CBC Radio One Book Club: April 21 with Sheryl Mackay, Douglas Coupland, Darrell Fox and John Burns
Category Archives: Terry Fox
Terry Fox book by Douglas Coupland featured for CBC Radio One Book Club
Terry Fox book by Douglas Coupland featured for CBC Radio One Book Club
The Terry Book Club
will air on North by Northwest on CBC Radio One.
Part One: Sat., April 30, 7 – 8 a.m.
Part Two: Sun., May 1, 8 – 9 a.m.
It was with both excitement and concern that host
Sheryl Mackay said she anticipated the presentation of “Terry” by
Douglas Coupland as the April 21st selection for the CBC Radio One Book
Card.
“You just can't get through it without crying,” said
Mackay. And true to her prediction, many people spoke emotionally
about the love for Terry Fox, or about their own challenges with
cancer, or about how cancer challenged their loved ones.
Mackay was joined by co-host John Burns from the
Georgia Straight, in welcoming both author Douglas Coupland, and the
younger brother of Terry Fox – Darrell Fox, who is now National
Director of the Terry Fox Run Foundation.
I will write more about the experience of being in
the emotionally and memory-charged room, but first I will post some of
the pictures from the event.
Author Douglas Coupland and family consultant Darrell Fox – who both
signed all the books. Douglas describes the Fox family as Canada's
“First Family.” Darrell says that Douglas is a member of the
family now.” So does that mean that Coupland is a member of “Canada's
First Family”?
Todd Wong standing with Sheryl Mackay, host of CBC
Radio's North By North West & the CBC Radio One Book
Club. Sheryl is a warm and congenial host always. It was a
pleasure to be a guest on her show in January as we talked about my
role with the Reverend Chan Legacy project that was being presented at
the Chinese Canadian History Fair at the Vancouver Museum.
Todd Wong with Douglas Coupland and Darrell Fox, at the CBC Radio
One Book Club for “Terry” – April 21st, 2005. It was Darrell Fox
who asked me to become a Terry's Team member in 1993.
“What is a Terry's Team member,” asked Sheryl.
“Cancer survivors who speak at Terry Fox Runs and for school visits,
who serve as living examples that cancer reseach has helped to make a
difference.
For my own cancer diagnois in 1989, I was given of a 60% survival
rate. At the time of Terry's Run in 1980, the survival rate was
about 50%, but by 1989 they were shooting for 100% survival rate.
My case was extremely advanced and without treatment I would have died
in two weeks.
CBC Radio Host Sheryl Mackay, Douglas Coupland, Darrell Fox and John Burns
32 Books: Leslie & owner Mary Trentadue. My favourite
independent book store on the North Shore – where I actually
bought my copy of “Terry” soon after it came out.
CBC Radio One Book Club features “Terry” with author Douglas Coupland and Darrell Fox
CBC Radio One Book Club features “Terry” with author Douglas Coupland and Darrell Fox.
I won tickets to the CBC Radio One “Terry” Book Club. The show will tape on Thursday, April 21, from 6:30pm to 8pm. and his hosted by CBC Radio host Sheryl Mackay
The Terry Book Club
will air on North by Northwest on CBC Radio One.
Part One: Sat., April 30, 7 – 8 a.m.
Part Two: Sun., May 1, 8 – 9 a.m.
CBC Radio is actively helping to collect stories about Terry Fox to be
published in a book by Douglas McIntyre to help celebrate the 25th
Anniversary of Terry Fox's Marathon of Hope. All the
stories will be given to Douglas Coupland to select and edit, as well
as be broadcast on CBC Radio and Television.
Here's what will be happening:
Microphones are set up for audience questions and
Terry Fox memories and stories. We encourage you to
join in, your participation in the CBC Studio One
Book Club is an important part of the broadcast.
This Book Club is part of CBC's national partnership
with the Fox family, Douglas & McIntyre publishing,
and Douglas Coupland to collect memories, stories,
artwork, photos and souvenirs that describe how
Canadians feel about Terry Fox. Doug will be
turning some of this material into a new book called
"Memories of Terry: Canada's National Scrapebook",
as a companion book to "Terry". As with "Terry",
all his work and royalities are being donated to the
Terry Fox Foundation for cancer research. "Memories
of Terry" will be published in the Fall of 2006, to
commemorate the 25th anniversary of the very first
public Terry Fox Run.
