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Writers Leo McKay and Erin Knight give reading at UPEI February 25

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Nova Scotian writer Leo McKay Jr., who reads at UPEI on February 25, was teaching English with his wife Kathy in Japan, when he woke up one morning to the word “Stellarton,” his home town, on the radio. The Westray Mining Disaster had just occurred. That event, fictionalized as the Eastyard disaster at Albion Mines, along with McKay’s lineage as the descendent of miners and his childhood in Pictou County, is at the heart of his novel Twenty-Six.

McKay, and Alberta poet and UNB graduate Erin Knight will read at 7:30 p.m., February 25, in the UPEI Faculty Lounge, Main Building. A reception and book signing will follow.

McKay’s fiction debut, Like This, was an impressive collection of gritty and potent short stories, with characters and a narrative voice that grabbed readers by the heart and gut. It was a finalist for the Giller Prize. A graduate of UBC’s MFA program in Creative Writing, he teaches English and Creative Writing at a high school in Truro.

In Twenty-Six, a family is changed forever after the devastating mining accident. Alistair MacLeod writes, "Universal in its scope, this is a novel about those who live and die in the underground of a coal-mining community. It is also about the families they leave behind on the surface. ‘Subterranean’ in a variety of ways–some of them quite wondrous–the novel is about memory, loss, guilt, and the light of redemption–sometimes, but not always, before it is too late."

And David Adams Richards writes that "Leo McKay Jr. has given us a book compassionate as love, tough as nails. The novel is a magnificent human drama, profound, haunting, and elegiac."

Erin Knight’s first book of poetry, The Sweet Fuels, reflects on the notion of orientation--whether in terms of magnetic north or street signs, the entrails of an animal or the vowels in a name--as a task of translation. Originally from Edmonton, she received an MA in Creative Writing and English from the University of New Brunswick.

This event is sponsored by the UPEI English Department, with support from the Canada Council for the Arts.

Contact

Anna MacDonald
Media Relations and Communications, Integrated Promotions

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