Event box
Word Vancouver Opening Gala featuring UBC Library Writer-in-Residence Tsering Yangzom Lama at the Museum of Vancouver (MOV)
On Saturday, September 21, 2024, Word Vancouver celebrates 30 years of bringing authors and their words to the streets of Vancouver and beyond.
Sponsored by UBC Library’s Irving K. Barber Learning Centre, UBC Creative Writing, and Nesters Market, the official opening event for this year’s Word Vancouver festival will be an evening of readings, music, laughter, and mingling. The evening will begin with an intimate reading and Q&A with UBC Library’s Inaugural Writer-in-Residence, Tsering Yangzom Lama, author of the Scotiabank Giller Prize-shortlisted We Measure the Earth with Our Bodies.
The admission cost includes entry into the Museum of Vancouver before and after the event, one drink, and a book from Word Vancouver. This is a catered event. Date and location: Saturday, September 21, 6.00-9.30pm at the Museum of Vancouver (MOV). 1100 Chestnut Street Vancouver, BC V6J 3J9
Agenda
6:00 PM – 6:30 PM – Intimate reading and Q&A with UBC Library’s Inaugural Writer-in-Residence
Tsering Yangzom Lama, reads from We Measure the Earth with Our Bodies (Penguin Random House).
6:30 PM – 7:00 PM – Musical Performance
Mark James Fortin (guitar) and Lorna Fortin (cello)
7:00 PM – Words of Welcome & Musical Performances
Traditional welcome and Vancouver Poet Laureate Fiona Tinwei Lam will say a few words. Mark James Fortin (guitar) and Lorna Fortin (cello) will play.
7:30 PM – Reading and Q&A from Keynote Author
Reading and Q&A from keynote author Valerie Jerome, Races (Goose Lane Editions).
8:00 PM – Readings and Q& A’s with our Guest Curators
Introduction with readings and Q&A from our guest LGBTQIA2S+ Curator Jen Currin, Disembark (House of Anansi Press), and Word Vancouver’s guest Indigenous Curator Michelle Cyca.
8:30 PM – Comedy Set
Comedy act from Sasha Mark
September 21, 6.00-9.30pm
Museum of Vancouver (MOV). 1100 Chestnut Street Vancouver, BC V6J 3J9 (map)
Bio’s
Tsering Yangzom Lama
Tsering Yangzom Lama’s debut novel, We Measure the Earth with Our Bodies, won the GLCA New Writers Award as well as the Banff Mountain Book Award for Fiction & Poetry. Her novel also received nominations for The Giller Prize, Prix Émile Guimet, The Center for Fiction First Novel Prize, The Carol Shields Prize, The Rakuten Kobo Emerging Writers Prize, The Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize, The Jim Deva Prize for Writing that Provokes, The VCU Cabell First Novel Prize, and The Toronto Book Awards. Tsering holds an MFA in Writing from Columbia University and a BA in Creative Writing and International Relations from the University of British Columbia. We Measure the Earth with Our Bodies is published in English in Canada, the United States, and India. Translations are available or forthcoming in French, Italian, Dutch, Polish, Bulgarian, Tibetan, and Arabic.
Tamara Taggart (Host)
Tamara Taggart is a community leader, activist, veteran broadcaster, cancer survivor, and mother. With a broadcasting career spanning 28 years in television, radio, and digital media, Tamara has also focused two decades’ of volunteer efforts on health care and the well-being of children and people with disabilities. She is a community leader who advocates for others and raises much-needed funds for many important causes, contributing thousands of hours and serving as a director of several non-profit organizations. Tamara currently hosts the podcast Telus Talks with Tamara Taggart from her home studio and is the volunteer president of Down Syndrome BC.
