'''Canada Reads''' is an annual "battle of the books" competition organized and broadcast by
Canada's
public broadcaster, the
CBC.
Overview
During ''Canada Reads'', five personalities champion five different books, each champion extolling the merits of one of the titles over a series of five programs. At the end of each episode, the panelists vote one title "off the island" until only one book remains. This book is then billed as the book that all of Canada should read.
''Canada Reads'' was first broadcast on CBC's
Radio One in 2002; since its third edition it has been broadcast on Radio One and on television on
CBC Newsworld.
The fourth edition of ''Canada Reads'' ran from
February 21 to
25,
2005. The fifth edition was broadcast from
April 17 to
21,
2006, but only on Radio One.
The candidate books for each edition of ''Canada Reads'' are announced several months before the programs are broadcast. They are then promoted in
bookstores, in the hope that the listening and viewing public will purchase and read them all before the programs air. In some cases, publishers have published special editions of the nominated titles. The publisher of the final ''Canada Reads'' title makes a donation to charity. In 2005 this a portion of sales proceeds of the winning book went to The Movement for Canadian Literacy.
Radio-Canada, the
French-language service of CBC, produced a French version of ''Canada Reads'' in 2004 entitled ''Le combat des livres'' ("Battle of the books"), broadcast from
March 29 to
April 2 on
La Première Chaîne. Another edition was broadcast from
March 14 to
March 18,
2005.
''Canada Reads 2002''
'''Canada Reads 2002''' aired from
April 16 to
19,
2002. The winning title was announced on
April 23,
2002,
Canada Book Day.
Mary Walsh was the moderator.
The books selected for ''Canada Reads 2002'' and their respective champions were:
★ ''
A Fine Balance'' by
Rohinton Mistry, championed by
actor Megan Follows
★ ''
In the Skin of a Lion'' by
Michael Ondaatje, championed by
Steven Page
★ ''
The Handmaid's Tale'' by
Margaret Atwood, championed by former
Prime Minister Kim Campbell
★ ''
The Stone Angel'' by
Margaret Laurence, championed by
Leon Rooke
★ ''
Whylah Falls'' by
George Elliott Clarke, championed by
Nalo Hopkinson
The winning title was ''In the Skin of a Lion'' by Michael Ondaatje.
''Canada Reads 2003''
'''Canada Reads 2003''' aired from
April 21 to
25,
2003.
Bill Richardson was the moderator.
The books selected for ''Canada Reads 2003'' and their respective champions were:
★ ''
Life of Pi'' by
Yann Martel, championed by author
Nancy Lee
★ ''
Next Episode'' by
Hubert Aquin (translation of ''Prochain épisode'' by
Sheila Fischman), championed by
journalist Denise Bombardier
★ ''
Sarah Binks'' by
Paul Hiebert, championed by
author Will Ferguson
★ ''
The Colony of Unrequited Dreams'' by
Wayne Johnston, championed by educator
Justin Trudeau
★ ''
The Lost Garden'' by
Helen Humphreys, championed by
actor,
writer and
building contractor Mag Ruffman
The winning title was ''Next Episode'' by Hubert Aquin.
''Canada Reads 2004''
'''Canada Reads 2004''' aired on both CBC Radio and CBC Newsworld.
Bill Richardson was the moderator.
The books selected for ''Canada Reads 2004'' and their respective champions were:
★ ''
Barney's Version'' by
Mordecai Richler, championed by
author Zsuzsi Gartner
★ ''
Green Grass, Running Water'' by
Thomas King, championed by former mayor of
Winnipeg Glen Murray
★ ''
The Heart is an Involuntary Muscle'' by
Monique Proulx (translation of ''Le cœur est un muscle involontaire'' by
Fred A. Reed and
David Homel), championed by
filmmaker and
journalist Francine Pelletier
★ ''
The Last Crossing'' by
Guy Vanderhaeghe, championed by
musician Jim Cuddy
★ ''
The Love of a Good Woman'' by
Alice Munro, championed by
soprano Measha Brueggergosman
The winning title was ''The Last Crossing'' by Guy Vanderhaeghe.
''Canada Reads 2005''
'''Canada Reads 2005''' was broadcast from
February 21 to
25,
2005.
CBC Radio host Bill Richardson was again the moderator.
