Kathryn Kuitenbrouwer’s All the Broken Things (2014)

2014-06-26T14:37:01-04:00

If she were to tell the story again, it would be a little different. You might wonder how, because Bo's story seems all-of-a-piece, powerful just as it is, at once archetypal and unique. Random House Canada, 2014 "No one knows. But one thing is true. Whenever someone retells

Kathryn Kuitenbrouwer’s All the Broken Things (2014)2014-06-26T14:37:01-04:00

Catherine Bush’s Accusation (2013)

2014-05-13T14:12:03-04:00

In her work as a journalist, Sara Wheeler has often inhabited “borderlands of turbulence and uncertainty”, and travelled into dangerous territory. Readers familiar with Catherine Bush's earlier novels might recall Arcadia from Rules of Engagement, her fascination with war and violence, and the question that haunts her: “What would you be willing

Catherine Bush’s Accusation (2013)2014-05-13T14:12:03-04:00

Anthony De Sa’s Kicking the Sky (2013)

2014-05-13T14:32:04-04:00

The cover image for Anthony De Sa's Kicking the Sky perfectly encapsulates the novel's themes, structure, setting and tone.* A child's bicycle leans against a garage door, the only sign of habitation. The view of the alleyway leaves the safety of home beyond the edges of the scene. The shadows are

Anthony De Sa’s Kicking the Sky (2013)2014-05-13T14:32:04-04:00

Stacey May Fowles’ Infidelity (2013)

2014-05-13T14:35:30-04:00

Three for three: I've read all three of Stacey May Fowles' novels straight-through. It just happened. But although it was true of  Be Good and Fear of Fighting, I was prepared to take my time with Infidelity, an emotionally exhausting subject. But, then, it happened again. Perhaps it simply comes down

Stacey May Fowles’ Infidelity (2013)2014-05-13T14:35:30-04:00

The City of Toronto: Five Books, One Award

2020-09-16T15:57:02-04:00

The shortlist for the Toronto Book Award nearly always introduces me to the work of one writer whose work I did not know. (This year, I "discovered" Kevin Irie's poetry.) • Kamal Al-Solaylee, Intolerable: A Memoir of Extremes (HarperCollins Canada) Harper Collins, 2012 Much of this memoir speaks

The City of Toronto: Five Books, One Award2020-09-16T15:57:02-04:00
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