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So far Buried In Print has created 2137 blog entries.

“Rich as Stink” Alice Munro

2014-07-11T16:57:30-04:00

In "Save the Reaper" and "The Children Stay" readers are directed to wonder what young children remember of their parents' shenanigans, but in this story readers inhabit Karin's perspective. Karin is certainly old enough to actively observe and contemplate the events unfolding around her (although from a girl's perspective, so

“Rich as Stink” Alice Munro2014-07-11T16:57:30-04:00

My Bloody Valentine: On Lawrence Hill’s 2013 Massey Lecture

2014-07-11T16:29:49-04:00

This year's Massey Lecture text begins with passion and grandiose declarations. "I have had a lifelong obsession with blood, and I'm not the only one. As both substance and symbol, blood reveals us, divides us, and unites us. We care about blood, because it spills literally and figuratively into every

My Bloody Valentine: On Lawrence Hill’s 2013 Massey Lecture2014-07-11T16:29:49-04:00

A reader’s notes on Kathy Kacer’s Novels

2025-03-26T13:47:46-04:00

Kathy Kacer's name dots the pages of Second Story Press' Holocaust Remembrance Series. From her first book in 1999 to last year's Shanghai Surprise, no other author has contributed so many stories to the series. The Secret of Gabi's Dresser is bookended by contemporary snippets designed to draw young readers into the

A reader’s notes on Kathy Kacer’s Novels2025-03-26T13:47:46-04:00

Learning about the Holocaust: How Young is Too Young?

2014-02-12T11:33:00-05:00

One mother in my step-daughter's seventh-grade class complained. The teacher incorporated John Boyne's The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas into the lesson-plan, and this mother believes the subject is inappropriate for twelve- and thirteen-year-old students. Are children too young to grapple with such serious subjects? The story of Hana's Suitcase

Learning about the Holocaust: How Young is Too Young?2014-02-12T11:33:00-05:00

Black History Month: Four Courageous Women

2014-02-11T11:25:00-05:00

Nine months before Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on the bus, Claudette Colvin, fifteen years old, stayed in her seat on a segregated bus in Montgomery, Alabama. It was March 2, 1955, but in the intervening years, this story has been all-but-forgotten. Phillip Hoose's work is essential reading.

Black History Month: Four Courageous Women2014-02-11T11:25:00-05:00
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