Summer Festivals

Olive Senior at the Calgary Public Library

Venue / Location:
Calgary Public Library, Central Branch (Feb. 18) & Calgary Public Library, Shawnessy Branch (Feb. 20)

18 Feb 2010 - 11:30am
20 Feb 2010 - 2:00pm

Ticket Price:
Free

Event Description:

Olive Senior is reading at the Central Branch, Calgary Public Library on Thursday, February 18, and again on Saturday, February 20 at the Shawnessy Branch. Olive Senior will also be in Edmonton on Wednesday, February 19 at Audrey's Books Ltd., and in Winnipeg on Sunday, February 21 to read at the Jamaican Association Manitoba Inc. Building. Books will be available at all events along with author signing.
"Arrival of the Snake-Woman has consolidated (Olive Senior’s) reputation as one of the most accomplished writers of short fiction and as one of the Caribbean’s finest creative minds." — Caribbean Week
About the Author
Olive Senior is one of Canada's most internationally recognized and acclaimed writers. Among her many awards and honours she has won the Commonwealth Writers Prize and F.G. Bressani Literary Prize, was nominated for a Governor-General’s Literary Award, and was runner up for the Casa de Las Americas Prize and the Pat Lowther Award. In 2003, she received the Norman Washington Manley Foundation Award for Excellence (preservation of cultural heritage – Jamaica). Her body of published work includes four books of poetry, three collections of short stories and several award-winning non-fiction works on Caribbean culture.
About Arrival of the Snake Woman
The Toronto author’s Jamaican birthplace provides the setting for these powerful and poignant stories that span a period of roughly 150 years, from the closing days of slavery in 1838 to the 1980s. The tensions wrought by rapid change and conflicting loyalties are at the heart of these stories, most beautifully evoked in the novella “Arrival of the Snake-Woman”. Here a young boy narrates the seminal event of his childhood in the late nineteenth century: the coming of a lonely Indian indentured woman into a mountain village. Senior’s stories are leavened with wit and humour and the intricate play with language and her characters emerge as triumphant examples of the human spirit unravelling the complex weave of race, class, and cultural and ethnic identity.