Category Archives: Literary Events

Paul Yee @ Vancouver Museum, Nov 18 book launch for “I am Canada: Blood and Iron”

Drink plenty of water or other calorie-free beverages.

1/22

Before you tear into that bag of potato chips, drink a glass of water first. People sometimes confuse thirst with hunger, so you can end up eating extra calories when an ice-cold glass of water is really all you needed. If plain water doesn’t cut it, try drinking flavored sparkling water or brewing a cup of fruit-infused herbal tea.

Tip No. 2: Be choosy about nighttime snacks.

Tip No. 2: Be choosy about nighttime snacks.

2/22

Mindless eating occurs most frequently after dinner, when you finally sit down and relax. Snacking in front of the TV is one of the easiest ways to throw your diet off course. Either close down the kitchen after a certain hour, or allow yourself a low-calorie snack, like a 100-calorie pack of cookies or a half-cup scoop of low-fat ice cream.

Tip No. 3: Enjoy your favorite foods.

Tip No. 3: Enjoy your favorite foods.

3/22

Instead of cutting out your favorite foods altogether, be a slim shopper. Buy one fresh bakery cookie instead of a box, or a small portion of candy from the bulk bins instead of a whole bag. You can still enjoy your favorite foods — the key is moderation.

Tip No. 4: Eat several mini-meals during the day.

Tip No. 4: Eat several mini-meals during the day.

4/22

If you eat fewer calories than you burn, you’ll lose weight. But when you’re hungry all the time, eating fewer calories can be a challenge. “Studies show people who eat 4-5 meals or snacks per day are better able to control their appetite and weight,” says obesity researcher Rebecca Reeves, DrPH, RD. She recommends dividing your daily calories into smaller meals or snacks and enjoying most of them earlier in the day — dinner should be the last time you eat. Check these Red boost reviews.

Tip No. 5: Eat protein at every meal.

Tip No. 5: Eat protein at every meal.

5/22

Protein is the ultimate fill-me-up food — it’s more satisfying than carbs or fats and keeps you feeling full for longer. It also helps preserve muscle mass and encourages fat burning. So be sure to incorporate healthy proteins like seafood, lean meat, egg whites, yogurt, cheese, soy, nuts, or beans into your meals and snacks. Visit https://www.wtkr.com/brand-spotlight/alpilean-reviews-shocking-customer-complaints-must-read-this-before-buying.

Tip No. 6: Spice it up.

Tip No. 6: Spice it up.

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Add spices or chilies to your food for a flavor boost that can help you feel satisfied. “Food that is loaded with flavor will stimulate your taste buds and be more satisfying, so you won’t eat as much,” says American Dietetic Association spokeswoman Malena Perdomo, RD. When you need something sweet, suck on a red-hot fireball candy. It’s sweet, spicy, and low in calories.

“25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee” delights!!!

The marvelous cast of the Arts Club production of “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee” – photo courtesy of Arts Club

25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee
Arts Club Vancouver
extended until August 25th.

I first became interested in spelling bees after my 2nd cousin Tracey won the inaugural Canspell regional spelling bee in the Vancouver region.  At the young age of 14, she then went off to the Scripps National Bee in Washington DC, and the Canspell National in Ottawa where she placed in the top 5.  I diligently followed the emails that her mother sent the family. Next I watched the movie Akeelah and the Bee, about a young child becoming involved in a spelling Bee, and being trained by Laurence Fishburne's character of Dr. Larabee.  Richard Gere also starred in the movie Bee Season.

This play captures all the silly ideas of the importance of spelling bees as well as the serious undercurrents of perfectionism and high expectations placed on the young competitors of these contests.  This is afterall a musical.  And musicals are meant to be fun and light.  And this musical delivers on all accounts… except I don't know if I can hum any of the tunes… but I was humming something when I walked out of the theatre.