This is very cool as I am a Terry's Team member – a
cancer survivor who attends and/or speaks at Terry Fox Runs, serving as
a living example that cancer research has made a difference.
I think I will wear my Terry's Team t-shirt to the event. The Terry Fox Run Foundation gives me a shirt each year to wear at the event.
For more details of the CBC Radio One Terry Book Club, Check out
http://www.cbc.ca/bc/bookclub/
For more about Terry Fox check out:
http://www.terryfoxrun.org/
“Terry” by Douglas Coupland: a pictoria book about Terry Fox and his Marathon of Hope
I won a copy of Terry, the pictorial book by Douglas Coupland, on Tuesday, the 25th anniversary. CBC Radio's BC Almanac
asked listeners to phone in with their memories of Terry Fox. All
people who got to speak on radio also had their names put in a draw for
the book.
I shared that Terry is very special to me because as a Terry's Team
member, I speak at Terry Fox Runs and elementary schools every
September. It's been a blessing to meet the Fox Family and the
friends and coaches that Terry had. I explained that many Terry's Team
members say that they probably wouldn't be alive today if cancer
research hadn't progressed in the years since Terry's Run. Host Mark Forsythe then asked what kind of cancer I had.
It was a great radio tribute to Terry Fox and his Marathon of Hope as I had spent the morning listening to “Sounds Like Canada” host, Shelagh Rogers,
interview Terry's mother Betty, brother Darrell, and friend Doug
Alward, about their reflections and memories about Terry starting off
on his Marathon of Hope from Mile 0, in St. John's Newfoundland.
The show highlighted the unveiling of a “Mile 0” monument, and much
discussion was about what it was like as Terry dipped his artificial
leg into the St. John's harbour, filled up a jug of water to empty into
the Pacific Ocean, and started his run through the province of
Newfoundland.
Here is the Canadian Press story.
I saw a picture of the monument in the Vancouver Sun, but have yet to find a picture on the internet.
Terry Fox Memorial unveiled at “Mile 0” in St. John's Newfoundland
Terry Fox Memorial unveiled at “Mile 0” in St. John's Newfoundland.
Twenty-five years ago on April 12, Terry Fox began his Marathon of
Hope journey with the quest to raise awareness and funds for cancer
research. Click here for the story from CBC.
I am anxiously awaiting the start of CBC Radio's Sounds Like Canada program to hear host Shelagh Rogers report “live” with the Fox family. At
the same time, Doug Coupland's new book Terry gets it's official
launch. The Fox family and Doug Coupland join Shelagh Rogers on a
special Sounds Like Canada live from the Battery Hotel in St. John's,
Newfoundland.
Terry Fox inspires many people and many ideas. He is the
quintesential Canadian hero – thinking of others… wanting to help
relieve the suffering of others.
Personally, I am very interested in following the stories for three reasons:
1) In 1989, I almost died from a near-fatal cancer tumor in my
chest. A large tumor, the size of a large grapefruit, was
displacing my vital organs – filling my lungs half-full with fluids,
choking my vena cava (where the blood returns to the heart), and
causing internal bruising. At the time, they said treatment
survivorship had been 50% ten years before, but in 1989 they were
“shooting for 100%.” But my tumor had been found late… and so
they only give me a 60% chance of survival, and later told me that
without treatment, I would have died in two weeks. On June 21, I
started receiving chemotherapy that would last for five months.
2) I am a Terry's Team Member
– Cancer survivors who serve as living
examples that cancer research has made a difference. We speak at
Terry Fox Runs throughout the country, and at elementary schools.
I have been a Terry's Team member since 1993, and have spoken at run
sites throughout the Greater Vancouver area such as Vancouver, North
Vancouver, West Vancouver, Burnaby, North Delta… + Kelowna BC, and
even Beijing China in 1993. I am always amazed to hear the
stories from other Terry's Team members, it's a special survivor
kinship that we would hope nobody else will have to experience.
