An Assortment of Indigenous Storytellers

2022-07-08T18:15:02-04:00

Lisa at AnzLitLovers is hosting a week dedicated to the works of indigenous authors, an event she has retitled First Nations Reading Week, July 3rd-10th, which is an excellent opportunity for me to mention a poetry collection that I absolutely loved earlier this year, in the company of a

An Assortment of Indigenous Storytellers2022-07-08T18:15:02-04:00

June 2022: Read Indigenous (3 of 4)

2022-06-27T19:52:19-04:00

Last time, there was talk of Bevann Fox’s novel Genocidal Love (2020), Isaac Murdoch’s The Trail of Nenaboozhoo and Other Creation Stories (illustrated by Christi Belcourt, 2019), David Bouchard’s and Roy Henry Vickers’ The Elders Are Watching (2003), and Kazim Ali’s Northern Light: Power, Land, and Memory of Water

June 2022: Read Indigenous (3 of 4)2022-06-27T19:52:19-04:00

Musings on March 17th, Mostly about Not-Reading

2022-03-16T13:07:08-04:00

After last year’s gulp and gobble of new books, I have been tentative and restless. I touch my tongue to a book in my stacks, then move on, relishing the contrasting flavours but rarely sitting for a meal. Here, in Lorna Goodison’s Controlling the Silver (2005), I found this

Musings on March 17th, Mostly about Not-Reading2022-03-16T13:07:08-04:00

Winter 2022: In My Bookbag (What Bookbag?)

2022-01-14T13:30:36-05:00

Here’s a glimpse of some recent reads which lend themselves more to sampling, in a handful of reading sessions, than gobbling in longer periods of time. Not the books which require a sink-into-your-seat focus, rather the ones which afford the opportunity to window-gaze between pages or single-sitting reads. Like

Winter 2022: In My Bookbag (What Bookbag?)2022-01-14T13:30:36-05:00

The Writing Life: Langston Hughes (4 of 4)

2021-12-27T13:48:28-05:00

The 1619 Project (Edited by Nikole Hannah-Jones, Caitlin Roper, Ilena Silverman, and Jake Silverstein) opens with an epigraph from Langston Hughes, his poem “American Heartbreak 1619”: I am the American heartbreak-- The rock on which freedom Stumped its toe-- The great mistake That Jamestown made Long ago He’s such

The Writing Life: Langston Hughes (4 of 4)2021-12-27T13:48:28-05:00
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