Chris Eaton | |
---|---|
Born | 1971 (age 52–53) Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada |
Genres | Indie rock |
Occupation(s) | Singer-songwriter novelist |
Chris Eaton (born 1971 in Moncton, New Brunswick) is the founder and lead vocalist of Toronto-based indie rock band Rock Plaza Central, as well as a novelist.
Eaton began as a solo artist, with various musicians backing him, often using musical improvisation. In 2003, the current line-up of Rock Plaza Central formed during such a gig in Toronto, and they recorded their first album in that incarnation only a month later. Their second album, Are We Not Horses , was favorably reviewed by influential music journal Pitchfork Media.
Eaton is also a published author. [1] His first novel The Inactivist (2003), has been required reading on two university courses at McGill University in Montreal, as well as a graduate English course at the University of South Alabama.[ citation needed ] His second novel, The Grammar Architect (2006), is a "cover" of a Thomas Hardy book, A Pair of Blue Eyes , [2] using some of the plot, imagery, themes and even some passages of the original and creating something new and personal out of that.
Letters To Thomas Pynchon is a short fiction collection published as an eBook with Joyland: A hub for short fiction in 2010.
In 2013, Eaton published his third novel called Chris Eaton, a Biography with Book*hug Press. Critical response was generally quite positive, with profiles in prominent national media like the National Post and Toronto Star. Martin Patriquin of Maclean's wrote "Nabokov could write about his back porch and make it interesting; Chris Eaton does much the same with his fellow Chris Eatons" [3] and The Winnipeg Review, while critical of the confusion of the conceit, praised the prose: "It's work, in other words, but Eaton's language is so good, managing that easygoing poetry that feels made from the thoughts of people who don't know they're being written, that you forgive him for it. Chris Eaton is threaded with so much of this kind of silver that it feels like he must just open the tap and let it pour." [4] The novel was included in many year-end lists, including the Toronto Star, Quill & Quire and Quarterly Conversation while also being included in Steven Moore's The Novel: an Alternative History, Volume 2. [5] [6]
Eaton's fourth novel, Symphony No. 3, based on the life of composer Camille Saint-Saëns, was published in 2019 by Book*hug Press and was listed as a finalist for the 2020 New Brunswick Book Awards. [7] [8] The New York critic David Gutowski called it "one of the year's finest novels, symphonic in structure and spectacular on a sentence level." [9] [10] Quill and Quire reviewer José Teodoro described the novel's narrative voice as one that is "capable of delivering an unrelenting battery of fireworks that leaves the reader dazzled and exhausted...It’s intended as neither mere praise nor outright dismissal to state that novels are rarely infused with this combination of piercing intelligence and flights of tedium." [11] Toronto Star reviewer Brett Josef Grubisic wrote that the novel reminded him of the flamboyant, American musician Liberace. "Tasty in small bites and impressive as an antic literary performance, the novel’s structure gradually buckles under the sheer mass of extravagant decoration. As with Liberace’s mirror walls etched with Aubrey Beardsley drawings, sensory overload produces diminishing returns." [12] Globe and Mail reviewer Jade Colbert called it "a dense text, and it reproduces the prejudices of fin de siècle Europe, which can make for difficult reading, though there are also sections when this novel opens up and sings." [13]
Lynn Coady is a Canadian novelist and journalist.
The Toronto Book Awards are Canadian literary awards, presented annually by the City of Toronto government to the author of the year's best fiction or non-fiction book or books "that are evocative of Toronto". The award is presented in the fall of each year, with its advance promotional efforts including a series of readings by the nominated authors at each year's The Word on the Street festival.
Mark Truscott is a Toronto poet. He was born in Bloomington, Indiana, United States. He attended several public schools and Nelson High School in Burlington, Ontario and went on for a B.A. and M.A. in English at McMaster University in Hamilton.
Brett Josef Grubisic is a Canadian author, editor, and sessional lecturer of the English language at the University of British Columbia.
Rock Plaza Central was a band from Toronto, Canada. They came to international attention in 2007 with the release of Are We Not Horses, a critically acclaimed science fiction concept album about six-legged robotic horses in the midst of an existential crisis. They have been on hiatus since 2010.
Brian Francis is a Canadian writer best known for his 2004 debut novel Fruit.
Danila Botha is a Canadian author and novelist. She has published two short story collections, with a third to be published in 2024 and two novels, with the second to be published in 2025.
The Dayne Ogilvie Prize for LGBTQ Emerging Writers is a Canadian literary award, presented annually by the Writers' Trust of Canada to an emerging Canadian writer who is part of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or queer community. Originally presented as a general career achievement award for emerging writers that considered their overall body of work, since 2022 it has been presented to honor debut books.
Farzana Doctor is a Canadian novelist and social worker.
A Great Game: The Forgotten Leafs and the Rise of Professional Hockey is a 2013 non-fiction book by Stephen Harper concerning the history of professional ice hockey in Canada during the early 20th century.
Jessica Dee Humphreys is a Canadian writer specializing in international humanitarian, military, and children's issues.
She of the Mountains is a 2014 novel by Vivek Shraya that interweaves a story of the Hindu deities, Parvati, Shiva and Ganesh with a queer Hindu boy growing up in Canada.
Kai Cheng Thom is a Canadian writer and former social worker. Thom, a non-binary trans woman, has published four books, including the novel Fierce Femmes and Notorious Liars: A Dangerous Trans Girl's Confabulous Memoir (2016), the poetry collection a place called No Homeland (2017), a children's book, From the Stars in The Sky to the Fish in the Sea (2017), and I Hope We Choose Love: A Trans Girl's Notes from the End of the World (2019), a book of essays centered on transformative justice.
Anne Emery is a Canadian writer of murder mystery novels and a lawyer. Emery has been awarded the 2019 Arthur Ellis Award for Best Novel, silver medal in the 2011 Independent Publisher Book Awards, and the 2007 Arthur Ellis Award for Best First Novel. In 2023, Emery's novel Fenian Street was shortlisted for the Crime Writers of Canada Whodunit Award for Best Traditional Mystery. She has published twelve novels in her Collins-Burke mystery series, which features Monty Collins, a Hallifax lawyer, and Father Brennan Burke, a Catholic priest and choirmaster, and a stand-alone novel.
Amy Spurway is a Canadian writer, whose debut novel Crow was published in 2019. The novel, a black comedy about a woman returning home to Cape Breton Island to reunite with her estranged family after being diagnosed with terminal brain cancer, was a shortlisted finalist for the 2020 Stephen Leacock Memorial Medal for Humour and the 2020 ReLit Award for fiction.
Christy Ann Conlin is a Canadian writer from Nova Scotia.
Chelene Knight is a Canadian writer and poet.
Five Little Indians is the debut novel by Cree Canadian writer Michelle Good, published in 2020 by Harper Perennial. The novel focuses on five survivors of the Canadian Indian residential school system, struggling with varying degrees of success to rebuild their lives in Vancouver, British Columbia after the end of their time in the residential schools. It also explores the love and strength that can emerge after trauma.
Butter Honey Pig Bread is Francesca Ekwuyasi's debut novel, published on September 3, 2020 by Arsenal Pulp Press.
Eddy Boudel Tan is a Canadian writer from Vancouver, British Columbia, whose 2020 debut novel After Elias was a finalist for the 2021 ReLit Award for fiction.