Hal Niedzviecki
Hal Niedzviecki (born January 9, 1971 in Brockville, Ontario) is a Canadian novelist and cultural critic.
Born into a Jewish family, he was raised in Ottawa, Ontario and Potomac, Maryland, did his undergraduate studies at the University of Toronto and his graduate studies at Bard College. In 1995, he co-founded the magazine Broken Pencil, a guide to underground arts and zine culture, and was the magazine's editor until 2002. He has also written for Adbusters, Utne Magazine, The Walrus, This Magazine, Geist, Toronto Life, The Globe and Mail and the National Post.
In 2006, Niedzviecki hosted a summer replacement series, Subcultures, on CBC Radio One.
Work
- Concrete Forest: The New Fiction of Urban Canada (1998, anthology)
- Smell It (1998, short fiction)
- Lurvy, A Farmer's Almanac (1999, novel)
- We Want Some Too: Underground Desire and the Reinvention of Mass Culture (2000)
- Ditch (2001, novel)
- The Original Canadian City Dweller's Almanac (2002, with Darren Wershler-Henry)
- Hello, I'm Special: How Individuality Became the New Conformity (2004)
- The Program (2005, novel)
- The Big Book of Pop Culture: A How-to Guide for Young Artists (2006)
- The Peep Diaries: How We're Learning to Love Watching Ourselves and Our Neighbors (City Lights, 2009) ISBN 978-0872864993.
- Look Down, This Is Where It Must Have Happened (City Lights, 2011) ISBN 9780872865396
External links
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Niedzviecki, Hal |
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