Ian Williams: Not Anyone’s Anything (2011) and Personals (2012)

2019-10-16T15:35:25-04:00

If the idea of experimental or innovative short stories makes you squirm, even though you are simultaneously bored with more traditional structure, Not Anyone’s Anything belongs on your bookshelf. Ian Williams puts relationships at the core of his work and this fiction collection exhibits this tendency as well. I also

Ian Williams: Not Anyone’s Anything (2011) and Personals (2012)2019-10-16T15:35:25-04:00

TGIF: In the workplace, on the page (3 of 4)

2015-07-10T13:13:05-04:00

A new Friday fugue, running through this month, considering the ways in which our working lives appear on the pages of novels and short stories. The first two weeks appear here and here.) Tightrope Books, 2011 Kathryn Mockler’s Onion Man (2011) “The first night, time went by fast

TGIF: In the workplace, on the page (3 of 4)2015-07-10T13:13:05-04:00

Diversiverse 2014 – Reading more diversely

2017-07-24T15:12:41-04:00

Of course I made a reading list. Then, I saw Vasilly’s list. (You probably already know where this is heading.) Her list has many temptations on it, including some of my favourites. But I have been looking for a reason to read the rest of Kazu Kibuishi’s Amulet series since I

Diversiverse 2014 – Reading more diversely2017-07-24T15:12:41-04:00

My mini-Canlit-read-a-thon on Canada Day, 2014 (II)

2014-07-23T07:13:42-04:00

Choosing a stack based on whimsy rather than duty urged me to binge on these books with enthusiasm. The afternoon heat was held at bay by good stories and an assortment of drinks (often rum with some sort of fruit juice, from tangerine to strawberry, lemon to cherry). And without

My mini-Canlit-read-a-thon on Canada Day, 2014 (II)2014-07-23T07:13:42-04:00

Shari LaPeña’s Happiness Economics (2011)

2014-07-11T16:00:54-04:00

The next time someone says to me that funny books are always disappointing because they're funny-dumb, I'll be pointing them to this novel: it's funny-smart. Brindle and Glass, 2011 Happiness Economics opens with Will Thorne struggling with the idea of being a poet in a world which does

Shari LaPeña’s Happiness Economics (2011)2014-07-11T16:00:54-04:00
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