Authors: Jane Eaton Hamilton
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Thanks to Gladys, LL, Uggy, Martin, Leah, and Margoâfor enduring love. Thanks to Hezah for âdouche canoe' and to my many friends who shared their stories of queer inseminations. Thanks also to my precious ones: Meghann and Sarah. Thanks to Davina and Naiya for becoming my new favourite people. A nod from my heart to my gay son, bill bissett.
Thanks to my sisters-in-lit, especially Eden Robinson and Brenda Brooks.
Thanks to Mary Bryson, Leah Macfadyen, Cornelia Hoogland, Patricia Young, and Tanis MacDonald for their generosity and friendship.
Thanks, Shelagh Plunkett, for the wide-ranging writing chats, Shelagh and Kari Szakacs for taking me to a cottage in Quebec where my characters, had they been real, might have hung out.
Thanks to Janice Stewart for putting the posit in position.
I'm grateful to Tom Cho, Jackie Wykes, the gang, and Historic Joy Kogawa House for hosting Shut Up and Write sessions during the writing of
Weekend
.
Thanks to Alice Anderson of FOITS fame, and to the people on social media who sustain me. I write knowing you have a hand on my elbow, propping me up.
I wrote
Weekend
for Arsenal Pulp Pressânot at their behest, but because of my own appreciation for their titles over the years.
Just a little love story
, I told myself, w
hat could go wrong?
A lot did go wrong, and Susan Safyan and Clara Kumagai were instrumental in fixing those things. Thanks to the rest of the team at Arsenal Pulp Press: Brian Lam, Robert Ballantyne, Cynara Geissler, and Oliver McPartlin. I appreciate all the work the team does during the lengthy process of seeing a book into the world.
The phrase “What we talk about when we talk about love” is taken from Raymond Carver's story of the same name.
I am grateful to the BC Arts Council and the Canada Council for their continued support.
Jane Eaton Hamilton
is the author of eight books of fiction, non-fiction, and poetry. Her story collection
July Nights
was a BC Book Prize finalist, her poetry title “Body Rain” was a Pat Lowther finalist, and her story collection
Hunger
was a Ferro-Grumley Award finalist. She is a two-time winner of the fiction prize at the CBC Literary Awards. Her most recent book is the poetry collection
Love Will Burst into a Thousand Shapes
(Caitlin Press). Her work has been published in the
New York Times
and
Salon
. She lives in Vancouver.