Truth Be Told: Coming Out as a Writer

Let me begin these remarks with a short preamble to explain something of the origins of this talk, and something about its composition, which was, for me at least, unusual. I drafted it on a flight I took earlier this week between St. John's Newfoundland and Vancouver. I liked the idea of havin...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Richardson, Bill
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: Saskatchewan Library Association 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10294/7419
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spelling ftunivregina:oai:ourspace.uregina.ca:10294/7419 2023-10-09T21:53:41+02:00 Truth Be Told: Coming Out as a Writer Richardson, Bill 1995-04-07 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10294/7419 en eng Saskatchewan Library Association http://hdl.handle.net/10294/7419 Presentation 1995 ftunivregina 2023-09-16T22:14:42Z Let me begin these remarks with a short preamble to explain something of the origins of this talk, and something about its composition, which was, for me at least, unusual. I drafted it on a flight I took earlier this week between St. John's Newfoundland and Vancouver. I liked the idea of having a stretch of more than 8 uninterrupted hours that would take me from one end of the Canada to the other, to write a speech that would be given more or less plumb in the middleofthecountry. I've taken the title from a conversation I had with Bonnie Burnard. I interviewed her for CBC Radio in Toronto in November oflast year. She lives near London, Ontario at the present moment, but is still, she told me, pleased to identify herself as a Saskatchewan writer, so the source seems apt for this occasion. I was struck by her use of the phrase "truth be told." I'd heard it before of course, and often; but for some reason, on this occasion was I particularly taken by the archaic grammar and Biblical roll of the words. Troth be told. It came to roost in the shallow folds of my brain, where I registered it with the department of future use. That future proves to be now. I've called this talk "Truth be told: Coming Out as A Writer." Other yes Conference Object Newfoundland oURspace - The University of Regina's Institutional Repository Canada
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description Let me begin these remarks with a short preamble to explain something of the origins of this talk, and something about its composition, which was, for me at least, unusual. I drafted it on a flight I took earlier this week between St. John's Newfoundland and Vancouver. I liked the idea of having a stretch of more than 8 uninterrupted hours that would take me from one end of the Canada to the other, to write a speech that would be given more or less plumb in the middleofthecountry. I've taken the title from a conversation I had with Bonnie Burnard. I interviewed her for CBC Radio in Toronto in November oflast year. She lives near London, Ontario at the present moment, but is still, she told me, pleased to identify herself as a Saskatchewan writer, so the source seems apt for this occasion. I was struck by her use of the phrase "truth be told." I'd heard it before of course, and often; but for some reason, on this occasion was I particularly taken by the archaic grammar and Biblical roll of the words. Troth be told. It came to roost in the shallow folds of my brain, where I registered it with the department of future use. That future proves to be now. I've called this talk "Truth be told: Coming Out as A Writer." Other yes
format Conference Object
author Richardson, Bill
spellingShingle Richardson, Bill
Truth Be Told: Coming Out as a Writer
author_facet Richardson, Bill
author_sort Richardson, Bill
title Truth Be Told: Coming Out as a Writer
title_short Truth Be Told: Coming Out as a Writer
title_full Truth Be Told: Coming Out as a Writer
title_fullStr Truth Be Told: Coming Out as a Writer
title_full_unstemmed Truth Be Told: Coming Out as a Writer
title_sort truth be told: coming out as a writer
publisher Saskatchewan Library Association
publishDate 1995
url http://hdl.handle.net/10294/7419
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10294/7419
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