The books selected for ''Canada Reads 2005'' and their respective champions were:
★ ''
Beautiful Losers'' by
Leonard Cohen, chosen and originally to be championed by
singer-songwriter Rufus Wainwright; tour commitments meant that Wainwright had to be replaced by
singer Molly Johnson
★ ''
Oryx and Crake'' by
Margaret Atwood, championed by
Olivia Chow,
Toronto city councillor
★ ''
Rockbound'' by
Frank Parker Day, championed by
Donna Morrissey, author
★ ''
No Crystal Stair'' by
Mairuth Sarsfield, championed by
Olympic fencer Sherraine MacKay
★ ''
Volkswagen Blues'' by
Jacques Poulin, translated by
Sheila Fischman, championed by
Roch Carrier, author and former
National Librarian of Canada
The winning title was ''Rockbound'' by Frank Parker Day.
''Canada Reads 2006''
'''Canada Reads 2006''' was broadcast from
April 17 to
21,
2006.
CBC Radio host Bill Richardson was again the moderator.
The books selected for ''Canada Reads 2006'' and their respective champions were:
★ ''
A Complicated Kindness'' by
Miriam Toews, championed by
singer-songwriter,
poet and
publisher John K. Samson
★ ''
Deafening'' by
Frances Itani, championed by
lawyer and author
Maureen McTeer
★ ''
Three Day Road'' by
Joseph Boyden, championed by
filmmaker Nelofer Pazira
★ '' by
Al Purdy, championed by poet
Susan Musgrave
★ ''
Cocksure'' by
Mordecai Richler, championed by actor and author
Scott Thompson
The winning title was ''A Complicated Kindness'' by Miriam Toews.
''Canada Reads 2007''
'''Canada Reads 2007''' aired from
February 26 to
March 2,
2007. Bill Richardson again moderated the competition.
For the 2007 competition, each of the five winning advocates from past series returned to champion a new title in an "all-star" edition of the series. The books chosen by the participants were revealed in late November 2006, in a series of interviews conducted by Richardson on ''
Sounds Like Canada''. The titles and champions were:
★ ''
Children of My Heart'' by
Gabrielle Roy, championed by Denise Bombardier
★ ''
Lullabies for Little Criminals'' by
Heather O'Neill, championed by John K. Samson
★ ''
Natasha and Other Stories'' by
David Bezmozgis, championed by Steven Page
★ ''
The Song of Kahunsha'' by
Anosh Irani, championed by Donna Morrissey
★ ''
Stanley Park'' by
Timothy Taylor, championed by Jim Cuddy
The winning title was ''Lullabies for Little Criminals'' by Heather O'Neill.
''Le combat des livres 2004''
Radio-Canada, the
French-language service of CBC, aired a French version of ''Canada Reads'' entitled ''Le combat des livres'' from
March 29 to
April 2,
2004. It was moderated by
Marie-France Bazzo.
The books selected for ''Le combat des livres'' and their respective champions were:
★ ''
L'histoire de Pi'' by
Yann Martel, the French version of ''Life of Pi'', championed by
singer Louise Forestier
★ ''
La petite fille qui aimait trop les allumettes'' by
Gaétan Soucy, championed by
filmmaker and
actor Micheline Lanctôt
★ ''
Une histoire américaine'' by
Jacques Godbout, championed by
union activist Gérald Larose
★ ''
Un dimanche à la piscine à Kigali'' by
Gil Courtemanche, championed by
environmentalist and
writer Laure Waridel
★ ''
La servante écarlate'' by
Margaret Atwood, the French version of ''The Handmaid's Tale'', championed by
lawyer and
professor Julius Grey
The winning title was ''Un dimanche à la piscine à Kigali'' by Gil Courtemanche.
''Le combat des livres 2005''
Radio-Canada, the French-language service of CBC, aired a French version of ''Canada Reads'' entitled ''Le combat des livres'' from
March 14 to
March 18,
2005. It was moderated by Marie-France Bazzo.
The books selected for ''Le combat des livres 2005'' and their respective champions were:
★ ''
Dolce agonia'' by
Nancy Huston, championed by
physician and president of
Médecins du monde Canada Réjean Thomas
★ ''
L'avalée des avalés'' by
Réjean Ducharme, championed by
actor Sophie Cadieux
★ ''
Thérèse et Pierrette à l'école des Saints-Anges'' by
Michel Tremblay, championed by union activist
Monique Simard
★ ''
La chair disparue'' by
Jean-Jacques Pelletier, championed by
pianist Alain Lefèvre
★ ''
À la hauteur de Grand Central Station, je me suis assise et j'ai pleuré'' by
Elizabeth Smart, the French version of ''By Grand Central Station I Sat Down and Wept'', championed by
journalist and
broadcaster Dennis Trudeau
The winning title was ''L'avalée des avalés'' by Réjean Ducharme.