The Arts Club has put a real effort into this production.  I remember earlier in May, when Arts Club manager Howard Jang told me that this was going to be very enjoyable.  He's right.  You step into the theatre, and the set design accurately represents a high school gymnasium, right down to the lockers outside in the hall.  You are indeed transported into a world of nostalgia as the musical begins with event host Rona Lisa Peretti entering the gym to set up.  There is a flashback
to when she is a little girl and she won the third annual spelling bee by correctly
spelling syzygy.  It brings a certain emotional induction to the theatre play, as I recalled watching the CBC documentary Generation: The Chan Legacy, that showed tv film footage of my young cousin Tracey spelling her word at the Canspell contest.

There are five contestants that are supplemented by four “contestants” chosen from the audience.  This adds to a wonderful spontaneity for the play, as each night will be different with the audience members chosen. 

This play is also a wonderful fit for multicultural Vancouver.  Two of the characters are Asian.  Chip Tolentino is a boy scout having issues with puberty.  This returning champion of last year's contest is played by Vincent Tong.  Marcy Park is an over-achieving recent transplant that sings “I Speak Six Languages” and played by Rosie Simon.

This is a fun play and perfect for a summer evening of fun.  25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee has been extended until August 25th.

More soon…..

Nancy Lee at Joy Kogawa House, final event of the writing for Social Change reading series and Kogawa House writer-in-residence program

Nancy Lee reading and interview at Joy Kogawa House on Monday, June 28

Please RSVP at kogawahouse@yahoo.ca

The time with Nancy and her husband John has been a great experience, as she has brought her insightful thought, probing questions, and wonderful wit to Joy Kogawa House.  Additionally, she hosted a memoir writing workshop on Saturday June 26th.

Please join us for the in the intimate living room at Historic Joy Kogawa
House for the final event of a successful series of small salon gatherings with five writers who use
literature to call for social change and justice and as a tool for
social transformation.

Five Mondays (and a Sunday) This Spring

  1. Joan Macleod, Monday, April 19
  2. Anosh Irani, Sunday, May 2
  3. Steven Galloway, Monday, May 17
  4. Karen Connelly, Monday, June 14
  5. Nancy Lee, Monday, June 28
  • All conversations begin at 7:30 p.m. on a Monday, except the one
    with Anosh Irani, which begins at 3:30 p.m. on a Sunday.
  • Historic Joy Kogawa House is located in the Marpole
    neighbourhood of Vancouver at 1450 West 64th Avenue (two blocks east of
    Granville)
  • Admission by donation
  • Books will be available for sale and signing by the authors
  • Please RSVP at kogawahouse@yahoo.ca
  • Thanks to the Canada Council Author Reading and Author Residencies
    programs for funds to host these writers at Joy House

    VACT's Etch-YOUR-SketchOFF2?#$% now features friendly rivalries

    Asians are talented in sketch comedy too!

    I chatted with VACT's founding creator Joyce Lam last week.  There is big drama for this year's Etch-YOUR-SketchOFF2!#$%.  One of last year's comedy sketch teams has split into two new teams for 2010.  That's right… dramedy is happening!  Members of last year's Darin' Joes, have formed new teams.  Fane Tse has helped to form new team Angry Asian Men. Josette Jorge was also with Darin' Joes last year but has returned to SFUU Man Chu.

    Will there be a comedic show down?

    Other teams competing are: Beef Noodle Soup, Laughing Make Mind Dangerous, Banana Drama, Asians Bleed Red, The Yangzters.

    Of special note: Tricia Collins is performing with SFUU MAN CHU.  Tricia co-hosted the 2010 Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner with me.  She is one of my favorite Vancouver actresses – having performed in her solo show Gravity, as well as Firehall Theatre's Ecstasy of Rita Joe and Urban Ink Production's Hunted.  She is also a writer, contributing to Ricepaper Magazine and Completely Mixed Up: An Asian North American Mixed Race Anthology.

    35 performers will be on stage.  Mostly Asians with some members of non-Asian minority groups, representing token inclusivity and plain old friendship between races.

    Check out the VACT website:  www.vact.ca

    Etch Your SketchOff 2 Logo

    Wednesday, April 28, 2010 – Vancouver Rice Bowl Competition
    Thursday, April 29, 2010 – People’s CHOYS Award
    Nightly at 7:30 PM

    Buy your tickets online now!

