our hosts

Shelagh Rogers

Shelagh Rogers is a recovering broadcast journalist. For decades on CBC Radio, she was privileged to have profound on-air conversations with brilliant people. Among them are some of the writers appearing this season at Writers at Woody Point. For the last 15 years at the CBC, she was host and co-producer of The Next Chapter, an award-winning program devoted to writing in Canada. As well as featuring Canlit, it was a goal of hers to amplify and celebrate Indigenous voices. She continues that work with the very good people at Indspire, interviewing people who personify Indigenous excellence. She is also the host of the podcast Words and Culture, The Michif (Métis) Episodes, produced by the legendary Kim Wheeler. 

In 2011, she was named an Honorary Witness for the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, and was inducted into the Order of Canada in recognition of her advocacy for adult literacy, for mental health, the arts in Canada, and truth and reconciliation. 

Shelagh is Chancellor of Queen’s University, UVic's Chancellor Emerita and a proud Citizen of the Manitoba Métis Federation. She is honoured to be back at Writers at Woody Point, so dear to her heart. 

Angela Antle

Angela Antle is a PhD candidate at Memorial University of Newfoundland and Labrador and a member of Norway’s Empowered Futures 2023 cohort. A writer and former CBC producer, her work has been recognized by The New York Festivals, The Gabriel and Gracie Allen Awards, The Atlantic Journalism Awards, The Nickel, Berlinale, Dublin and Wexford Film Festivals. Her first novel will be published by Breakwater Books in 2025.

Tom Power

Tom Power is an award-winning musician and broadcaster, rarely seen without an instrument or microphone nearby. He blends a warm curiosity and playful wit to cover the arts, music and entertainment stories you're talking about, and the ones that are too interesting not to share.

Tom started his career in his hometown of St. John's, N.L., studying folklore by day and "gigging" (read: performing music) in pubs at night. He recorded his earliest interviews during those years, travelling around the region with a microphone to collect oral histories from his fellow Newfoundlanders.

He made his radio debut programming bluegrass music for a college radio show, wryly named Do-Si-DON'T. Tom quickly moved on to become a news announcer for a local radio station and, in 2008, joined CBC Radio as the host of the national folk music program DEEP ROOTS. Three years later, Tom shifted into the host chair of RADIO 2MORNING, CBC Radio's biggest national music show. He also became a trusted guest host on q and AS IT HAPPENS. Tom became the host of q in October 2016. Off the air, Tom fronts the folk-rock band The Dardanelles — known for drawing new audiences around the world to traditional Newfoundland music. He's also a member of the Polaris Music Prize jury, and has hosted and performed at major music festivals in Canada.

Michael Crummey

Michael Crummey is the author of seven books of poetry and a collection of short stories, Flesh and Blood. He is also the author of the novels The Wreckage, a national bestseller and finalist for the Rogers Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize; Galore, winner of the Commonwealth Writers' Prize for Best Novel (Canada and Caribbean) and finalist for the Governor General’s Literary Award; Sweetland, a finalist for the Governor General’s Literary Award; and The Innocents, a finalist for the Scotiabank Giller Prize, the Rogers Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize, and the Governor General’s Literary Award. His most recent novel, The Adversary, was a #1 national bestseller. Michael Crummey lives in St. John's, Newfoundland.

Elamin Abdelmahmoud

Special guest host, Elamin Abdelmahmoud, is a culture writer, CBC’s Commotion host, and former Pop Chat host. His work appears in Rolling Stone, The Globe and Mail, and beyond. He was a founding co-host of Party Lines and a panelist on CBC’s At Issue.

Lisa Moore

Special guest host, Lisa Moore, is the acclaimed author of the novels Caught, February, Alligator; the story collections Open and Something for Everyone; and the young-adult novel Flannery. Her books have won the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize and CBC’s Canada Reads, been finalists for the Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize and the Scotiabank Giller Prize and been longlisted for the Man Booker Prize. Lisa is also the co-librettist, along with Laura Kaminsky, of the opera February, based on her novel of the same name (2023). She lives in St. John’s, Newfoundland.