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This week we’re excited to talk to Heather O’Neill, owner of Sweat Equity and Cryofit - San Antonio, about the full suite of services she offers through her wellness facilities. Whether you suffer from pain, inflammation, stress, are looking to recover faster from an injury, are interested in anti-aging or want to bio-hack your way to optimal health, Heather is likely to have a service (or a handful of services!) that speak to your needs! In this episode, Heather walks us through the various wellness services she offers, along with the benefits of each. She offers multiple types of infrared services, cryotherapy, a somodome meditation pod, vitamin drips and injectables. These services can be purchased on a one time and package basis as well as through customized memberships to fit your needs. See website for list of services and pricing. Social Media for Sweat Equity Instagram: @sweatequity_sa Facebook: Sweat Equity Infared Saunas Website: https://sweatequitysa.com/ Social Media for Cryofit Instagram: @cryofitah Facebook: Cryofit Alamo Heights Website: https://www.mycryofit.com/location/us/texas/san-antonio-alamo-heights/ SoLive host, Rian Overcash, is an independent wellness consultant who specializes in nutragenomics and functional medicine coaching. You can follow her on Instagram at @habitmethodhealth. SoLive host, Tracey Keller, is an Eating Psychology Coach and personal trainer. Tracey works with clients on navigating their relationship with food and movement, helping them set up practices that will lead to success in their highest calling. You can follow Tracey on Facebook at RISE2It. Thanks so much for joining us! If you enjoyed this conversation, please subscribe to “SoLive Podcast” and rate and review wherever you listen to podcasts. Doing so, helps us get this information to more people who stand to benefit from it.
Recorded at Metatopia 2019 Presented by Heather O'Neill, Tim Rodriguez, Jennifer Graham-Macht. You are an individual using your hard earned money to invest in your game project. Do you self-publish, Kickstart or attend that convention? You are an indie tabletop company, so you have some budget to work with. What's your next project? Which big conventions do you attend? We will address costs specific to the tabletop gaming industry (self-publishing, Kickstarter, conventions, marketing, etc.) and ways to make decisions on what will benefit you or your company.
I’m Heather O’Neill – founder of Pixels for Humans, where we help SaaS company leaders scale their businesses without compromising on their values. In this age of constant content, it’s easy to get overwhelmed by the number of changes, conversations, and articles happening in tech. That’s why we’re bringing the most important ones to you. This is Tech Thinking Aloud. Each week on tech thinking aloud. My co-host, Jim, and I will read aloud an article important to the tech scene. We’ll focus on topics, ideas and conversations that dig into the impact that tech has on the world. Challenges and changes in the industry, and the shape of the future of tech as it evolves. After each article we’ll break it down: What’s important, who’s involved, and what that means for you, if it’s important in technology will be talking about it. Be sure to subscribe to Tech Thinking Aloud on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts. ----- If you’re a fan, help us grow by leaving a rating, recommending an article, or sharing an episode with your friends. We can’t wait to share the latest in tech with you!
Quand Franco Nuovo rencontre la romancière Heather O’Neill, on plonge dans ses souvenirs d’enfance pour mieux comprendre ses romans et sa poésie.
L'actualité culturelle à Toronto avec Russell Smith. Mission impossible; Alain Farah répond aux questions d'auditeurs pour la suite de la lecture d'Ulysse, de James Joyce. L'Antiquité pour les nuls avec Pierre-Luc Brisson: Sénèque. Camille Robert et Jacques Nantel ont relu No Logo, de Naomi Klein. Une entrevue avec Robert Lalonde pour son roman Fais ta guerre, fais ta joie. Le morceau choisi de Daniel Leblanc-Poirier pour son recueil Zoo. Le Canada vu par les écrivains avec David Homel, Fredric Gary Comeau et Heather O'Neill
In this bonus interview, we continue the conversation around women in tabletop game development with Heather O'Neill and Heather Wilson of 9th Level Games. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
HEATHER O'NEILL is a novelist, short-story writer and essayist. Her work, which includes Lullabies for Little Criminals, The Girl Who Was Saturday Night and Daydreams of Angels, has been shortlisted for the Governor General's Literary Award for Fiction, the Orange Prize for Fiction and the Scotiabank Giller Prize in two consecutive years, and has won CBC Canada Reads, the Paragraphe Hugh MacLennan Prize for Fiction and the Danuta Gleed Award. Born and raised in Montreal, O'Neill lives there today with her daughter. And it's there that I met with her to discuss her 2017 CLC Kreisel Lecture published in 2018 by The University of Alberta Press as Wisdom in Nonsense - Invaluable Lessons From My Father. Among other things we talk about hating and loving your life, happiness and wonder, relationships with your parents dead and alive, memoirs versus fiction, truth, abuse and #metoo and witnesses, the legal system and power, Concordia, lying to tell the truth, editing the real world, heads being eaten off by dragons, magical radical worlds, deception versus folly, pretending, class, ignoring fathers' advice, metaphors, loneliness, ugly babies, conventional versus internal beauty, clowns, collecting, stealing cheese, Montreal's Plateau neighbourhood, and roses.