''Le combat des livres 2006''
Radio-Canada, the French-language service of CBC, aired a French version of ''Canada Reads'' entitled ''Le combat des livres'' from
January 30 to
February 3,
2006. It was moderated by Marie-France Bazzo.
The books selected for ''Le combat des livres 2006'' and their respective champions were:
★ ''
Un petit pas pour l'homme'' by
Stéphane Dompierre, championed by
comedian Louis-José Houde
★ ''
Une coquille de silence'', the French-language translation of ''Deafening'' by Frances Itani, championed by lawyer and author Maureen McTeer (this is the same title that McTeer championed in ''Canada Reads 2006'')
★ ''
Comment devenir un monstre'' by
Jean Barbe, championed by actor
Lucie Laurier
★ ''
La femme de ma vie'' by
Francine Noël, championed by journalist
Françoise Guénette
★ ''Prochain épisode'' by Hubert Aquin championed by actor
Pierre Lebeau (''Next Episode'', the English-language translation of ''Prochain épisode'', was championed by journalist Denise Bombardier in Canada Reads 2003'', where it won the competition)
The winning title was ''La femme de ma vie'' by Francine Noël.
''Le combat des livres 2007''
Radio-Canada, the French-language service of CBC, aired a French version of ''Canada Reads'' entitled ''Le combat des livres'' from
February 26 to
March 2,
2007, moderated by
Christiane Charette.
The books selected for ''Le combat des livres 2007'' and their respective champions were:
★ ''
Le poids des ombres'' by
Marie Laberge, championed by
politician Pauline Marois
★ '' Vamp '', by
Christian Mistral championed by
rap artist Biz
★ ''
L'iguane'' by
Denis Thériault, championed by actor and comedian
Dominique Lévesque
★ ''
D'où viens-tu berger?'' by
Mathyas Lefebure, championed by sportswriter
Robert Frosi
★ The French-language version of ''
Self'' by Yann Martel, championed by politician
Sheila Copps
The winning title was ''L'iguane'' by Denis Thériault.
Success
As a vehicle to promote interest in
reading and books and to increase sales, ''Canada Reads'' has been a signal success. Even already successful titles see increases in sales driven by their inclusion in the contest: sales of Michael Ondaatje's ''In The Skin of A Lion'' increased by 80,000 in 2002, the year of its appearance on ''Canada Reads''. Its
publisher,
Random House of Canada attributed much of this increase to ''Canada Reads''.
The success for lesser known titles can be as marked. Hubert Aquin's ''Next Episode'' sold 18,500 copies in the year when it won ''Canada Reads''.
For the 2005 edition, sales of Jacques Poulin's ''Volkswagen Blues'', which usually are about 200 copies a year, increased to 7,500 between the time the nominations were announced and the shows began airing. During the same period, 7000 copies of Frank Parker Day's ''Rockbound'' were shipped by its publisher, the
University of Toronto Press.
Criticism
There has been some criticism of ''Canada Reads''. First, criticism has been made of the use of "celebrity" panelists. Criticism has also been made of the
game show format, and the fact that discussion of books often remained on a superficial level.
Criticism has also been made of the choice of books; originally each panelist provided a list of five books, from which the producers chose the final contenders. In 2005, this process changed, and the panelists submitted only one choice. (The fact that Molly Johnson had to step in and defend Rufus Wainwright's choice threw a spanner in the works to a certain extent.)
References
★
"The great Canadian book brawl" from ''
The Globe and Mail'', Saturday,
February 19,
2005, Page R7
External links
★
''Canada Reads'' web site
★
Le combat des livres 2004 at Radio-Canada (in French)
★
Le combat des livres 2005 at Radio-Canada (in French)
★
Le combat des livres 2006 at Radio-Canada (in French)
★
Le combat des livres 2007 at Radio-Canada (in French)