Tracy Barone’s Happy Family (2016)

2024-05-31T19:01:20-04:00

As a screenwriter and a playwright, it's not surprising that Tracy Barone's debut novel, Happy Family, reads like a series of scenes. Little, Brown and Company, 2016 The first unfolds on August 5, 1962. "The pregnant girl enters the Trenton Family Clinic, looking like she parted the Red Sea to get

Tracy Barone’s Happy Family (2016)2024-05-31T19:01:20-04:00

Rhoda Rabinowitz Green’s Aspects of Nature (2016)

2016-07-16T15:29:08-04:00

This debut collection is filled with sensory detail. From brisket and chicken soup to gefilte fish and borscht. From paint-by-number clowns to lacy pillow-slips. From red-striped deck chairs to weathered shutters. Inanna Publications, 2016 Whether it's Debussy or lyrics from "Oklahoma", the details matter. But Aspects of Nature is actually preoccupied

Rhoda Rabinowitz Green’s Aspects of Nature (2016)2016-07-16T15:29:08-04:00

Karen Molson’s The Company of Crows (2016)

2024-05-31T19:02:29-04:00

It might seem to be, at first glance, a quintessential CanLit passage, a poetic description of the natural world. Linda Leith Publishing, 2016 But the opening passage of The Company of Crows reveals more about Karen Molson's debut novel, than one might think. "Thin grey lines fan out across the

Karen Molson’s The Company of Crows (2016)2024-05-31T19:02:29-04:00

Jessi Klein’s You’ll Grow Out of It (2016)

2016-07-09T12:30:03-04:00

"My main career goal has been to get to go to work every day on something that I'm proud of, with a bunch of people I really like and respect, who make me laugh." Grand Central Publishing - Hachette, 2016 This is Jessi Klein, interviewed by Cosmo, for

Jessi Klein’s You’ll Grow Out of It (2016)2016-07-09T12:30:03-04:00

Malcolm Sutton’s Job Shadowing (2016)

2016-07-08T11:34:53-04:00

If it's true, that “new thoughts only happen at the edge of what we already know”, then Malcolm Sutton's Job Shadowing has provided me with plenty of new thoughts. Book Thug, 2016 Job Shadowing is a novel which pools at the edges of the shape that I recognize as fiction. It would be

Malcolm Sutton’s Job Shadowing (2016)2016-07-08T11:34:53-04:00
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