3) I helped to create a Terry Fox Day
and Terry Fox Run at Simon Fraser University in 1994, and a trophy case
dedicated to Terry was unveiled. In 1991, a statue of Terry was
unveiled at a re-invigorated Terry Fox Day. Thousands of SFU students can now see everyday, that Terry was a student, just like them.
25 Years of Hope – The Legacy of Terry Fox
If you have memories of Terry and would like to share what he means to you, please click here.
CBC will possibly the stories for on television, radio, internet and
given to Douglas Coupland for inclusion for a new book.
For my article and pictures of the Canadian Mint coin unveiling at Simon Fraser University March 14,2005 click here
“The Relentless Terry Fox” in Maclean's Magazine April 1, 2005
Maclean's Magazine published a good story about Terry Fox by Ken MacQueen their April 1 issue, titled The Relentless Terry Fox.
MacQueen accompanied Fox for three days along the Marathon of Hope back
in 1980, in Ontario. He gives some of the background stories,
about some of the frustrations on the tour, the sacrifice of Darrell
Fox's high school graduation ceremony so he could join his brother
Terry, the anguish of Betty Fox “giving up two sons to the road.”
“It was a stupid thing to do,” says Betty Fox reflecting on her son's
quest to run across Canada on one leg, “really stupid.”
“It was supposed to happen,” she says next
reflecting how all the pieces fell into place to create one of Canada's
singular moments of history. “I believe he was supposed to get
cancer. And do this run
for cancer research.” Then, as with a tear wrenching realization
she concludes, “He wasn't meant to . . . to live.”
MacQueen also reflects on how true the Terry Fox Run Foundation has
stayed to Terry's wishes. There is no corporate sponsorship, no
endorsements, no event or company tie-ins. It is a very lean
operation that Terry's brother Darrell runs as national director of the
organization.
Attending the Canadian Mint coin unveiling at Simon Fraser University
on March 14th, MacQueen sees all the people who played important roles
in Terry's development and his dream; his parents and siblings, his
coaches, his best friend Doug Alward, his friend Rick Hansen. MacQueen
poses the questions about how rare an occurence a Terry Fox comes along
in a country's history, and concludes that Terry Fox had a tremendous
support system. Rick Hansen called his old friend “the instrument
of a dream” and says, “The vision behind it is so captivating it doesn't always just depend on one individual.”
It's a good story.
For my personal account and pictures of attending the coin unveiling click here.
Darrell Fox interview in Vancouver Sun today: Terry's younger brother
Darrell Fox interview in Vancouver Sun today: Terry's younger brother
Good interview in today's (Friday April 8th) Vancouver Sun with Darrell
Fox, the younger brother of Terry Fox and now national director of the
Terry Fox Run Foundation, page B2-B3 of the Westcoast section.
I first met Darrell in 1993, when he invited me to come to the BC/Yukon
office of the Terry Fox Run Foundation where he was then executive
director. He also invited me to become a Terry's Team member – to
speak at runs and elementary schools as a living example that cancer
research has made a difference. I liked Darrell immediately then,
and I believe this Vancouver Sun article does him justice.
Darrell has always put Terry Fox first, he always asks the question,
“What would Terry think?”
This article explains the special bond that Darrell always had with his
older middle brother. Darrell went to Newfoundland to help
accompany Terry and Terry's best friend Doug Alward on the Marathon of
Hope. Darrell took Terry's death pretty hard, and still does.
As national director of the Terry Fox Run Foundation, Darrell is
fiercely proud that 87 cents of every dollar raised goes into cancer
research. The Terry Fox Run Foundation has one of the highest
benefit to cost ratio for a large non-profit organizaton – all the more
amazing when you realize that no corporate sponsorship is accepted.
Sounds Like Canada in Newfoundland for Terry Fox 25th Anniversary celebrations
This is from the Sounds Like Canada
website. Gung Haggis Fat Choy is proud to be “friends” with CBC
Radio's Sounds Like Canada – for our past cross-over references and
events click here.
Sounds Like Canada in
St. John's, Newfoundland, April 11 – 14.
