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Vinyl Cafe: Up & Away

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A new collection of fifteen hilarious stories from Stuart McLean.Sit back and let Vinyl Cafe: Up & Away transport you to the always-entertaining world of Dave, Morley and friends. We’ll touch down in Nova Scotia for a tale of the Greatest Hockey Game Ever Played, and the introduction of the first roundabout in Big Narrows; we’ll drop in on Sam as he spends his first night home alone, and hear about a school field trip that doesn’t go exactly as planned; we’ll float by Dave and Kenny figuring out the mechanics of a sensory deprivation tank, and the science of a sourdough starter. All this plus stories about disastrous dinner parties, airport security, a dog named Tissue and more! Up & Away will lift you up and keep you laughing for close to five hours.

Audio CD

Published January 1, 2016

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About the author

Stuart McLean

107 books269 followers
Librarian Note: There was more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name.

From the Vinyl Cafe web site: Stuart McLean was a best-selling author, award-winning journalist and humorist, and host of CBC Radio program The Vinyl Cafe.

Stuart began his broadcasting career making radio documentaries for CBC Radio's Sunday Morning. In 1979 he won an ACTRA award for Best Radio Documentary for his contribution to the program's coverage of the Jonestown massacre.

Following Sunday Morning, Stuart spent seven years as a regular columnist and guest host on CBC's Morningside. His book, The Morningside World of Stuart McLean, was a Canadian bestseller and a finalist in the 1990 City of Toronto Book Awards.

Stuart has also written Welcome Home: Travels in Small Town Canada, and edited the collection When We Were Young. Welcome Home was chosen by the Canadian Authors' Association as the best non-fiction book of 1993.

Stuart's books Stories from the Vinyl Cafe, Home from the Vinyl Cafe, Vinyl Cafe Unplugged, Vinyl Cafe Diaries, Dave Cooks the Turkey, Secrets from the Vinyl Cafe and Extreme Vinyl Cafe have all been Canadian bestsellers. Vinyl Cafe Diaries was awarded the Canadian Authors' Association Jubilee Award in 2004. Stuart was also a three-time winner of the Stephen Leacock Memorial Medal for Humour for Home from the Vinyl Cafe, Vinyl Cafe Unplugged and, most recently, Secrets from the Vinyl Cafe.

Vinyl Cafe books have also been published in the U.S., the U.K., Australia and New Zealand.

Stuart was a professor emeritus at Ryerson University in Toronto and former director of the broadcast division of the School of Journalism. In 1993 Trent University named him the first Rooke Fellow for Teaching, Writing and Research. He has also been honored by: Nipissing University (EdD(H)); University of Windsor (Lld) and Trent University (DLH). Stuart served as Honorary Colonel of the 8th Air Maintenance Squadron at 8 Wing, Trenton from 2005 to 2008.

Since 1998 Stuart has taken The Vinyl Cafe to theatres across Canada, playing in both large and small towns from St. John's, Newfoundland to Whitehorse in the Yukon.

Close to one million people listen to The Vinyl Cafe every weekend on CBC Radio and Sirius Satellite Radio and on a growing number of Public Radio stations in the United States. The program is also broadcast on an occasional basis on the BBC.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Brandon Forsyth.
917 reviews184 followers
February 24, 2017
Stuart McLean passed away a week ago. For those of my international friends who may not be aware of him, McLean was a staple of Canadian radio who was adored by millions for his distinctive voice and his heartwarming short stories. McLean never meant much to me growing up - I somehow avoided the Vinyl Cafe until I met my girlfriend, whose family were all McLean fanatics, but I can see why he was so beloved. His stories focus on friendships and kindness and all kinds of local flavour and values that Canadians hold dear. For everyone who loves him, though, there is someone who finds his stories ingratiating and cloying and patronizing. I've ended up somewhere in the middle: while the majority of his stories are far too cute for my taste, I did laugh (or at least smile) at moments in almost all of them. I'll miss getting to hear more of them.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews