Since 2020, my bookbag has been at home more often than not, so this has also become a place to share the books I’ve found myself reading in bits and pieces.
Originally, I bought Democracy with last year’s MARM in mind, for Margaret Atwood’s contribution. It opens with a piece by Elif Shafak, which positions democracy as part of an ecosystem, with reflections on nature. “While the human internet is just a few decades old, the ‘fungal internet’ has been around for millions and millions of years. And unlike us, trees have managed to use their interconnectivity in a position and constructive way.”
Kristen Zory King’s Ladies Ladies Ladies (2025) landed in my stack thanks to the linked story collection Irregulars by Kerry Trautman, circling around a waitress’ single shift in a dinner in middle America. Stanchion’s subscription service was irresistible and a great way to support small presses in the United States that value independent thinking and diversity in storytelling. Eighteen “vignettes” are linked thematically, assembled from a series of moments in the ladies’ lives. You could savour one each day like poems, but I gulped them in one sitting. The phrase that returns to my mind is a subversive sort of melancholy. Despite loneliness and uncertainty, there are moments of ferocious joy. These are the stories that exist in the moment after you’ve wiped the mist off the bathroom mirror with the meat of your fist (this actually happened).
“Callie didn’t have a tragedy of her own so she collected others, keeping them in her pocket and running her fingers against each scissored edge until they were so familiar by touch, so warn to the warmth of her fingertips, that she could almost believe they were hers.”




The speeches in Gabriel Garcia Márquez’s 2010 collection, I’m Not Here to Give a Speech (in translation by Edith Grossman, 2014) are not very long—he hated giving speeches, apparently). And I’m not a very experienced Márquez reader, but I still enjoyed the expanse of material, from a speech made in 1944 to his graduating class, to one celebrating the 40-year-anniversary of One Hundred Years of Solitude (also the 25th anniversary of his having received the Nobel Prize) in 2007. I read just one or two in a sitting, and I was left craving more of his work.
Jan Zwicky’s and Robert V. Moody’s Sixty-Seven Ontological Studies (2022) is a slim volume with 49 of Zwicky’s spare, thoughtful poems and 18 of Moody’s striking, evocative photographs. Even in paperback it’s an elegant volume—set in type by Robert Bringhurst and printed by Hemlock Printers. Some days I marvel most at the words: one favourite is the pair “Skin” and “February”. Other days, the images: with one favourite being Independence Pass in Colorado, the perspective aligned so we peer through a series of ruined wooden doorframes with a mountain as backdrop. A note at the end explains that the volume had been previously published in 2020 with only 56 Studies, so it’s not unreasonable to hope we will soon have 78 or 89.
Other piece-meal reads include Kate Beaton’s early comics (more about her longer work next week). I’ve borrowed these from the library before, and I made the mistake of reading them like a graphic novel. She describes having written them when she should have been studying or working. Instead, she would dash off a few frames—often reflecting what she was reading or learning. Hers is a niche audience—she does name her historic figures and sometimes there’s a paragraph beneath that offers some context but, you know, the longer it takes to explain a joke, the faster the giggles fade.
My favourites in Hark! A Vagrant (2011) were the Nancy Drew mysteries and the Austen panels. And in Step Aside, Pops (2015) she shifts her focus from Austenmania to Brontëmania and, affectionately, declares “May we always have a mania to sustain us.” One that really made me laugh had two characters from Pride & Prejudice lounging around and then complaining that the dratted characters from Wuthering Heights were approaching, about to ruin the mood. There are also more Nancy Drew bits, but because I happened to be rereading The Secret Garden, that spread really made me laugh. And the riffs on historic Hallowe’en cards were good fun too.




Alongside, I was reading single chapters in Art Spiegelman’s classic graphic memoir Maus (1980-1991). Originally published in his own magazine, Raw, I first read this years ago, when one had to request it at the library’s reference desk. There I was directed to the children’s library, which was downstairs and a long corridor away. Maus was kept there, behind the circulation desk, where it was immediately checked out to me (not simply added to my stack of other loans). All that I remember about that first reading is it provoked my reading of other graphic novels and memoirs: no notes, no journal entry. It could be that I simply didn’t have the vocabulary to adequately react. That I only let it wash over me and, then, returned it so another reader could be stunned into silence.
What I didn’t remember was that the story is framed as the son recording his father’s story, so that we know from the beginning who survives (the father and mother) and who doesn’t. I also didn’t remember that there’s some humour in the back-and-forth about the interview process. There is one scene where his father makes his son’s coat (sophisticated but bland) disappear, so that he has to wear home a loudly patterned waist-length anorak type thing with a zip, very similar to his father’s very “stylish” jacket, that provoked a full laugh. The history recounted is complicated but skilfully arranged to create a throughline (despite his father’s memories coming from every direction) and to represent his mother’s experiences too, although the couple had been separated in Auschwitz, and later his father had burned her diaries. After it was published in the mainstream (1986 Volume I; 1991 Volume II), it received the Pulitzer Prize in 1992—A Special Award in Letters—and it’s no longer shelved with the children’s books.