    NEW GROUP RATE! BUY 8 TICKETS FOR $120!
    Tickets are $15 each!

    Buy Group Rate tickets online now!

    Be a Friend of VACT

    Wed Apr 21, 03:15 PM by editor

    For
    those who have enjoyed our shows and want to support us financially –
    we are recognizing our fans with special benefits.  Depending on your
    friendship level, you will receive premium reserved seating upgrades,
    recognition in the programs, opening night tickets and invitations to
    cast parties, signed productions posters and special concierge
    ticketing services & privileges.  Our way of saying thank you to
    you.

    For more details, click here.

    2010 BC Book Prizes: Fred Wah wins Poetry Prize

    2010_April_BC_BookPrizesGala 004 by you.
    Fellow nominees for the Dorothy Livesay Poetry Prize: Larissa Lai for “Automaton Diaries” and Fred Wah for “Is A Door”.  Fred will be interviewing Larissa Lai for an upcoming issue of Ricepaper magazine.  Fred was the eventual winner of the poetry prize!  The banners of each prize hangs in the background.

    It
    was great to attend the 2010 BC Book Prizes. Very happy to see my
    friends Fred Wah and Larissa Lai nominated for Dorothy Livesay Poetry
    Prize – Fred won! and Charles Demers was nominated for Hubert Evans
    Non-Fiction Prize.

    2010_April_BC_BookPrizesGala 002 by you.
    My pals!  Fred Wah with Cara Ng and Charles Demers – who was nominated for the Hubert Evans Non-Fiction Prize.  Charlie was going around saying I was responsible for his expected niece/nephew.  In actual fact, Cara's brother met his wife on the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.  Fate took its course as they fell in love, married last year, and are expecting a baby this year.  I am still trying to recruit Charlie and Cara and Fred to the dragon boat team.  We will have the “most literary” and “most poetical” dragon boat team in Canada!

    Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas and Masako Fukawa &
    Stanley Fukawa, and Dal Richards
    nominated for Bill Duthie Booksellers’ Choice Award. Great to make new
    friends with many of the authors such as Ian Weir, Lori Culbert, Ehor
    Boyanowsky.  

    2010_April_BC_BookPrizesGala 029 by you.
    Todd Wong, Masako Fukawa &
    Stanley Fukawa – authors of 
    Spirit of the Nikkei Fleet: BC’s Japanese Canadian Fishermen”, and Ann-Marie Metten.  Ann-Marie and I are the executive director and president of Historic Joy Kogawa House Society.  We invited Masako and Stanley to come do a reading at Joy's childhood home.

    2010_April_BC_BookPrizesGala 026 by you.
    Terry Glavin, last year's winner of the Lieutanant Governor's Award for Literary Excellence, accepts for Stan Persky, the 2010 winner!  Shirley Yew, president of the West Coast Book Prize Society and Lt. Gov. Steven Point present the award.

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    Ian Weir, author of Daniel O'Thunder – nominated for the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize, chats with Charles Demers nominated for non-fiction.

    And always great to spend some time with Shelagh Rogers!

    2010_April_BC_BookPrizesGala 011 by you.
    Shelagh Rogers emceed the BC Book Prizes Gala at Government House.  I emceed the BC Book Prizes Soiree back on April 7th, in Vancouver.  Shelagh is a great supporter of Historic Joy Kogawa House and the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner.  I hope soon to have a Gung Haggis dinner in Nanaimo or Gabriola Dinner with Shelagh as my co-host!

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    And of course there was dessert!

    Ali & Ali 7: RCMP, Immigration and tasers – Oh My!

