Sahar Delijani’s Children of the Jacaranda Tree (2013)

2014-05-13T09:11:22-04:00

A blindfolded woman in labour, in the back of a van that has left Evin Prison in Tehran. It's an un-put-down-able scene. Atria Books - Simon & Schuster, 2013 It's 1983, in the third year of the war with Iraq, but the fierce immediacy of the story pulls

Sahar Delijani’s Children of the Jacaranda Tree (2013)2014-05-13T09:11:22-04:00

Saleema Nawaz’ Bone and Bread (2013)

2014-03-20T21:23:23-04:00

Before I began reading Bone and Bread, I read Mother Superior, Saleema Nawaz's debut, a collection of stories. House of Anansi, 2013 About "Bloodlines", I noted: "S keeps Khalsa (pure, according to Sikh law) and B does not, so B grows larger and S grows smaller, above a Montreal bagel

Saleema Nawaz’ Bone and Bread (2013)2014-03-20T21:23:23-04:00

Linwood Barclay’s A Tap on the Window (2013)

2014-05-13T15:49:27-04:00

A Tap on the Window feels like the quintessential late-summer read. I have to move indoors with my book sooner on August evenings, because the light doesn't last as long, but the neighbourhood still moves to other summer rhythms. And, so, that old yearning for a page-turner. Doubleday -

Linwood Barclay’s A Tap on the Window (2013)2014-05-13T15:49:27-04:00

Benjamin Constable’s Three Lives of Tomomi Ishikawa (2013)

2020-05-21T16:03:51-04:00

Imagine the Griffin and Sabine stories. Gallery Books - Simon & Schuster, 2013 But take away the artwork. And substitute notebooks for postcards. Now, combine that with the bizarre otherworldliness of Banana Yoshimoto's novels. Take their spirited heroines, and the matter-of-fact acceptance of a thin veil between the worlds.

Benjamin Constable’s Three Lives of Tomomi Ishikawa (2013)2020-05-21T16:03:51-04:00

“Carried Away” Alice Munro

2014-03-31T15:57:28-04:00

Could be that "Carried Away" is my favourite Alice Munro story. 1994; Penguin, 1999 Not only because Louisa is a librarian. (But that certainly helps.) "The Librarian’s desk was in the archway between the front and back rooms. The books were on shelves set in rows in the

“Carried Away” Alice Munro2014-03-31T15:57:28-04:00
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