Judith Fitzgerald
Judith Fitzgerald is the author of fifteen books including Ultimate Midnight (Black Moss Press), Rapturous Chronicles (Mercury— nominated for a 1991 Governor General’s Award for Poetry), and Habit of Blues (Mercury). Fitzgerald’s poems, essays, reviews, and articles have appeared across Canada in a variety of newspapers, magazines, and literary journals, from The Globe and Mail— where she has been a regular contributor of literary journalism— to Saturday Night.
Given Names
Habit of Blues
This is poet and award-winning journalist Judith Fitzgerald's fourteenth book, following Ultimate Midnight (Black Moss Press) and Rapturous Chronicles (Mercury), nominated for a 1991 Governor General's Award for Poetry.
"Fitzgerald's book is a powerful voicing of ‘forbidden’ feelings, those very emotions that mark us as human."” American Boo …
Marshall McLuhan
Communications theorist Marshall McLuhan (1911-1980) predicted the effects of electronic media on modern culture as early as 1964. McLuhan published several breakthrough books and coined terms like "hot" and "cool" media, "the global village," and "the medium is the message."
Marshall McLuhan
Communications theorist Marshall McLuhan (1911-1980) predicted the effects of electronic media on modern culture as early as 1964. McLuhan published several breakthrough books and coined terms like "hot" and "cool" media, "the global village," and "the medium is the message."
Rapturous Chronicles
NOMINATED IN 1991 FOR THE GOVERNOR GENERAL?S AWARD FOR POETRY: Rapturous Chronicles is a long prose poem in memory of novelist Juan Butler, whose tragic death cut short a promising career in Canadian writing; it is.an affair with language, with words and ideas, with the unfashionable idea of love itself.
"Passion and linguistic virtuosity are the f …
