July 17th, 2015
CBC NAMES CHELSEA A “WRITER TO WATCH”: I’ve been listening to CBC Books since I had ears. They curated this list, and I’m thrilled to be on it: WRITERS TO WATCH, 2015.
CBC NAMES CHELSEA A “WRITER TO WATCH”: I’ve been listening to CBC Books since I had ears. They curated this list, and I’m thrilled to be on it: WRITERS TO WATCH, 2015.
“Rooney crafts a gripping story in murky territory.” Thank you Broken Pencil for this glowing review of PEDAL.
“Gutsy, innovative, beautiful, lively…” Thank you to Alexis Kienlen at the Daily Herald Tribune for her thoughtful review of PEDAL.
I’m honoured that Chapters employee Tracy from Toronto has chosen PEDAL as “the book every Canadian should read.” I obviously couldn’t agree more. Have a look!
Tonight on The Storytelling Show, I chatted with my smart, warm and adorable friend Christina Rzepa about a wide variety of topics, from sexual health and safety for sex workers in Vancouver (Christina works for the BC Centre of Excellence in HIV/AIDS) to Rzepa’s role as a fixture in the Vancouver music scene (she plays cello for several bands and has recorded on over fifty studio albums!) Our conversation is delightful. Listen in!
Award-winning author Alix Hawley started a fantastic new Q&A series called Storybrain, and invited me to talk about PEDAL for her inaugural post. Read it here!
Congratulations to Alix Hawley, author of ALL TRUE NOT A LIE IN IT, and winner of the 2015 Amazon.ca First Novel Award! We had a blast together in Toronto, and the honour couldn’t have gone to a nicer person. Not only that, but Alix’s writing is the stuff author dreams are made of: pristine, sharp prose, with mellifluous rhythm. I very much look forward to reading with her in the future. All the nominees were wonderful; check them out here: Sean Michaels, Emma Hooper, and Guillaume Morissette.
On The Storytelling Show, novelist Sigal Samuel and I chatted about her debut novel THE MYSTICS OF MILE END which sets ancient Jewish mysticism in modern-day Montreal. We also got to hear an excerpt from her spectacular nonfiction piece in Forward about searching for her Kabbalist heritage in India earlier this year. Have a listen here!
Shawn Syms, author of NOTHING LOOKS FAMILIAR, interviewed me about PEDAL. I got to talk about how I researched pedophilia and what I learned about gender and sexuality. Our conversation appears in Issue 19 of The Winnipeg Review.
Stay tuned for my blog.