In November 1948 a tall, gangly young man reported for duty at the CBC building – “the old Kremlin” – the gabled brick Victorian pile at 354 Jarvis Street in downtown Toronto. A recent graduate in Honours English and Philosophy at the University of Toronto, he had intended to be a magazine writer, or a critic, or perhaps to work in publishing. He stumbled into his position as a program organizer in the Talks and Public Affairs Department of the CBC, stipulating at the time of his employment that his work some way involve literatures. As a result, he was put in charge of a rather innocuous fifteen-minute weekly slot of readings called Canadian Short Stories….
A series of coincidences – he calls them “accidents” – led to the career of Robert Weaver who, from a sequence of modest beginnings nearly sixty years ago, became the catalyst and facilitator of the flowering of contemporary Canadian literature…[,] godfather and muse to three generations of Canadian writers.

Elaine and Bryan fulfilled a deathbed promise to Joel to complete his memoir of love and loss.
Read the full article in The Gazette
Read the book review by David Staines in the Literary Review of Canada