Weekend Sampler: Featuring Edward Riche’s Easy to Like

2014-03-20T14:55:37-04:00

"Reality is for people who can't handle fiction -- and that is mostly everybody." Elliot Johnson has been writing screenplays in LA, but he's been having trouble selling his fictions. House of Anansi, 2011 That's Elliot Johnson. Or Elliot Johnston, or Elliot Jonson: it depends which document you're

Weekend Sampler: Featuring Edward Riche’s Easy to Like2014-03-20T14:55:37-04:00

Sniffling in the Toronto Reference Library

2014-03-18T11:13:48-04:00

Suzanne Robertson's Paramita, Little Black has been nominated for the 2012 Toronto Book Award. And lucky for me, because I would not have read this slim volume of verse had it not been. Lucky for me, because it's another reminder that poetry doesn't have to be this far-away thing that

Sniffling in the Toronto Reference Library2014-03-18T11:13:48-04:00

Memory, regret, dying, avalanches: quintessential Canlit

2020-09-24T09:50:18-04:00

Dundurn, 2011 The ReLit shortlist was announced earlier this week, but I'm still reading from the longlist. Farzana Doctor's Six Metres of Pavement (Dundurn, 2011) was also nominated for the Toronto Book Award. That's fitting because the setting plays an important role in this story, but much of the drama

Memory, regret, dying, avalanches: quintessential Canlit2020-09-24T09:50:18-04:00

Weekend Sampler: Hoogland, Griffin and Burgess

2014-03-17T16:54:37-04:00

Today's bookish chatter: featuring Cornelia Hoogland's Woods Wolf Girl and two snack-sized servings of Daniel Griffin's Stopping for Strangers and Tony Burgess' Idaho Winter. Wolsak & Wynn, 2011 Cornelia Hoogland's Woods Wolf Girl is a page-turner of a poetry collection. Even if you are already familiar with the roots of

Weekend Sampler: Hoogland, Griffin and Burgess2014-03-17T16:54:37-04:00

Weekend Sampler: On a Bookish Plate

2014-03-17T16:39:21-04:00

In today's bookish chatter: a plateful of Rosemary Nixon's Kalila and two snack-sized servings of Britt Holmström's Leaving Berlin and George Elliot Clarke's Red. If Rosemary Nixon's Kalila came with a cover summary, many readers would put the book aside. And, yet, only a few pages into the story, the

Weekend Sampler: On a Bookish Plate2014-03-17T16:39:21-04:00
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