The Carol Shields Prize for Fiction (3 of 4)

2024-07-24T17:23:57-04:00

Rebecca and Laura have been reading and writing about books on the Carol Shields Fiction Prize too: Rebecca (Loot, The Future and Chrysalis, Cocktail and Land of Milk and Honey and Laura (Between Two Moons and Summary) If you’re also reading from the longlist (shortlist with winner announced), please

The Carol Shields Prize for Fiction (3 of 4)2024-07-24T17:23:57-04:00

The Carol Shields Prize for Fiction 2024 (2 of 4)

2024-04-08T21:04:26-04:00

Louise Erdrich and Barbara Kingsolver, Amy Tan and Elizabeth Strout: these are some of the writers whose stories about parenting, and being parented, stand out in my mind. Claudia Dey’s fiction could be included here, too, although her stories spiral around alienation and abandonment—the ways in which those who

The Carol Shields Prize for Fiction 2024 (2 of 4)2024-04-08T21:04:26-04:00

The Carol Shields Prize for Fiction 2024 (1 of 4)

2024-04-10T12:59:58-04:00

On the longlist, I’d read just four of the books when the nominees were announced, two last year and two this year. For those who can forgive short stories for not being novels, Lisa Alward's Cocktail will satisfy on many levels. She’s got the sharp observations of writers like

The Carol Shields Prize for Fiction 2024 (1 of 4)2024-04-10T12:59:58-04:00

Autumn 2023, In My Stacks #MARM #UrsulaKLeGuinFictionPrize

2023-10-21T09:35:07-04:00

Earlier this year, I read Britt Wray’s Generation Dread, which is where I learned about the philosopher Thomas Attig, who tells us: “grief allows us to ‘relearn the world’ by thinking about how the world has changed when something that matters deeply to us is lost, and how that

Autumn 2023, In My Stacks #MARM #UrsulaKLeGuinFictionPrize2023-10-21T09:35:07-04:00
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