    Ali & Ali 7 Return to the stage for another outrageous skewering of Canadian Multiculturalism

    WORLD PREMIERE of Ali & Ali
    Created and performed by Camyar Chai, Guillermo Verdecchia and Marcus Youssef
    Co-starring Laara Sadiq and Raugi Yu
    Directed by Guillermo Verdecchia

    at the Cultch’s Historic Theatre
    Apr 14–24
    Tickets for Cultch Performances available at 604-251-1363 or https://tickets.thecultch.com/

    at the Shadbolt Centre for the Arts’ Studio Theatre
    April 28 – May 1
    Tickets for Shadbolt performances at 604-205-3000 or boxoffice@burnaby.ca

    Ali & Ali are to Canadian multiculturalism what Wayne & Shuster
    are to Canadian culture.  They poke fun at ourselves, to help us laugh
    at the absurdity of our history and culture.

    But in today's world, Wayne & Shuster, comedy kings of the 1960's and 1970's, have given way to Kids from the Hall, and Russell Peters.  Canadian culture is no longer white and red, our cultural diversity includes black and yellow and pink and especially brown.  Canadians also come from Iran, Iraq, Lebanon and Azerbaijian.  Wayne & Shuster used to make fun of foreign accents.  Camyar Chai and Marcus Youssef as brown immigrant refugees from the fictional country of Agraba, take ethnic jokes to a whole different level – but with some very serious political commentary.

    This
    was my first time at Ali & Ali. I really enjoyed reading the
    published play Ali & Ali and the Axes of Evil.  I couldn't stop laughing at some of the bits about Asian Heritage Month, and the Scottish stage manager.  For the 2010 Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner, I had invited Marcus Youssef to read/perform an excerpt with comedian Charles Demers.  So I wasn't going to miss them.

    The show opens with a montage of  current world leaders from Libya, USA, and Canada.  It's a tribute rap to Moammar Gadhafi.  Wow… we are definitely in a different cultural perspective here.  The play is interactive with the audience, asking questions, getting responses.  Surprise!  They are spoofing and utilizing experimental theatre audience participation as well as Bertolt Brecht's agitprop theatre.

    Ali & Ali are presenting a show to the audience.  They introduce their assistant as Yogi Ru, in actuality Vancouver actor Raugi Yu.  Raugi is the straight man to this zany duo, even dressing up as Obama's Portuguese Water Dog. 

    Along the way, an ethnic South Asian RCMP officer (Laara Sadiq) appears, to charge
    Ali & Ali with illegal immigration to Canada.  A kangaroo court (or
    would it be a “moose court” in Canada?) ensues and Ali & Ali must
    defend and explain themselves. This is where the character of Raugi steps up as an interpreter to
    explain the actions of Ali & Ali to the RCMP officer.  But true to
    Ali & Ali interpretation and misinterpretion, as Canadian
    sacred institutions
    such as the RCMP are poked with scenarios including tasers and cultural sensitivity
    training. Broad outrageous humour got loud laffs from the audience –
    especially the puppet show!

    Ali & Ali poke some fun at Barak Obama's New
    World Order. The puppet show took on a weird outrageous vibe, as talking heads of Afro-American movement cultural icons, criticize Obama policies in the White House.  It would have been nice if they had been able to identify who their “Jiminy Cricket” conscience guides were, as many audience members are probably not versed in Afro-American revolutionaries such as Malcolm X and Angela Davis.  

    Some serious topics are addressed such as
    prison detention & torture, illegal immigration and deportation.  This show uses the slap stick humour to set up and explain the underlying social commentary.  How does a normal human being cope with being detained in prison on unspecific charges?  The balance between the serious and absurdist swings back and forth, eliciting emotional reactions from the audience.  Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't.  There are many in-jokes, dependent upon the audience's knowledge of many things.  It is like a television channel-flipping barrage of issues.  But the play succeeds in informing the audience about our country's detention of prisoners, and it creating new cultural perspectives of multiculturalism.  Sometimes, how you see the world really does depend on what colour your eyes are.

    Definitely not for everybody – but neither was Monty Python or Wayne & Shuster.