Mark James Fortin and Lorna Fortin
Mark James Fortin and Lorna Fortin are a Vancouver jazz, roots, singer-songwriter duo who deliver infectious live performances that evoke an emotional response in the listener. Before moving to Vancouver, Mark lived in Toronto and played shows with the likes of Greg Keelor, Jim Cuddy, the Brent brothers and Soul Asylum and received recognition for his art with accomplishments such as winning Toronto’s Radio Q107 Homegrown Contest and was offered management and label deals. Mark’s first west-coast musical collaboration was with Yvonne McSkimming, co-writing music for the Fringe Festival Hit Crossing Boundaries. After rave reviews the two went into the studio with Bill Buckingham to arrange and co-produce Yvonne’ debut CD “A Place of Standing” which spent 6 months at the top of the MP3.com charts and across Canada. The artist’s collaboration also resulted in the co-creation of one Vancouver’s most beloved monthly songwriters showcases in the city’s history. The ongoing benefit event Just Singin ‘Round (JSR) hosted by Mark and Yvonne has raised over 2 million dollars for numerous Vancouver charities over the past 26 years. Shortly after Mark moved to Vancouver, Lorna joined him and has been a regular contributor to his shows for over 24 years. Some of their claims to fame as a duo include performing at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 1999, in 2018, Mark, Lorna and their daughter Ella won a Leo Award for best score for a short drama film, and in 2019 Mark co-wrote the hit single “All about Love” with Charley Huntley which was recorded and realised by Esan Chan in Hong Kong. This hit stayed at #1 on iTunes for 6 weeks, ahead of Celine Dionne. This duo performs at local restaurants, bars, weddings, funerals and house-concerts with a line-up of captivating originals and well-known songs that reveals their uncompromising desire to offer music with heart. For larger venues and parties, ask Mark and Lorna about the band (find Mark James Fortin Band on Facebook).
Valerie Jerome
Valerie Jerome is an activist, speaker, teacher, politician and athlete from Vancouver. The granddaughter of Canada’s first Black Olympian, John “Army” Howard, Jerome became the Canadian senior women’s champion in the sprints and long jump at the age of 15 in 1959. She went on to represent Canada at the 1960 Rome Olympics, the Commonwealth Games, and the Pan American Games (where she won a bronze medal in the 4 x 100 metres relay), competing alongside her brother Harry Jerome. Away from the track, Jerome has represented the Green Party of British Columbia and is a recipient of the 125th Anniversary of the Confederation of Canada Medal and for a City of Vancouver Heritage Award for her work in conservation. She has also served as a board member for numerous organizations — including Achilles Track & Field, the Junior Black Achievement Awards, and several dance companies — and spoken in schools and at community events for Black History Month. Races is her first book.
Jen Currin
Jen Currin’s new collection of stories is Disembark, just published by House of Anansi. Their collection Hider/Seeker: Stories won a Canadian Independent Book Award, was a finalist for a ReLit Award, and was named a 2018 Globe and Mail Best Book. They have also published five collections of poetry, most recently Trinity Street (Anansi, 2023); The Inquisition Yours (Coach House, 2010), which won the 2011 Audre Lorde Award for Lesbian Poetry and was a finalist for a LAMBDA, the Dorothy Livesay Prize, and a ReLit Award; and School (Coach House, 2014), which was a finalist for the Pat Lowther Award, the Dorothy Livesay Prize, and a ReLit Award. A white settler of mixed, mostly Western European ancestry, Currin lives on the unceded ancestral territories of the Halkomelem-speaking peoples, including the Qayqayt, Musqueam, Kwikwetlem, and Kwantlen Nations, in New Westminster, BC and teaches creative writing and English at Kwantlen Polytechnic University
Michelle Cyca
Michelle Cyca is a journalist and essayist living on the unceded homelands of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh Nations in what is recently called Vancouver. She is an editor with The Narwhal and a contributing writer to The Walrus. Her writing can often be found in Maclean’s, Chatelaine, The Tyee and The Globe & Mail. Previously, she was the editor-in-chief and co-publisher of SAD Mag. Her feature story, The Curious Case of Gina Adams, received a National Magazine Award in 2023 for investigative journalism, and was published in April 2024 as a limited-edition hardcover. She’s a member of the Muskeg Lake Cree Nation in Treaty 6, Saskatchewan.
Sasha Mark
Sasha Mark (he/him/they/them) is a Cree-Métis stand up comedian from Treaty 1 territory, but now is residing on so called “Vancouver”. He has done work with the Winnipeg Comedy Festival, OutTV, Just For Laughs Vancouver and is most known for their work on APTN. He is the host of the Sasha Ha Ha Show and also co-hosts Camp! Comedy a comedy and drag cabaret show.
The UBC Library’s Writer-in-Residence is supported by the Peña Family Fund.
- Date:
- Saturday, September 21, 2024
- Time:
- 6:00pm - 9:30pm
- Audience:
- Community
- Categories:
- Writer-in-Residence