• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Atlantic Books and Authors

Atlantic Books

Atlantic Books

Locate me to show me local book sellers and libraries

Locate me
Locate me
  • 0
FR
  • Home
  • Collections
    • Winter Reading
      • Winter Brain Ticklers
      • Winter Heartwarmers
      • Winter Snuggles
    • Holiday Gift Guide
      • The Gift Of Art Stories
      • The Gift Of Historical Stories
      • The Gift Of Human Stories
      • The Gift Of Literary Stories
      • The Gift Of True Stories
      • The Gift of Youthful Stories
    • VOICES
      • Black Atlantic Canadian Authors and Stories
    • Time to
      • Time To Be Inspired
      • Time To Create
      • Discover
      • Time to DIY
      • Time to Escape
      • Time to Indulge
      • Time to Laugh
      • Time to Learn
      • Time to Lire en Français
      • Time to Meet
      • Time to Read Alone
      • Time to Read Together
  • Stories
  • Shop
  • About
  • Contact Us

PEI Literacy Alliance

July 1, 2015 by Sarah Sawler

Katherine Dewar, author of Those Splendid Girls, reads in the window of Bookmark Bookstore. Photo credit: Melanie Fishbane
Katherine Dewar, author of Those Splendid Girls, reads in the window of Bookmark Bookstore. Photo credit: Melanie Fishbane

For one week in May, the National Reading Campaign transformed Charlottetown into Reading Town Canada

The lights are low, the food is local, the wine is flowing, and the conversation shows no sign of slowing down. A group of people is gathered around a table in a cozy attic-like lounge. The talk is animated, and occasional bursts of laughter interrupt nearby conversations.

That was the scene in Marc’s Lounge on Charlottetown’s Sydney Street on May 9th, just a few hours shy of one week into Reading Town Canada, a travelling literary festival spearheaded by the National Reading Campaign.

And this was the kind of scene the festival fostered. Reading Town Canada, which debuted last year in Moose Jaw, SK, puts a unique spin on the age-old tradition of the literary festival. Although it has plenty of the usual workshops and signings, the Charlottetown version, which was supported by the PEI Literacy Alliance, also featured little libraries set up in wooden cabinets on the street, poems delivered in pizza boxes, people reading aloud from a rocking chair in Bookmark Bookstore’s window.

Dave Atkinson spent an evening chatting with fans at the Tween Reading Café at Beanz Espresso Bar and Café
Dave Atkinson spent an evening chatting with fans at the Tween Reading Café at Beanz Espresso Bar and Café. Photo credit: Melanie Fishbane

“We didn’t have many people sign up before Reading Town started, but as people started sitting in the window, more people got interested,” says Lori Cheverie, manager of Bookmark. “We heard nothing but positive feedback. There were always people stopping and looking, and some people would come in to ask about Reading Town.”

The festival hosted a variety of local authors, like Glenna Jenkins, author of Somewhere I Belong, who ran a workshop on writing from family history; Finley Martin, who launched his new Anne Brown mystery, The Dead Letter, at Carriage House; and Dave Atkinson, author of Wereduck, who spent an evening chatting with fans at the Tween Reading Café at Beanz Espresso Bar and Café.

There were also some notable authors from elsewhere in Canada, including Zarqa Nawaz, creator of “Little Mosque on the Prairie”, who read from her new book, Laughing All the Way to the Mosque.

“Her book is about growing up in Canada,” says James Roy, Reading Town’s project manager. “She’d never been to the East before this week. I took her to a school on Tuesday afternoon, and she gave a talk to a grade 11 class and it went really well. She tried to use the opportunity to bridge the gap between cultures.”

The event also welcomed Debra Komar, who launched her newest book, The Bastard of Fort Stikine: The Hudson’s Bay Company and the Murder of John McLoughlin Jr., at the Confederation Centre Public Library.

Although the entire festival served to unite the Charlottetown community in a celebration of reading, there were two events in particular that really brought people together, and both were organized by Bookmark.

Little libraries popped-up around the city. The tiny cabinet-like libraries encourage users to discover new books and drop off old ones.
Little libraries popped-up around the city. The tiny cabinet-like libraries encourage users to discover new books and drop off old ones. Photo credit: Melanie Fishbane

The first was a private event honouring its 10 top-selling Island authors from last year. The second was Reading at the Mall, a last-day-of-the-festival family event that featured readings, signings, and visits from picture book characters.

