This week we broadcast an encore prestation of a programme we made with Ted Barris last winter. Ted is is an award-winning historian with 21 books to his credit and his journalism has appeared regularly in the national press, as well as magazines as diverse as Air Force, esprit de corps and Zoomer. He has also worked as host/contributor for most CBC Radio network programs, PBS in the U.S. and on TV Ontario He is the author of 21 bestselling, non-fiction books, including many on wartime Canada. He was recently award the Order of Canada.
Month: August 2025
NOTICE for April 17th
Please note that because of special programming at 89.7 FM this coming Sunday, there will be no episode broadcast of Word on the Hills this weekend.
Thomas Harrison
WORD ON THE HILLS, wordonthehills.com
This programme was broadcast on August 3rd. Thomas Harrison is a teacher, lawyer and artist who lives on his family horse farm in rural Prince Edward County. He has taught in a wide range of settings, teaching literacy in Kingston Penitentiary, with Young Offenders in detention, in high schools and in higher education at Queen’s University Law School. He spent most of his legal career as Crown Counsel, doing policy work with the provincial Attorney General. He earned his Ph.D. in law in 2016. He has written and published journalistic and scholarly works but Searching for Richard Nixon: Finding Refuge and Making a Home in Prince Edward County is his first book-length work of creative nonfiction. Thomas is also an emerging artist who paints and acts. He will be reprising his role as Herr Schultz in the Shatterbox Theatre’s production of Cabaret this Fall at the Cape in Picton.
Phyliss Wright
WORD ON THE HILLS wordonthehills.com
This week we are playing a re-run of interviews we conducted last spring with Phyliss Wright. Phyliss Wright’s journey as a poet started in university days, when she edited a literary magazine in Colorado during the tumultuous sixties, where she also taught mountain climbing and piton-craft. She returned to writing poetry after a stint in the Marines as an air traffic controller. Poems are a way she explores the world and her own thoughts about life. Her work is shaped by her adventures in Afghanistan, Spain, Poland, and Siberia. But her formative work began in widowhood, when she served as a hospital director in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa of Pakistan, and then as a teacher in the United Arab Emirates. She wrote with the Kent State University Writers Group for over twenty years and still meets with them remotely. Recently she married Canadian, Eric Wright, who is a Northumberland writer. A new resident of Port Hope, she writes with the Cobourg Poetry Workshop, has two children, four grandchildren and a cat who came with her from the United Arab Emirates.