    Check out the Neworld website:
    http://www.neworldtheatre.com/productions-ali-and-ali-7.html

    BC Book Prizes Soiree is a friendly, casual but exciting literary event

    It was fun to host the 2010 BC Book Awards Soiree on Wednesday night.  It is indeed one of my favorite events because I get to meet new writers, greet writer friends, buy some new books, pick up some great silent auction prizes… and the organizers are always so friendly!

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    Todd Wong hosts the 2010 BC Book Prize Soiree, making announcements with Selina Rajani, vice-president of the West Coast Book Prize Society – photo Nagai/Wong

    This time as host, it was much busier.  Before going over the evening's script, the first thing I had to do was find my girlfriend Deb, to borrow her credit card to pay for the parking downstairs.  At past events you could always put money into the meters for 2 hours, and not worry.  But with extended meters until 10pm on busy Robson St. I don't take chances anymore.

    Event producer Fernanda Vivieros had the updated scripts ready, and I acquainted myself with the room and who was there.  A good cross-section of BC's literary community of authors, publishers and organizers.  I said hello to publisher Scott McIntyre, organizer Linda Johnston, greeted author Larissa Lai who we featured at the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner this year, and waved to David Chariandy – author of Soucouyant (2008 nominee).

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    Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas, nominated for his Haida-Manga book “Red” wears an Asian-inspired jacket with frog buttons, while I wear a dragon themed waist-coat and Ancient Hunting Fraser tartan kilt. – photo Wong

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    Some of the 2010 BC Book Prize nominees stand at the front as we give a toast to them – photo Nagai/Wong

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    Todd Wong and Rolf Maurer toast to Stan Persky – photo Nagai/Wong

    The best literary moment of the evening was Rolf Maurer's speech about Stan Persky.  He recounted the importance of Stan to our BC Literary community.  The jury stated that:

    “We have chosen Stan Persky as the recipient of the 2010 Lieutenant Governor's Award for Literary Excellence because of the intellectual and moral integrity he brings to his work as a writer who engages with some of the most difficult questions facing society, and because of the great contributions he has made to the literary canon of Canada and British Columbia.

    His numerous books and his trial-blazing efforts in creating literary journals and a forum for public engagement – not least New Star Books and the Georgia Straight – have helped develop British Columbia's literary community into what it is today.

    Stan's bravery as a philosopher, a polemicist and a story-teller, leap from the pages of his twenty books.  Stan Persky is our Socrates.”

    And indeed Persky has touched my life – first as my instructors for Political Science and Philosophy at Capilano College (now Capilano University) in the 1980's.  Stan became the original editor of The Solidarity Times, during the Operation Solidarity movement protesting the Socred government's restraint program. It was natural since Persky had written the book “Son of Socred” about Premier Bill Bennett.  During 2007, I found myself at the forefront of the historic Vancouver library strike when I organized a writer's series, inviting Vancouver writers to speak to the striking library workers. Stan came and stated he came to speak at the library because his “books are locked up and unavailable to the public.”

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    Ricepaper managing editor Patricia Lim, Todd Wong, author Charles Demers – nominated for Vancouver Special (an essay collection about Vancouver's neighborhoods which features 2 paragraphs about Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner and Todd Wong) – photo Wong

    And books!  I always walk away with new books in my hands.  This year I purchased Charles Demers' Vancouver Special, Spirit of the Nikkei Fleet: BC's Japanese Canadian Fishermen by Masako Fukawa with Stanley Fukawa, and Red by Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas.  And Larissa Lai also signed my copies of her nominated poetry collection Automaton Biographies.

    Todd Wong to host BC Book Prizes Soiree

    Todd Wong is delighted to host the 7th annual 2010 BC Book Prizes Soirée 2010 on April 7th at the Listel Hotel.


    Todd Wong and George McWhirter, then Poet Laureate of City of Vancouver, at the 2007 BC Book Prizes Soiree. photo D. Martin

    This is one of my favorite events of the literary year, where all the nominees of the 2010 BC Book Prizes are invited for a casual evening, prior to the BC Book Prizes Gala. 

    Here are the details:

    Wednesday, April 7, 2010

    The Listel Hotel
    Impressionist Gallery Room
    1300 Robson Street
    Vancouver, BC

    The nominated authors are invited out to mix and mingle with BC’s
    vibrant literary community and support the BC Book
    Prizes On Tour program.  There are great door prizes (3 years ago I won
    a gift certificate for SALT Restaurant) and silent auction prizes that
    include
    weekend getaways, prize-winning books and many other fabulous items (I
    love my two dragon puppets that were donated by BC Library
    Association). The event will also feature light refreshments provided
    by The Listel Hotel.  Finalist authors will sign copies of their books at the People’s Co-op Bookstore table.

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    Todd Wong and Terry Glavin, recipient of the 2009 Lieutenant Governor's Award for Literary Excellence at the 2009 BC Book Prizes Gala


    The 2010 Lieutenant Governor’s Award for Literary Excellence award will be announced on Saturday, April 17 and presented
    at the annual Lieutenant Governor’s BC Book Prize Gala on April 24,
    2010.
    I am pleased that I could be there when the awards were presented to my friends: 2009 Terry Glavin and 2008 Gary Geddes

    The  Lieutenant Governor’s BC Book Prizes Gala 2010 will be held in Victoria BC, at Government House, and hosted by my friend Shelagh Rogers.

    2009_April_Kogawa 059

    Shelagh Rogers hosted a “Purdy's Party” at Historic Joy Kogawa House last year, with Jean Baird, George Bowering, John Asfour (inaugural Kogawa House writer-in-residence) and George Stanley. The event was part of BC Book Week – photo Todd Wong

    ABOUT TODD WONG:

    I have been in love with books since I was a child.  My parents would take me shopping to their friends' book warehouse where we could pick out a brand new book.  My mother worked at the Vancouver Public Library, and introduced me to all her library friends and the many many books and libraries.  And now I have worked at the Vancouver Public Library for over 30 years, where I served on the inaugural One Book One Vancouver committee that celebrated Wayson Choy's “The Jade Peony”.

    I remember being thrilled to pick up Joy Kogawa's “Obasan” because it was one of the first Canadian novels to tell the story of Asian Canadians.  Paul Yee's books became magical for me, as I volunteered in 1986 at the Saltwater City museum display that Paul curated, and inspired his award winning book Saltwater City (my picture is included in the revised 2006 edition). 

    Little did I know back then, that I would become an active board member for the Asian Canadian Writer's Workshop beginning in 2000, and help create the ACWW Community Dinner to recognize some of our great Asian Canadian writers. In 2005, I became involved in the Save Kogawa House campaign, which helped to save author Joy Kogawa's childhood home from impending demolition.  Today, I am president of Historic Joy Kogawa House Society, and a board member for The Land Conservancy of BC, proud owners of Kogawa House.

    And somewhere along the way, I created the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner, that each year features a local writer alongside the immortal poetry of Robert Burns.  Past years have featured Joy Kogawa, Jim Wong-Chu, Sean Gunn, George McWhirter, Fred Wah, Rita Wong, Fiona Tinwei Lam, and this year Larissa Lai.  Both Larissa and Fiona are poetry nominees for this year's BC Book Prizes.

    Somehow, everything seems to return full circle.  I love BC Books and BC authors.

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    Todd Wong at Scottish Parliament display of “This is Who We Are: Scots in Canada” – a picture of Todd in kilt and Chinese Lion Head was featured in the display for his work in Canada promoting the poetry of Robert Burns in Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner events. photo Onya Attridge.

    Larissa Lai is featured poet for 2010 Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner

    Larissa Lai, author of When Fox is a Thousand and Salt Fish Girl – comes to Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner

    Larissa Lai

    Last year, Larissa Lai was a guest at the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner.  She enjoyed the event so much she is coming back… as our featured poet!   At a reading event at the Vancouver Public Library, Larissa shared with me that she teaches Robert Burns to her students at University of BC.  Wow… Perfect! 