Cette semaine à l'émission: L'actualité culturelle avec Brendan Kelly et Charles-Olivier Michaud; En direct du festival du cinéma de Berlin 2019 : Entrevue avec Denis Côté; Critique de livre de René Homier-Roy Mademoiselle samedi soir de Heather O’Neill; La vie culturelle à New York avec Marie Bourreau:Exposition au Nations Unies; Entrevue avec le comédien et humoriste Phillipe Audrey Larrue St-Jacques; Petites mains précieuses :Entrevue avec Ariane Moffatt; La vie culturelle à Washington avec Karim Lebhour:Fermeture du musée du journalisme le Newseum; Critique de film:High Flying bird de Steven Soderbergh sur Netflix; Suggestions musicales de de Félix B Desfossés et de Philippe Renaud
In this episode, Cathy welcomes Heather O’Neill, the designer of Meeple Party, to the co-host seat and they talk about the games they’ve played recently including Azul, Kingdom Builder, Patchwork Express, and Terraforming Mars: Colonies; and Cathy interviews Steven Aramini about his new game, Animal Kingdoms.
Cette semaine à l'émission avec Stéphane Leclair à l'animation, au Salon du livre de Montréal: Coups de coeur de Joane Despins et de Samuel Archibald: Dédicaces ; Auteurs au défi: Entrevue avec Salomé Corbo et Jean-Philippe Baril Guérard ; Son livre La Boîte de Pandore: Entrevue avec l'auteur Bernard Werber ; Coups de coeur de Joane Despins et de Samuel Archibald: Horreur ; Auteurs au défi: Entrevue avec Heather O'Neill, Stefan Psenak, Joanne Arseneau ; Coups de coeur de Joane Despins et de Samuel Archibald: Cuisine ; 20 ans de Paul et La Pastèque: Entrevue avec Michel Rabagliati, Frédéric Gauthier ; Auteurs au défi: Lecture de Salomé Corbo et de Jean-Philippe Baril Guérard ; Coups de coeur de Joane Despins et de Samuel Archibald: Jeunesse ; Auteure en littérature jeunesse: Entrevue avec Stéphanie Lapointe
Angela and Kelli discuss “Moon Called” by Patricia Briggs and “The Lonely Hearts Hotel” by Heather O’Neill. Plus the ladies introduce their first writing challenge: NaNoWriMo!!!
Heather O ‘Neill est un phénomène littéraire au Canada ou son dernier roman "Les Enfants de Coeur " (Seuil) l’a propulsé au sommet des meilleurs ventes. Netflix, c’est désormais officiel, lui a acheté les droits pour une adaptation de la saga de ces deux orphelins s'aimant d'un amour impossible et traversant les bas-fonds de Montréal pendant la Grande Dépression. A Vincennes, on a pu rencontrer l'écrivain star, en toute simplicité, et c’est ce qui fait la magie du Festival America que l’on vous fait partager.
Lisa Appignanesi, prize-winning writer and Freudian scholar, with a personal memoir that explores public and private loss and anger. Presenter Eleanor Rosamund Barraclough also looks at a Festival of Canadian and North American writing meeting authors Heather O'Neill and Cherie Dimaline whose novels explore the meaning of family in dystopian visions of Canada, urban and rural. And, as the Oceania exhibition opens at the Royal Academy in London and a new Pacific Gallery opens at the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, Jo Walsh, artist and art producer, and cultural adviser, discusses the cultural protocols and disciplines which should be taken into account when mounting exhibitions of art from the Pacific nations and we look at the idea of cultural loss. Lisa Appignanesi : Everyday madness: On Grief, Anger, Loss and Love Heather O'Neill is one of Canada's best known fiction writers. Also a poet and journalist, her latest novel is The Lonely Hearts Hotel. Cherie Dimaline is a writer and editor from the Georgian Bay Metis Community in Ontario. Dimaline's latest book is The Marrow Thieves. They are taking part in the inaugural Festival America in London this September. Jo Walsh, (Māori / Pākehā) is a London-based artist and founding member of In*ter*is*land Collective and works with major institutions, including the British Library and National Maritime Museum. Oceania at The Royal Academy, London, 29 September — 10 December 2018. Sackler Gallery: Pacific Encounters, one of four new galleries at National Maritime Museum, now open.
