Denison Avenue by Christina Wong - ISBN: 9781770417151
Paperback
Loss, gentrification, and resilience bloom in Toronto’s Chinatown–Kensington Market.

$50.42

  • Paperback

    280 pages

  • Release Date

    2 May 2023

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Summary

Shortlisted for 2024 Canada Reads Finalist for the 2024 Carnegie Medals for Excellence through the American Library Association Finalist for the 2023 Foreword Indies Award, Adult Fiction Shortlisted for the Kobo Emerging Writer Prize, 2024 Longlisted for the Toronto Book Awards, 2023

“A beautiful book that shares stories of love and loss.” — Matty Matheson, celebrity chef and star of the hit televisio…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781770417151
ISBN-10:177041715X
Author:Christina Wong, Daniel Innes
Publisher:ECW Press,Canada
Imprint:ECW Press,Canada
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:280
Release Date:2 May 2023
Weight:606g
Dimensions:229mm x 152mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

“Wong and Innes have created something truly special in this multi-faceted book. Innes’ detailed and beautiful hand-drawn illustrations depicting the changes in the community are eye-catching complements to Wong’s writing and can stand on their own.” — Booklist, starred review“But the true triumph of this production is bringing the Taosan dialect to life. The dialogue is performed first in Taosan and then in English. While most listeners will only understand the English, it is a rare and culturally astute choice that lets listeners experience the languages side by side…this audio will engage listeners craving something new and soothe anyone who knows what it’s like to love a city that doesn’t always love you back.” — Booklist“I spent my formative years in Kensington Market. I still go to Chinatown multiple times a week to eat. I love it so much, it’s a place that truly brings me so much joy. Denison Avenue shows us the realness of how the buildings are changing, the restaurants are changing, and the love that has slowly been taken away in the process. A beautiful book that shares stories of love and loss.” — Matty Matheson, celebrity chef“The magnificent Denison Avenue will tell you a story you’ve never heard before — about people you think you know in your neighbourhood. It will change you. It will change how you look at people on the bus and on the streets. It will change how you live your life.” — Naheed Nenshi, former Mayor of Calgary, for CBC’s Canada Reads“Wong’s performance captures the isolation and displacement often experienced by the elderly, along with the scourge of gentrification. It’s a thought-provoking lament for what used to be.” — AudioFile“In Denison Avenue, we watch a recent widow desperately tread water in a city drowning under waves of gentrification. This tender lyrical novel is an anthem of grief, a swan song to cities as we know them and the loved ones we lose along the way.” — Catherine Hernandez, author and screenwriter of Scarborough, the novel and film“The book reminds those of us who live in cities across the world that it is important to consider the heritage and legacies of neighborhoods in many cities and the ways that gentrification affects the people who live there.” — Shondaland“With its intricate line drawings and poignant story, Denison Avenue transports me to a place I’ve never been, but also to a place that feels like home. From canned fried dace and butter cookie tins to the sonorous tones of the Toisanese dialect, this is the world of my ancestors — the lo wah kiu who flourished in Chinatowns all over Canada. And as we walk alongside Wong Cho Sum in her personal journey through grief, we grieve, too, for past generations and the loss of a once-thriving community.” — Teresa Wong, author of Dear Scarlet“Christina Wong writes from the perspective of an elderly immigrant widow who collects bottles and cans in the streets and alleys of Toronto. It’s a thoughtful account of a difficult journey in a vanishing neighbourhood, complete with time capsule illustrations of Chinatown and Kensington Market by Daniel Innes. Denison Avenue is designed for people like me who fall in between the cracks of culture. I enjoyed reading the phonetic Cantonese and Toisan dialect translations in English that connected me to familiar languages and my neighbourhood.” — Sook-Yin Lee, filmmaker, musician, and broadcaster“What is a city but its stories? In Denison Avenue, Christina Wong’s elegant prose and poetry are accompanied by beautifully rendered illustrations by Daniel Innes, bringing to life the portrait of a Chinatown that is both disappearing and emerging. Through Mrs. Wong’s eyes, we witness a rapidly changing city. We travel with her through streets with names like Nassau, Cecil, Ulster, pass familiar noodle joints and Chinese bakeries, follow her cart from bin to bin. And yet Mrs. Wong shows us with keen observation the small joy one can have by eating a doong on a park bench or the delight in bumping into an old friend at Honest Ed’s, shopping for deals. I can hear her voice in Toisan, a song of love, kinship, and a collective memory of Chinatown. What is a city but its stories? Denison Avenue is a Toronto story.” — Carrianne Leung, author of That Time I Loved You

About The Author

Christina Wong

Daniel Innes’s extensive portfolio includes painting, installation, graphic and textile design, illustration, sign painting, and tattooing. He uses traditional commercial art techniques, with a focus on the process. He has a special interest in creating works that have the possibility of an immersive physical experience.

Daniel was born in the north end of Toronto and has lived in the Spadina–Chinatown neighbourhood for over 20 years. Watching the neighbourhood change over the years has ended his love affair with Toronto. His time is now spent between Toronto and his studio (an artist residency project) in Hyōgo, Japan.

Christina Wong is a playwright, prose writer, and a multidisciplinary artist who also works in sound installation, audio documentaries, and photography. Her plays have been performed at Factory Studio, Theatre Passe Muraille Backspace, and Palmerston Library Theatre. Her work has also appeared in TOK Magazine, the Toronto Star, and on CJRU 1280AM.

Christina grew up with the sights, smells, and sounds of Toronto’s Chinatown and Kensington Market neighbourhoods, which have shaped her identity and view of the world.

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