News, publicity and goings-on

Hear John read Coal Black Heart

Added May 31st, 2010

To hear John read from Coal Black Heart and read an excerpt from the book in the Globe and Mail click  http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/industry-news/energy-and-resources/john-demont-coal-black-heart/article1585306/

Coal Black Heart a finalist for National Business Book Award

Added May 11th, 2010

John’s book Coal Black Heart: the story of coal and lives it ruled, is one of five finalists for the National Business Book. The award, which will be presented at a luncheon in Toronto on June 9, carries a cash prize of $20,000.

Coal Black Heart a finalist in the Atlantic Book Awards

Added March 12th, 2010

Coal Black Heart is a finalist for the 2010 Evelyn Richardson Memorial Literary Prize for Non-Fiction. The winner will be announced on April 14.

Coal Black Heart chosen as one of the best books of 2009

Added March 12th, 2010

The Hill Times of Ottawa has chosen Coal Black Heart as one of the best books of 2009

Coal Black Heart is nominated for the richest non-fiction literary prize in Canada

Added November 9th, 2009

Coal Black Heart is one of 11 books nominated for B.C.’s National Award for Canadian non-fiction. One hundred and forty nine books were nominated for the $40,000 prize.

Hear and see John interviewed on YouTube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bVKrgKA-1So

Added September 15th, 2009

See John at Halifax Word on the Street Sept. 27th

Added September 15th, 2009

John will be part of a panel on historical books that runs from 12:45 to 1:15 on Sunday Sept. 27th at the Cunard Centre on the Halifax Waterfront

Hear John interviewed by Shelagh Rogers

Added June 15th, 2009

Go to http://www.cbc.ca/thenextchapter/

Click on the Deep Economy podcast and hear John’s interview from the June 13 episode of The Next Chapter.

Shelagh Rogers interviews John about Coal Black Heart

Added June 11th, 2009

Hear John interviewed on The Last Chapter, Saturday June 13 at 3 p.m. CBC Radio One. Or at 6 a.m. and 1 p.m. Saturday on Sirius 137.

http://www.cbc.ca/thenextchapter/index.html

Calgary Herald gives Coal Black Heart a big thumbs up

Added June 8th, 2009

Into the harsh life of a miner

Naomi Lakritz, Calgary Herald

Published: Sunday, May 31, 2009

John DeMont’s book is so full of his exuberance about the history of coal mining in Nova Scotia that it practically bounces off the table. DeMont’s exuberance comes naturally–he had relatives who worked in the mines, but when the 1992 Westray mine disaster came along, it rekindled his interest in them. “I had never laid eyes on a single miner who worked the Pictou County coal seams. . . . I’d managed to forget that generations of my ancestors had taken the long ride underground to hack out the black stone that has transformed societies and launched empires,” DeMont writes.

It’s a good thing he remembered or Canadians might not have been graced with this wonderful book.

“Lord, it sounded cruel, this world of damp and dust and lethal cave-ins that began with something as simple as a whiff of gas, a few unstable rocks, a spark from two pieces of machinery brushing together . . . a world where a good year meant new shoes for the kids and a bad one a casket in the parlour and a roomful of mourners in the dining room,” DeMont writes. This style of lively, personable prose fairly carries the narrative along, just the way a tram loaded with coal might slip along a track in a Cape Breton mine. DeMont begins with his ancestors’ migration from Britain to Nova Scotia to work in the mines, and entwines their stories with the history of mining, like tendrils growing from the same vine, twisting around each other with their leaves mingling, then moving apart again but always with that one vine in common.

Lord, it was indeed cruel. The gruelling shifts underground, the dangers, the filth, the inevitable fatalities, the sicknesses, the old miners bent over from years of sidling and scuttling about under the mines’ low ceilings, “all those years working in tunnels no wider than a rain barrel,” coughing their guts out from black lung disease. And above, in the bright light of day on the surface, the power grabbing, the money grubbing and the politics of the mine owners.

DeMont’s turns of phrase are delightful: “Here I am, on one of those Emily Carr fall days.” The

mining songs, “passed down from parent to child . . . were like a collective moan.”

Nina Cohen, a Glace Bay woman who ran the miners’ museum, once said: “A coal miner is no ordinary man. His story has a heartbeat. It should not be allowed to die.” DeMont is no ordinary journalist. The heartbeat of Nova Scotia’s mining story is beautifully captured here and thanks to DeMont’s considerable talent, it will never die.

Coal Black Heart: the story of Coal and the lives it ruled, by John deMont (doubleday Canada, $34.95, 335 pages)