Zane Koss Book Signing and Reading: August 10, 4:00 p.m., with after music performed by Alina Hartley

Zane visited the Elora Poetry Centre on Sunday afternoon, August 10, to read from Country Music, his new book. Here’s a brief blurb from the publisher: “Zane Koss grew up listening to stories. Often these were told late at night around kitchen tables or campfires against the backdrop of rural British Columbia. The stories themselves, punctuated by the humour and violence of life in the mountains, offer a means of critiquing ‘extractiveness’–both the violence of settler-colonial capitalism and the systems of class privilege that devalue rural, working-class experience. Mining these materials for a rural poetics–a country music–Koss begins to understand both his working-class upbringing and academic surroundings.” — Invisible Publishing

Zane, a poet and translator living in Guelph, was born and raised in the East Kootenays, BC, and earned a doctorate at New York University. His delivery masterfully captured the vernacular speech of his boyhood in rural interior BC as he read the text of Country Music in its entirely, followed by a lively Q & A.

Following Zane’s performance, members of the audience were treated to Alina Hartley’s piano playing as they mingled prior to sharing a simple buffet. Alina, who hales from Georgetown, grew up studying under the Royal Conservatory program and successfully completed her Level 9 exams in performance, history, and theory. She will be completing her Bachelor of Music at Carleton University in April 2026.

100 Thousand Poets for Change: featuring Kevin heronJones and Jerry Prager, 28 September 2025

The Elora Poetry Centre & Gallery once again participated in the annual global initiative 100 Thousand Poets for Change, which takes place in hundreds of international locales at the end of each September. We have been part of this worldwide celebration of poetry’s power to effect change since its co-founding in 2011 by the late Michael Rothenberg and Terri Carrion. As with last year’s event, we were also part of Centre Wellington Township’s Culture Days, with this year’s theme of “celebrating diversity and artistic expression in Centre Wellington” being reflected in our program featuring Kevin heronJones and Jerry Prager.

Kevin heronJones, who recently played Henry “Box” Brown in the Centre Wellington Black Committee’s production of BHM Awakened Voices Narratives at Melville United Church in Fergus, is the first writer-in-residence for the city of Brampton. An author, poet, journalist, editor, actor, and lecturer, Kevin is perhaps best known for his spoken word performances, as founder of the PoeticSoul poetry series, the Duel of the Iron Mic poetry series in collaboration with Unblind, the Iron Mic Slam at Ryerson [now Toronto Metropolitan University], the 1 Ness poetry series in collaboration with Al St. Louis, and When Words are Spoken. An exemplary Poet for Change, Kevin designed PoeticSoul as an organization dedicated to promoting the poetic arts scene, creating PoeticSoul Online Literary Journal in 2004 as the first online publication focused on the spoken word community in Canada. He also joined energies with AIM, the African Image Makers, an organization that has created scholarships for African students, organized fundraisers, and released a clothing line “with thought provoking designs and poetry that reflect the beauty of the Black Caribbean and African Community.” He writes “in the tradition of the ancient African griots who used stories and poetry to educate as well as entertain,” and his performance on Sept. 28 included both storytelling and poetry.

Jerry Prager really needs no introduction at the Elora Poetry Centre & Gallery, having performed his poetry here a number of times, premiered a table reading of Covenant Chains: A New Folk Opera (with music by Peter Skoggard), and created “The Composition of Anti-slavery” from wood, salvaged from the Chalmers Presbyterian Church in Elora, the remarkable sculpture that is now mounted behind Beaver House. Having recently returned to Elora, Jerry enhances our arts community with his varied and colourful experiences as a writer, poet, playwright, sculptor, dancer, and heritage stone worker. He has published three books on the history of the Underground Railroad in Wellington County and reprised a long poem related to this subject that has become a favourite at the Elora Poetry Centre, titled “Echoes in the Timbers.” This time Jerry read this remarkable poem at dusk in a Son et Lumière setting in which the acclaimed Elora-based photographer Wayne Simpson created a backdrop by providing lighting from within Beaver House, the Elora Poetry Centre’s 1832 log house that was part of the Canadian Underground Railroad in its original locale south of Aberfoyle.

This event was in conjunction with the national Culture Days initiative, with funding from Centre Wellington Township. Additional funding of Jerry Prager’s reading was from the League of Canadian Poets and the Canada Council for the Arts.