“We were just so busy, we’re only absorbing it all now,” says Cheverie. “Every day we were involved in something, and Saturday was far bigger than we thought it would be. There were hundreds of kids here. The other tenants in the mall were so happy about the buzz we’d created. It was amazing to see that, as a bookstore, we could create such a positive draw. Books are just so important.”

 

Filed Under: #78 Summer 2015, Features Tagged With: Bookmark, Charlottetown, Dave Atkinson, Debra Komar, Finley Martin, Glenna Jenkins, Little free library, National Reading Campaign, Nimbus Publishing, PEI Literacy Alliance, Prince Edward Island, Reading Town Canada, Sarah Sawler, Somewhere I Belong, The Acorn Press, The Bastard of Fort Stikine: The Hudson's Bay Company and the Murder of John McLoughlin Jr., The Dead Letter, Wereduck

January 30, 2015 by Kim Hart Macneill

From www.nationalreadingcampaign.ca:

National Reading Campaign logoIn keeping with Family Literacy Day on January 27th, the National Reading Campaign is thrilled to announce that the 2nd annual Reading Town Canada will be held in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island.

Presented by TD Bank Group and partnering with PEI Literacy Alliance and the Confederation Centre Public Library, Charlottetown will host a week-long celebration of everything related to reading from May 2nd to 9th of 2015. For one week, the 35,000 citizens of the city will weave reading into every aspect of their lives.

“Charlottetown’s long cultural tradition and unique community spirit make it the perfect location for a celebration of reading in Reading Town Canada Week,” says James Roy of the Reading Town Canada project, who added that authors from the region and all over Canada will be invited to participate.

In the interest of making Reading Town Canada a national event, the National Reading Campaign has also partnered with Calgary Reads in order to hold a concurrent Reading Town in Calgary, specifically in the neighbourhoods of Inglewood and Ramsay.

2014’s inaugural Reading Town was held in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan and featured interactive events such as a competitive spoken word poetry public event, ‘Blind Date with a Canadian Book,’ which invited citizens to choose free books based only on sly hints about its content. Other events included a reading-themed pub trivia  and ‘Pizza Pie Poems’ – everyone who ordered a pizza during the week also received a poem by a Canadian poet.

“Reading is fundamental to a child’s development and to their future,” says Frank McKenna, Deputy Chair TD Bank Group. “At TD, we feel strongly about giving Canadian children every opportunity to learn and thrive, and we are especially pleased to support the 2nd annual Reading Town Canada in PEI.”

As Reading Town Canada is presented by TD, the NRC is again working with two other TD-funded reading organizations to make the week a success – First Book Canada will be bringing Canadian children’s books to lower-income families in Charlottetown and TD Canadian Children’s Book Week, coordinated by the Canadian Children’s Book Centre, will also participate. Touring author Bill Swan will be reading as part of the program.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Calgary Reads, Canadian Children's Book Centre, Confederation Centre Public Library, Family Literacy Day, National Reading Campaign, PEI Literacy Alliance, Reading Town Canada

Primary Sidebar

Our Latest Edition

Fall 2020

DISCOVER

Get Our Newsletters

Sign up to the Read Atlantic newsletters

Subscribe to one or all three of our carefully curated newsletters: Atlantic Books, Fiction and Poetry.

SUBSCRIBE

Footer

Atlantic Books

AtlanticBooks.ca is your source for Atlantic Canadian books. Stay up to date with the latest books news, feature stories, and reviews, and browse our catalogue of local books where you can download samples, borrow digital books from your local library, or purchase them through local book sellers or publishers.

Facebook
Twitter

#ReadAtlantic

Atlantic Books is part of the #ReadAtlantic community, which brings together Atlantic Canadian authors, bookstores, publishers, libraries, readers, literary festivals, and more. We encourage you to use this hashtag to promote all the ways we can support the local literary landscape in Atlantic Canada.

 

Useful Links

  • Subscribe to Atlantic Books newsletters
  • Find Your Atlantic Book Seller
  • Find Your Atlantic Public Library
  • Terms of Service
  • Return Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • About us
  • Contact Us
  • My Account
  • My wishlist

With Thanks

We acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts and the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund for this project, as well as the Province of Nova Scotia’s Department of Communities, Culture and Heritage.

Copyright © 2021 · Atlantic Books All Rights Reserved

  • Subscribe to Atlantic Books newsletters
  • Find Your Atlantic Book Seller
  • Find Your Atlantic Public Library
  • Terms of Service
  • Return Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • About us
  • Contact Us
  • My Account
  • My wishlist