Back to All Events

Complex Relationships

  • UBC Robson Square 800 Robson Street Vancouver, BC, V5S 0G4 Canada (map)

From Japanese internment to France in WWI to mythological landscapes of ancient China, these three authors contend with the depiction of difficult circumstances. Join them in a discussion around developing complex characters and relationships through the challenging environments they find themselves in.

Hybrid events are held in person, you will also be able to watch it live streamed from our Youtube channel.

Location: Room C400, UBC Robson Square

Type: Panel

Sponsored by Asian Canadian Writers’ Workshop

Moderator: Todd Wong

Readers: Hiro Kanagawa, Forgiveness (Playwrights Canada Press) | Alice Poon, The Heavenly Sword (Earnshaw Books) | Janie Chang, The Porcelain Moon: A Novel of France, the Great War, and Forbidden Love (HarperCollins)

About The Moderator

Todd Wong, is a mild-mannered library worker by day, and in his spare time he becomes a cultural activist, and literary event organizer.  A 5th Generation Vancouverite, Chinese Head Tax descendant, known as "Toddish McWong" creator of the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner, he navigates the literary and multicultural landscape as president of Asian Canadian Writers Workshop, and founding board member for Historic Joy Kogawa House Society.  A co-creator of the former Vancouver International Taiwanese Dragon Boat Festival, Todd has now retired to Stand-Up Paddle Boards, and plays accordion with Chinese music, and Celtic Ceilidh friends, and looks for literary excuses to drink single malt whisky.

About The Readers

Hiro Kanagawa is a Vancouver-based writer and actor perhaps best-known for his 200-plus film and television roles ranging from "Best in Show" and art house shorts to hit shows like "Smallville", "Altered Carbon" and "Star Trek: Discovery". Behind the camera he was story editor on several critically-acclaimed Canadian television series: "Da Vinci’s Inquest", "Da Vinci’s City Hall", "Intelligence" and "Blackstone". As a playwright, he received the 2017 Governor-General’s Literary Award for Drama for his play, "Indian Arm". His other works include "Tiger of Malaya" (2002) and "The Patron Saint of Stanley Park" (2008), both of which have been performed across Canada. Earlier this year he received the Betty Mitchell Award for Outstanding New Script for his adaptation of Mark Sakamoto’s memoir "Forgiveness" which premiered in January, 2023 in an Arts Club Theatre / Theatre Calgary co-production directed by renowned director Stafford Arima. His next work, a play co-commissioned by the Banff Centre and the Stratford Festival, is inspired by the astonishing true account of a Japanese castaway in the 19th Century Pacific Northwest.

After a childhood spent devouring Jin Yong’s wuxia (or martial arts heroes) novels, Alice Poon has, over the years, fed herself a steady diet of Chinese history, mythology masterpieces and wuxia/xianxia/historical C-dramas. Since the release of her two historical Chinese novels: The Green Phoenix and Tales of Ming Courtesans, nostalgia for the magical world of wuxia has spurred her desire to write in the Chinese fantasy genre. With the passing of the wuxia fiction icon Jin Yong in 2018, she has wanted to do her small part in helping to preserve the legacy of this unique genre of literature. Born and raised in multicultural Hong Kong, she developed from an early age a bilingual (English and Chinese) reading and writing habit. Her fiction writing has been influenced by French and Russian realist classics, the wuxia/xianxia media, Chinese mythology classics and period history. She lives in Greater Vancouver, Canada and wishes to indulge herself in putting her imagination on the page.

Janie Chang writes historical fiction, often with a personal connection, drawing from a family history with 36 generations of recorded genealogy. Her first novel, THREE SOULS, was a finalist for the 2014 BC Book Prizes Fiction Prize; her second novel, DRAGON SPRINGS ROAD, was a Globe and Mail national bestseller. Both were nominated for the International Dublin Literary Award. Her third book, THE LIBRARY OF LEGENDS, released in May 2020, was nominated for the Evergreen Award and is a Globe and Mail national bestseller. THE PORCELAIN MOON, released in February 2023 was a Globe and Mail historical fiction bestseller; THE PHOENIX CROWN, a novel Janie has co-authored with Kate Quinn, will be released in February 2024. A graduate of The Writer’s Studio at Simon Fraser University, Janie was the founder and main organizer of Authors for Indies, a 100% volunteer-staffed event that promoted a national day of support by Canadian authors for Canada's independent bookstores; the event ran from 2015 - 2017 and transitioned to Canadian Independent Bookstore Day which is organized by the Canadian Independent Booksellers Association. Born in Taiwan, Janie has lived in the Philippines, Iran, Thailand, and New Zealand. She now lives with her husband on the beautiful Sunshine Coast of British Columbia, Canada.

Earlier Event: September 16
The Personal and the Political
Later Event: September 16
Connecting to Your Readers