Also I have borrowed the first in a series of Spanish graphic novels translated into French in 2023: Alfonso Zapico’s Le chant des Asturies. They have just the kind of intricate line-drawings that I love, with particular detail in outdoor landscapes and architectural structures, domestic scenes and daily life (brickwork and cobblestones, minescapes, stuff laid out on a desk, or paintings and decorations on a wall). So far, Zapico reminds of Joe Sacco (although how useful is that comparison when I’ve not finished even one of his books?!). And, as with Joe Sacco’s books, I find myself spending as much time online researching elements of history as I spend with the books themselves; this independent region of northern Spain and its miners’ role in the Spanish Revolution are fascinating, although the specialised terms in French are a challenge.
What have you been reading in bits and pieces? Or packing in your bookbag?
Kristen Zory King’s Ladies Ladies Ladies sounds interesitng. Usually I am pretty picky with short story collections, but this one piqued my interest. I also enjoyed reading Hark! A Vagrant and I need to read the second part of Maus.
Stanchion is such an great little press, and closer to you than to me!
The second part of Maus takes a slightly different slant than I had expected, showing some situations that aren’t so well-known.
That’s a bit shocking about Maus. What damage was it going to do to readers that it needed to be kept under lock and key? (Emotional damage, I guess, but still…)
I’ve been on a bit of an aphorisms bender lately for my bits and pieces sort of reading. I was waiting for Elias Canetti’s Book Against Death from the library and while I was waiting I read/reread all his earlier books of aphorisms–and then that sent me off to others. Canetti was quite taken with Ludwig Hohl (new name to me) and Hohl was pretty interesting.
At the time, I think it was more a question of their not having determined a policy for graphic novels/memoirs in general: were they comics, and therefore for children? were they literature, and therefore for adults? (This wasn’t in Toronto.)
Ohhh, he does sound interesting! I can see the appeal. The story behind Ascent sounds intriguing, and I note that he’s thought to have influenced Handke.
I think there were some classical history bits in Beaton’s comics that you might like (I didn’t know the figures well enough to fully appreciate them), but her focus doesn’t usually stretch back quite that far.
Ascent does sound interesting, but I haven’t figured out to get hold of it–it was The Notes that I read.
I’d never heard of Beaton, but I do like the graphic style shown on the covers.
That looks fascinating too. And even at nearly 400 pages, it’s an abridged version?!
What was the name of that fun shop that used to be on the main level of the TRefLibrary? They used to have a corner with her stuff in it, that’s how I got curious!
I doubt that any of these books would ever end up in my bookbag. Do I have a bookbag? I have a shopping bag for carrying audiobooks (cds) from the library. And I always have a couple of books in my work backpack (I have about 20 books in storage lockers in my truck which might only get read in the direst emergency). The closest I have is Marquez’s The General in His Labyrinth, which I should read as a token for your year (is it just one year?) of reading South and Central America.
I very occasionally take a book in my bookbag now, so perhaps the habit will resume as time passes. Most of these would have worked very well, except for Maus I suppose, which I did read chapter-by-chapter over a longer period of time, but it’s very serious for public reading.
Is your storage locker that accommodating? I had the idea there were maybe four or five pocketbooks in there.
That’s not one I can easily get (Solitude, Cholera, Chronicle, and likely not of interest…the Collected Stories and first volume of his biography) but I have heard good things about it. It was originally going to be a single year, but now I think not. (Sound familiar? heh)
My Volvo Globetrotter has extensive storage lockers, above the windscreen and under and above the bed. Room for clothes, a week’s food and books. I have Cholera as an audiobook, so tell me when you start reading and I’ll start listening.
Democracy sounds excellent—quite a lineup of writers, and a topic that’s very timely now that democracy is no longer something we can take for granted (if we ever could). The parallel between democracy and ecology is an interesting one. So I’ll keep an eye out for that one.
Sorry, my memory is terrible—did you write about the Marquez book before? I remember reading about it somewhere and commenting on that fact about how he hated giving speeches, but I don’t know if it was on your blog, and I can’t see that post. So now I don’t know where I read it!
I think most of them are available online, which might actually suit you very well! I thought it would be the writers I “knew” that would prove most compelling, but the new-to-me ones have been very good too.
We did chat about it briefly; maybe it was in an unrelated comments thread where I mentioned the #ShelfofMexico but didn’t discuss the books themselves. I still haven’t picked up another Marquez but I’m still thinking about it. And I haven’t forgotten Bolano, but that might have to be a purchase because they tend to be long and perhaps not easy on a non-renewable ILL.
Both Ladies Ladies Ladies and Irregulars sound right up my street.
I’m sure you would enjoy them both, the gentle interlocking of the first and the restaurant setting of the second.
Ladies Ladies Ladies sounds especially tempting. I’m not I can get it here but I’ll have a hunt!
Their epubs are inexpensive, if you are able to read on a screen (perhaps their being shorter would help with that).