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• Butler, Juan, 1970. Cabbagetown Diary: A Documentary. Toronto: Peter Martin Associates Limited.
• Cornish, John, 1968. Sherbourne Street. Toronto: Clarke Irwin.• Ellis, Deborah, 1999. Looking For X. Toronto: Groundwood.• Garner, Hugh, 1950; 968. Cabbagetown. Toronto: White Circle; Ryerson Press. • Garner, Hugh [under the pseudonym Jarvis Warwick], 1950. Waste No Tears. News Stand /
Export Publishing.• Garner, Hugh, 1976. The Intruders. Toronto: McGraw-Hill Ryerson. (A follow-up, in some ways,
to Cabbagetown.)• Jewinski, Hans, 1975. Poet Cop. Markham, ON: Simon & Schuster / Pocket Books. [poetry]• Lapp, Dave, 2008. Drop-In. Montreal: Conundrum Press. [graphic novel/memoir]• Matheson, George, 1996. Hogs and Cabbages. Lumby, British Columbia: Kettle Valley
Publishing.• McAree, J.V., 1953. Cabbagetown Store. (memoir). Toronto: Ryerson Press.• Plantos, Ted, 1977. The Universe Ends at Sherbourne & Queen. Toronto: Steel Rail Publishing.• Plantos, Ted, 2000. The Shanghai Noodle Killing. Toronto: Seraphim.• Rosen, Eric S., 1991. The Banker of Cabbagetown. Toronto: Eric S. Rosen. [play / theatre and
history]• Thurman, Mark, 1987. Cabbagetown Gang. Toronto: NC Press. [children's / young adult]• Type, David, 1979. Cabbagetown Plays (Diamond Cutters, Snow Birds and The Travesty and the
Fruit Fly). Toronto: Playwrights Co-Op.• Type, David, 1984. Just Us Indians. Toronto: Playwrights Canada Press. [play; also set in
The Story of a Victorian Neighbourhood. Toronto: James Lorimer. • Farewell Oak Street [documentary], 1953. Grant McLean/ NFB.• Kelly, Colleen, 1984. Cabbagetown in Pictures. Local History Handbook No. 4.
Toronto: Toronto Public Library Board.• Lorimer, James and Myfanwy Phillips, 1971. Working People: Life in a Downtown
City Neighbourhood. Toronto: James Lewis & Samuel Ltd. [narratives of Cabbagetown]
• Rose, Albert, 1958. Regent Park: A Study in Slum Clearance. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
Amy Lavender Harris teaches in the Department of Geography at York University in Toronto, where her work focuses on urban identity and the cultural significance of place.
Her book, Imagining Toronto (Mansfield Press, 2010) was shortlisted for the Gabrielle Roy Prize in Canadian literary criticism and won the Award of Merit, the highest honour given to a book at the 2011 Heritage Toronto Awards.
Amy is a contributing editor with Spacing Magazine, where she writes a regular column on Toronto literature. She has also contributed essays to Open Book: Toronto and Open Book Magazine, Reading Toronto, The State of the Arts: Living with Culture in Toronto (Coach House, 2006), GreenTOpia (with Peter Fruchter, Coach House, 2007), Canada: A Literary Tour (Library & Archives Canada, 2009), Hagar: Studies in Culture, Polities and Identity (2011), Plan Canada and the Ontario Planning Journal.
Amy speaks regularly to popular and scholarly audiences about Toronto literature, urban culture, identity and the imaginative qualities of cities.