Heather O ‘Neill est un phénomène littéraire au Canada ou son dernier roman "Les Enfants de Coeur " (Seuil) l’a propulsé au sommet des meilleurs ventes. Netflix, c’est désormais officiel, lui a acheté les droits pour une adaptation de la saga de ces deux orphelins s'aimant d'un amour impossible et traversant les bas-fonds de Montréal pendant la Grande Dépression. A Vincennes, on a pu rencontrer l'écrivain star, en toute simplicité, et c’est ce qui fait la magie du Festival America que l’on vous fait partager.
Dans un orphelinat de Montréal, toutes les filles s’appellent Marie, et tous les garçons, Joseph. Mais parmi la grisaille des enfants abandonnés brillent deux étoiles : Rose et Pierrot. Les deux orphelins se produisent en spectacle devant de riches Montréalais pendant les Années folles. Il joue du piano, elle danse, et ils rêvent ensemble de fonder le plus grand cirque du monde. Arrivent plutôt la crise, la pauvreté crasse et une double plongée dans l’univers interlope. La dépression est cruelle aux rêveurs, qui continueront pourtant de chercher à se réunir au clair de la lune. L’auteure de La vie rêvée des grille-pain signe un conte sentimental d’une magie brute porté par un érotisme troublant, où la misère se voile de paillettes et l’amour a raison de toutes les tempêtes. | Lu par Alice Pascual | Livre publié en 2018 | Éditions Alto | 530 pages
Cette semaine à l'émission: Le spectacle Femme ta gueule: Entrevue avec Mariana Mazza ; L'actualité culturelle avec Charles-Olivier Michaud et Erika Soucy ; La vie culturelle à New York avec Marie Bourreau: Exposition sud-coréenne ; Son nouveau roman Hôtel Lonely Hearts: Entrevue avec Heather O'neill ; Critique de livre avec René Homier-Roy: L'enfer, de Sylvie Drapeau ; Les petits violons et La légende du feu: Entrevue avec Renaud Paradis ; Critique de série avec René Homier-Roy: Féminin/Féminin ; La vie culturelle à Paris avec Katia Chapoutier:La sculpture de Jeff Koons ; Suggestions musicales de Stéphane Leclaire et de Philippe Renaud ; Le projet OSTR_web: Entrevue avec le chef d'orchestre Jacques Lacombe.
Amanda and Jenn discuss Finnish literature, mental illness, enemies-to-lovers stories, and more in this week's episode of Get Booked. This episode is sponsored by Your One and Only by Adrianne Finlay and Comic Bento. Questions 1. I’m heading on a trip to Finland at the end of February and I’d love to read some Finnish fiction, translated to English please! I’d love something with a strong sense of place to familiarize me with the environment/culture/weather etc. My favourite books are easy enough to fall into and ones where the characters stay with you long after the story ends. I’m generally a literary fiction reader but happily read other things except for romance and scific/fantasy (as a rule). If it helps, some of my favourite authors are Heather O’Neill, Miriam Toews, Peter Heller, A.M. Homes, Wally Lamb, David Benioff and Willy Vlautin. Thanks for the help! --Julie 2. Hi! I love your podcast and listen to your show every week! I just finished Turtles All the Way Down by John Green and loved Aza's perspective. I live with mental illness as does she, and I really enjoyed reading a story where the character accepts her mental illness and still struggles even though she is in recovery. I really like the non-linear way the book looks at her condition. Do you know of any other books where the main character has a mental illness, but does not exactly "defeat" it and instead learns to accept themselves? I have read I Can't Promise You a Rose Garden and enjoyed that. (Sidenote, I have read many books about people with eating disorders and I would prefer recommendations that do not include that topic.) Thanks! --Sara 3. I love fiction by what I like to think of as provocative and sometimes offensive people of faith. I love books where the author writes about his or her faith tradition from a place of love, but aren't afraid to ask the messy questions, air the dirty laundry, and treat belief like the complicated, untidy, yet deeply meaningful thing that it is. Some of my favorite authors that I'd put in this category are Chaim Potok, Fyodor Dostoevksy, Graham Greene, Evelyn Waugh & Levi S. Peterson. I love would to read more fiction like this. I read widely and would be comfortable with any genre except horror. Thanks! --Erin 4. Recently I read Michelle Moran's The Heretic Queen. Unfortunately, I didn't enjoy it, but it did leave me wanting to find a good historical romance or fiction in a similar vein. The main reason I did not enjoy the book was because I felt the relationship in the book was not strong enough. I have two requests, and I hope they aren't too much. I'd like the book to be set in the ancient world (Greece, Egypt, Rome), and I want a strong relationship (F/M M/M and F/F are all fine). I don't want instant love, or an