25 Years of Hope – The Legacy of Terry Fox
On Tuesday, April 12, a special Fox Family celebration
of a great dream live from the Battery Hotel — we celebrate the start
of the 25th Anniversary of Terry Fox's Marathon of Hope Run. A new
monument in his honour will be unveiled at mile zero. And, Doug
Coupland's new book “Terry” gets it's official launch.
If you have memories of Terry and would like to tell us what he means to you, please click here.
The week of April 11th, 2005: CBC Radio will broadcast a special five part series on morning shows across the country.
- Monday – We begin with a look back at the man and his mission with The Marathon of Hope.
- Tuesday – Find out why another Canadian icon Douglas Coupland turned his curiousity about Terry Fox into a book called TERRY.
- Wednesday – It began in Newfoundland … how the Terry Fox legacy lives on in Canada's eastern most province.
-
Thursday – Keeping the journey alive… Terry's family and friends share
their stories about the man they lost and the man who inspired a nation
never to forget. - Friday – The man in motion –
Rick Hansen toured the world in his wheelchair after he was personally
touched and inspired by Terry Fox. He contemplates the power of people
to affect change.
April 12th:
Anniversary
of the day, 25 years ago, that Terry Fox dipped his artificial leg in
the Atlantic Ocean. CBC Radio and CBC Television will be broadcasting
live across the network from St. John’s Newfoundland, on Sounds Like
Canada and CBC News: Canada Now from the Battery Hotel on Signal Hill.
The Fox family, Douglas Coupland and people instrumental in the
Marathon of Hope will be there to celebrate the day Terry started his
journey. As part of the festivities, a new monument to Terry will be
unveiled where he started, plus the new book Terry will be
launched with a reading and book signings, and the Canadian Mint will
have a booth where you can exchange your loonie for the new Terry Fox
dollar coin.
Live from the Battery Hotel, St. John's:
Terry Fox on Sounds Like Canada: stories from nurse Judith Ray
Terry Fox on Sounds Like Canada: stories from nurse Judith Ray
I listened with great interest to CBC Radio's Sounds Like Canada
on 690 AM this morning, as guest host Kathryn Gretsinger talked with
Judith Ray, who was then head nurse of the pedriatric ward at Royal
Columbian Hospital in New Westminster. Before she had even met
Terry, she made decisions that would influence his treatment and
recovery. She ensured that at age 18, he would stay in the
pediatric ward with children and teens aged 5 to 18, knowing that a
room full of younger children would act as a great distraction to
somebody facing the loss of a leg, especially somebody devoted to
athletics.
Even though the doctors were very sure that Terry had bone cancer and
that his leg needed to be amputated, they were not going to tell him
right away until all the tests were done. Judith recounts how she
emphasized that the whole family be in attendance when the doctor
shared the news, that Terry's leg would be amputated, that he would
have chemotherapy, that he would lose his leg. This is a great
shock to many people, as I can personally attest to… being told that
you have cancer. Judith says that Terry's younger siblings
Darrell and Judith asked lots of questions and really helped lessen the
shock and gravity of the moment.
Judith shared great insight to Terry's character. At the time of
his amputation in March 1977, Terry was a first year student at Simon
Fraser University studying kinesiology. That first weekend she
told him on a Friday that the amputation operation would take place on
a Monday, and she reccommended he take the time to visit the places he
could and enjoy the use of his two legs. Where did he go?
SFU – Terry loved Simon Fraser University, and the university has now
instituted Terry Fox Day, and has on display both a trophy case
dedicated to Terry and a bronze statue.
This interview with Judith Ray can be heard again tonight.
Night Time Review can be heard Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday at 8:00 p.m. (8:30 NT) on CBC Radio One.
Night Time Review – Friday, April 8
Most Canadians first met Terry Fox in 1980. He was a determined,
21-year-old, one-legged runner who launched a Marathon of Hope — a
plan to run across Canada to raise money for cancer. Judith Ray
first met Terry when the then-18-year-old Simon Fraser University
basketball player came to the hospital with a sore leg. She and
Terry developed a close bond during those early days of his cancer
diagnosis. A bond that Judith believes helped shape her life.
Guest host Kathryn Gretsinger talks to Judith Ray about the legacy of
Terry Fox.