Joan Barfoot’s Abra (1978)

2014-03-09T16:11:01-04:00

Joan Barfoot's Abra McGraw-Hill Ryerson, 1978 Edition shown: Women's Press (UK) 1999 The first Joan Barfoot novel that I read was Family News (1989), dating to a time when I only irregularly noted the books that I read in a coilbound exercise book, so I know that I sought out

Joan Barfoot’s Abra (1978)2014-03-09T16:11:01-04:00

My final Shelf Discovery re-read

2014-03-09T13:36:01-04:00

Jean Auel's The Clan of the Cave Bear Bantam Books, 1980 I had started high school when I read Jean Auel's first novel in the Earth's Children series, but I don't know if it was the 9th grade or the 13th. It was my grandmother's copy -- she bought a

My final Shelf Discovery re-read2014-03-09T13:36:01-04:00

Revisiting the Castle

2014-03-09T13:18:57-04:00

This is my second-last Shelf Discovery Challenge post and read. I deliberately chose both this and Jean Auel's The Clan of the Cave Bear to round things up because they were among the books that helped me shift away from kidlit and YA books to adult reading. The transition via

Revisiting the Castle2014-03-09T13:18:57-04:00

Stepping Out with Rebecca Gowers

2017-07-20T18:03:21-04:00

If you read Rebecca Gowers' first novel, When to Walk, you've been introduced to Ramble: she's not easy to know but she's at the heart of Gowers' debut so you'll have made her acquaintance. Those readers who want to make friends with the characters they're reading about, likely didn't even

Stepping Out with Rebecca Gowers2017-07-20T18:03:21-04:00

Austin Clarke’s More (2008)

2014-03-09T11:28:15-04:00

Austin Clarke's More Thomas Allen, 2008 I can't help it: when I see a stack of new books at the library, I am compelled to, at the very least, ogle them. Usually I pick one up. Often I pet one (even if it's just a shinier version of a favourite

Austin Clarke’s More (2008)2014-03-09T11:28:15-04:00
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