undeveloped relationship- I really want to be able to root for the relationship. And before you mention it, I have read (and loved) The Song of Achilles. Thanks for the awesome show guys! I can't wait to hear your recommendations. --Anon 5. Hello: I am not a big romance reader. I very rarely pick up a romance. I struggle with historical fiction, so historical romance is really not my thing. However, I recently read The Hating Game by Sally Thorn and loved the contemporary romance. It was an "enemy to lovers" type books, so I enjoyed the banter and the humor. Disclaimer: some portions were problematic, so I do not mean to say that it was perfect. But, it did keep me reading. I would like some similar recommendations. I would prefer contemporary romance, but I'll take anything I can get that explores the "enemy to lovers" theme. Thanks, --Awful at Romance Reading 6. Thank you for an awesome podcast. I suffer from depression and considering the world’s political climate, I will continue to suffer for some time. I study humanitarian action in crisis and I love to read books that are topic heavy, such as Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie or The color Purple by Alice Walker or an anthology about racism in Sweden (I'm from Stockholm). Although the books are so good and I can't get enough (I also have ADHD which makes me unable to give up on these books but at the same time considering my depression they also make me sadder and unable to heal right now). I feel like I need something to break this habit while trying to get better and read book that’ll make me laugh or not think. I love novels about dance (favourites include Mao’s last dancer by Li Cunxin, A time to dance by Padma Venkatraman and Taking flight by Michaela DePrince) and novels from comedians like Seriously… I’m Kidding by Ellen Degeneres or How to Make White People Laugh by Negin Farsad. I’m giving you free hands, just remember – depressed, cannot stop reading awesome heavy novels, need something else though. And also, if you HAPPEN BY CHANCE to know a book about or featuring a person (not cis-gender white male) with ADHD, I’d love to hear about it. Thanks! --Emilie 7. Hi Amanda and Jenn! Thanks for a wonderful podcast! One of my favorite books is Sweetland by Michael Crummey. I enjoyed that it was set on an island, was very atmospheric, and beautifully dealt with loss and isolation. I also liked how nature was a large part of the book. I'm wondering if you have suggestions for something similar? Thanks so much for your time! --Carrie Books Discussed The Other Lands (Acacia #2) by David Anthony Durham Frankenstein in Baghdad by Ahmed Saadawi The Year of the Hare by Arto Paasilinna The Summer Book by Tove Jansson I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter by Erica L Sanchez (trigger warning: self-harm) Hate to Want You by Alisha Rai Saints and Misfits by S.K. Ali (trigger warning: sexual assault) The Mothers by Brit Bennett The Captive Prince trilogy by CS Pacat (all the trigger warnings) Fire from Heaven (Alexander the Great #1) by Mary Renault, recommended by Alexander Chee (Reading My Way Out of the Closet) Hold Me by Courtney Milan Dating You / Hating You by Christina Lauren Yes Please by Amy Poehler Year of Yes by Shonda Rhimes Pond by Claire-Louise Bennett Galore by Michael Crummey All the Birds, Singing by Evie Wyld
We couldn't be more excited to interview Heather O'Neill, the author of THE LONELY HEARTS HOTEL (Riverhead). Heather tells us what it's like to be longlisted for the Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction, gives us some behind-the-scenes info about THE LONELY HEARTS HOTEL, and talks about some of her favorite authors. Buy the Book: http://amzn.to/2otRGxC Follow Heather on Twitter: https://twitter.com/lethal_heroine Full Show Notes on readingwomenpodcast.com CONTACT Hello@readingwomenpodcast.com Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Litsy: @thereadingwomen Music “Stickybee” by Josh Woodard Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Heather O’Neill is the author of 4 books of fiction including the novels Lullabies for Little Girls and The Girl Who Was Saturday Night. She appeared at the Women’s Art Association in Toronto to talk about her new novel, The Lonely Hearts Hotel, a spell-binding story about two gifted orphans in Montreal whose magnetism and talent allow them to imagine a sensational future. The event was part of the Writers’ Trust of Canada Author Series program and was recorded on April 19, 2017.
Heather O’Neill is a talented and provocative novelist based in Montreal. Her first book was the celebrated Lullabies for Little Criminals, which won Canada Reads in 2007 and the Hugh MacLennan Prize for Fiction. Her latest novel is The Girl Who Was Saturday Night, which was published by HarperCollins Canada this past April and tells […]