    But Larissa is much more than that… She is an acclaimed poet in her own right, and the author of two novels – When Fox Is A Thousand, and Salt Fish Girl.  Both books are in my personal collection.  I first met Larissa back in 1994, when I wrote an article for the SFU Student Newspaper, and she was a featured poet for the Go For Broke Festival – the forerunner of Asian Heritage Month.

    But I am sorry to share that we will NOT be serving Salted Fish at the 2010 Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner.  While my mother used to (and still does) cook salted fish at home… I have selected pan-fried spicy salted prawns (Jew-Yim-Hah) for the 2010 Menu… one of my favorite dishes.

    2009_Oct_CUPE_writerfest 111

    From www.larissalai.com
    Larissa Lai is an Assistant Professor in the Department of English at
    The University of British Columbia. She holds a PhD from the University
    of Calgary. Her first novel, When Fox Is a Thousand (Press Gang 1995)
    was shortlisted for the Chapters/Books in Canada First Novel Award. Her
    second novel, Salt Fish Girl (Thomas Allen Publishers 2002) was
    shortlisted for the Sunburst Award, the Tiptree Award and the City of
    Calgary W. O. Mitchell Award. In 2004, West Coast Line published a
    special issue focussed on her work. She has been the Markin-Flanagan
    Writer-in-Residence at the University of Calgary (1997-8), and
    Writer-in-Residence in the English Department at Simon Fraser
    University (2006). sybil unrest, her collaborative long poem with Rita Wong, was published by Line Books in 2009. Eggs in the Basement, a long poem based on a vocabulary exhaustion exercise, surprised its writer by telling the story of Moses and Monotheism. It was published by Nomados, also in 2009. Lai’s first solo full-length poetry book, Automaton Biographies, has just been released by Arsenal Pulp Press.

    Google News Alert for “Gung Haggis Fat Choy”

    Here are some of the media interviews about Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner + other stories

    Every year I do media interviews.  On Robbie Burns Day, I was woken up at 7am by a request from BBC Radio Scotland.  Yesterday, I did an interview for French CBC television.  Monday was Epoch Times.  Last week the Georgia Straight did a food feature article.  Somewhere in Scotland there is an interview in the Sunday Post.  Even SFU, Seattle and North Shore News have stories about Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner this year.  Check out the links:

    Gung Haggis Fat Choy is the ultimate fusion feast

    Straight.com – Carolyn Ali – ‎Jan 21, 2010‎
    “People really like haggis dim sum,” says Todd Wong, otherwise known as Toddish McWong. He's organizing the 12th annual Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner,

    Gung Haggis Fat Choy Celebrates Chinese and Scottish Heritage

    The Epoch Times – Ryan Moffatt – ‎11 hours ago‎
    At first glance not a lot, but if you ask Todd Wong, founder of Gung Haggis Fat Choy, the two partner together quite well. “In Canada they talk about the

    Food Calendar

    North Shore News – Pamela Stone, Debbie Caldwell – ‎4 hours ago‎
    Gung Haggis Fat Choy:
    The annual Scottish and Chinese cultural, musical and literary event
    featuring intercultural food, fun, poems and music, Sunday, Jan.

    Join the Burns Day fun Jan. 25

    Simon Fraser University News – ‎Jan 21, 2010‎
    And don't forget to stay for Gung Haggis Fat Choy, a fun meld of Chinese New Year and Burns Day festivities, with dragon cart races, haggis and egg rolls.

    Like a trip home

    The Kingston Whig-Standard – Ian Elliot – ‎Jan 25, 2010‎
    and a unique Canadian twist is a Scottish- Chinese fusion born in Vancouver known as Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinners that feature haggis wontons and other

    Vancouver taste treat: haggis won ton

    Crosscut (blog) – Knute Berger – ‎19 hours ago‎
    The menu for the 2010 Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner in Vancouver has been revealed, and it combines the celebratory influences of Chinese New Year with the

    Food and Culture Topic of Presentation

    Opinion250 News (blog) – ‎Jan 9, 2010‎
    We also attend boundary-blurring festivals, such as Gung Haggis Fat Choy Day,” says Dr. Iwama, who has a PhD in Interdisciplinary Studies.