoffs
- The Canadian Pacific Railway strike means more than 2,000 non-striking unionized CP employees will be laid off, a spokesman for the company said Wednesday, as the federal labour minister said she may force an end to the work stoppage. more »
- Canadian Everest victim warned by guide to turn back
- A Toronto woman who died on Mount Everest did not heed warnings for her to turn back, according to the Nepalese tour company who organized her expedition. more »
- Tuition talks to resume between Quebec minister, students
- Student leaders say a compromise over the tuition crisis is within reach, but Quebec is firm that its emergency protest law will not be part of new talks. more »
- Finley expected to detail EI changes Thursday
- Human Resources Minister Diane Finley is expected to put an end to speculation about the government's plans to change employment insurance on Thursday when she holds a news conference. more »
Latest Arts & Entertainment News Headlines
- Security breach alleged in making of bin Laden raid film
- A House committee chairman charged Wednesday in Washington that the CIA and Defence Department jeopardized national security by co-operating too closely with filmmakers producing a movie on the raid that killed Osama bin Laden. more »
- Tom Wesselmann celebrated in new Montreal exhibit
- With Beyond Pop Art: Tom Wesselmann, the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts is trying to give the reserved, modest American art icon the attention he deserves. more »
- Mario Bros. creator gets Spain's Asturias Award
- Japan's Shigeru Miyamoto, considered the father of the modern video game, has been awarded Spain's Prince of Asturias Award for Communication and Humanities. more »
- David Cronenberg exhibit planned at TIFF
- With Canadian director David Cronenberg drawing attention at Cannes with the upcoming release of Cosmopolis, the TIFF Group is getting ready to celebrate his film career with a new exhibition. more »
Q Blog
Stephen Merchant stands up for himself May. 23, 2012 4:44 PM The comic best known for collaborating with Ricky Gervais on hit TV shows "The Office" and "Extras," talks to Jian about recently returning to his stand-up comedy roots, whether there are taboos in comedy, and more.
CBC Books
The problem with modern motherhood May. 23, 2012 5:26 PM French writer Elisabeth Badinter has written a controversial new book about modern motherhood. It in she argues that parenting methods like attachment parenting undermine women. She explains why to Day 6.
- Canadian Everest victim warned by guide to turn back
- Canadian Pacific Railway strike leads to 2,000 layoffs
- Prince Charles and Camilla jet home after 4-day visit
- Outhouse bear attack survivor was grabbed from 'throne'
- Canadian climber describes Everest as 'a morgue'
- Disgraced RCMP officer transferred to B.C.
- Mom can't leave Canada with children, or stay either
- Tsunami debris could bring shoes with human remains
- Calcium supplement use may raise heart attack risk
The full Canada Reads panel are, from left, Steve MacLean, Zaib Shaikh, Dave Bidini, Jemeni and Lisa Moore.

