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    Talkingbooksandstuff's podcast

    Dennis Rimmer is talking about books, and writing and stuff. https://www.patreon.com/talkingbooksandstuff1
    en-ca253 Episodes

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    Episodes (253)

    Episode 245 - Samantha Reynolds

    Episode 245 - Samantha Reynolds

    Samantha is an author, actor and award-winning filmmaker living in Toronto, Canada.  She is a certified Dr. Shefali Conscious Parenting Coach and received her MFA in film production from The University of Southern California.  When not creating, Samantha can be found spending time with her husband, son and mini Poodle.  

     In her book Help Me Be Me, she wants parents to be able to let go of their fantasies of who and what their child should be and simply observe and listen. It isn’t always easy to do but this is when the magic of self-discovery happens.

    Episode 243 - Dustin Galer

    Episode 243 - Dustin Galer

    Dustin Galer is an award-winning writer, biographer, and historian.

    He is known for his exceptional contributions to the world of disability history and labour. He earned his doctorate in History from the University of Toronto and has solidified his reputation as a prominent figure in the field. 

    Dennis and he discuss his book, Beryl.

    Episode 242 - Lori Hahnel

    Episode 242 - Lori Hahnel

    Lori writes fiction about love, loss, longing, music, history, and the lives of women. Her first novel was loosely based on the formative experience in her teen years of playing in Calgary band The Virgins, in the context of the male-dominated world of 1980’s punk music. She is fascinated by outsiders, misfits, the strange, and the forgotten.

    Episode 240 - Meg Braem

    Episode 240 - Meg Braem

    Meg Braem’s plays have won the Gwen Pharis Ringwood Award for Drama at the Alberta Literary Awards and the Alberta Playwriting Competition, and Blood: A Scientific Romance was nominated for a Governor General’s Literary Award for Drama. Her work has been presented at the Citadel Theatre, Theatre Calgary, Lunchbox Theatre, the Belfry Theatre, Sage Theatre, Sparrow & Finch Theatre, Theatre Transit, Atomic Vaudeville, and Intrepid Theatre.

    Episode 239 - Bruce Belland

    Episode 239 - Bruce Belland

    Bruce Gerald Belland was born in Chicago, Illinois on October 22nd, 1936, the second son of Rev. Stanley G. Belland, a Fundamentalist minister and his wife Hertha, a Gospel radio singer. It was in 1954 that Bruce convinced Glen Larson, a friend since grammar school, to co-found a vocal group for that year’s student talent show. Bruce, Glen and two pals from the school choir, stole the show with the Crew Cuts’ “Sh-Boom.” Convinced they were on to something special, Bruce and Glen enlisted two classmates—Bruce’s friend 6’4” bass and high school football star Ed Cobb, and high tenor and former boy soprano in the famed Mitchell Boys Choir, Marv Ingram—to permanently fill the other two slots.

    And THE FOUR PREPS were born. 

    Episode 238 - Nick Bantok

    Episode 238 - Nick Bantok

    Nick Bantock is a British artist and author based in Saltspring Island, British Columbia, known for his series, The Griffin and Sabine Trilogy. 

    In 1993, he won the Bill Duthie Bookseller's Choice Award for Sabine's Notebook.

    In 2006, he adapted the Griffin and Sabine series into a play, also called "Griffin and Sabine", which premiered in Vancouver at the Granville Island Stage and ran from 5 October – 4 November 2006.

    In 2007, he resumed painting full-time, and opened a studio-gallery, 'The Forgetting Room', on Saltspring Island. Between 2007 and 2010, Bantock was one of the twelve committee members responsible for selecting Canada's postage stamps. 

    Episode 236 - Stephen R. Bown

    Episode 236 - Stephen R. Bown

    Stephen has written ten books on the history of exploration, science, and ideas--including books on the medical mystery of scurvy, the Treaty or Tordesillas, the lives of Captain George Vancouver and of Roald Amundsen and a doomed Russian sea voyage. His books have been published in multiple English-speaking territories, translated into nine languages and shortlisted for many awards. Dennis interviews him about his newest book Dominion, about the transconinental railroad.

    Episode 234 - Charlotte Gray

    Episode 234 - Charlotte Gray

    Charlotte Gray is one of Canada’s best-known writers of literary non-fiction. Born in Sheffield, England, and educated at Oxford University and the London School of Economics, she began her writing career in England as a magazine editor and newspaper columnist. After coming to Canada in 1979, she worked as a political commentator, book reviewer and magazine columnist before she turned to biography and popular history.