An Assortment of Teenlit: Four Books

2014-03-15T18:20:49-04:00

Aristophane’s The Zabîme Sisters Trans. Matt Madden (2010) This was the happy product of a browsing session on a summer day that found me seeking the relief of the public library's A/C. I brought it home and took it to bed on a still-too-hot night, the sort when you really

An Assortment of Teenlit: Four Books2014-03-15T18:20:49-04:00

An Assortment of Kidlit: Four Books

2025-11-17T11:38:55-05:00

A giraffe and a cat. Origami gone wild. A fantastic book of transformative tales. A word-lovin' ol' woman, and a sword-wielding girl. The first of these two came to me via Shelagh Rogers' The Next Chapter on CBC. (It's worth repeating; her enthusiasm about all kinds of storytelling is wholly contagious.)

An Assortment of Kidlit: Four Books2025-11-17T11:38:55-05:00

To Tell the Truth: Elspeth Cameron

2014-03-15T18:17:07-04:00

Elspeth Cameron's And Beauty Answers: The Life of Frances Loring and Florence Wyle Cormorant Books, 2007 It certainly wasn't something that a lot of women were doing in the early 1900s; girls weren't lining up to become sculptors. But Frances Loring and Florence Wyle did just that, meeting in 1906

To Tell the Truth: Elspeth Cameron2014-03-15T18:17:07-04:00

The Wind Done Gone (2001)

2025-03-25T09:03:31-04:00

When Scarlett, the sequel to Gone with the Wind that the Margaret Mitchell Estate authorized, was published in 1991, the world of books was abuzz. Nobody had heard of Alexandra Ripley, but everybody wanted to know what happened to Scarlett. Somehow I missed news of the publication of Alice Randall's

The Wind Done Gone (2001)2025-03-25T09:03:31-04:00

Gone with the Wind (1936)

2025-03-25T08:59:30-04:00

Of a 16-year-old's devotion Margaret Mitchell's Gone with the Wind (1936) Avon Books, 1973 This is my original copy of this novel, which I first read when I was sixteen years old. You've seen one like it, right? It's the copy that I remember seeing on the shelves

Gone with the Wind (1936)2025-03-25T08:59:30-04:00
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