The Fold’s 2016 Reading List (Part One)

2020-08-19T08:24:02-04:00

The FOLD (The Festival of Literary Diversity) is an annual event, in Brampton (Ontario, Canada) dedicated to telling more stories, to having audiences connect with a wider variety of storytellers. You can check out their lineup of terrific writers and storytellers who were a part of the debut festival in May

The Fold’s 2016 Reading List (Part One)2020-08-19T08:24:02-04:00

Neil Smith’s Boo (2015)

2015-06-23T09:04:44-04:00

There are "ways of making people into ghosts". So Atticus say, to Jem in To Kill a Mockingbird, about Boo (Arthur) Radley. Alfred A. Knopf, 2015 Neil Smith turned Oliver Dalrymple into a ghost in Boo. And, then, he named him Boo and gave him a Casper the Friendly Ghost

Neil Smith’s Boo (2015)2015-06-23T09:04:44-04:00

Miranda Sherry’s Black Dog Summer (2015)

2015-06-11T13:10:39-04:00

It’s frightening, what happened to the author late one night travelling on a dark road after an exhausting studio session, forced to suddenly stop because of two shadowy figures ahead. (You can read about the event in an article on her UK publisher's site, here.) Simon & Schuster, 2015

Miranda Sherry’s Black Dog Summer (2015)2015-06-11T13:10:39-04:00

Benjamin Constable’s Three Lives of Tomomi Ishikawa (2013)

2020-05-21T16:03:51-04:00

Imagine the Griffin and Sabine stories. Gallery Books - Simon & Schuster, 2013 But take away the artwork. And substitute notebooks for postcards. Now, combine that with the bizarre otherworldliness of Banana Yoshimoto's novels. Take their spirited heroines, and the matter-of-fact acceptance of a thin veil between the worlds.

Benjamin Constable’s Three Lives of Tomomi Ishikawa (2013)2020-05-21T16:03:51-04:00
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