About Buried In Print

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So far Buried In Print has created 2137 blog entries.

Read in One Sitting: Watch How We Walk

2014-07-11T16:48:33-04:00

There is no great mystery at the heart of Jennifer LoveGrove's debut novel. No simple explanation for the way its pages turn, relentlessly. Emily's story is a quiet story, the ground beneath her feet shifting subtly, though inexorably. In relaying her story to readers, Jennifer LoveGrove makes a series of

Read in One Sitting: Watch How We Walk2014-07-11T16:48:33-04:00

David Gilmour’s Extraordinary (2013)

2020-07-30T14:34:28-04:00

When describing this book to a friend recently, I said I found his style "quintessentially male". That's a sloppy term, but when you've bookchatted with someone about many books over several years, a certain shorthand develops. All I had to add was that it left with me the same feeling

David Gilmour’s Extraordinary (2013)2020-07-30T14:34:28-04:00

A Fainter Footprint, So Far

2014-03-23T08:42:49-04:00

Other Friday Fugues here have focussed on Bookish Books and Epistolary Works, this year's Friday Fugue is A Fainter Footprint. As in, leaving a fainter footprint behind, ecologically speaking. To date, there has been much talk of recent cookbooks, those which are light on resources but heavy on flavour and

A Fainter Footprint, So Far2014-03-23T08:42:49-04:00

Letters Between Canadian Writers

2014-03-23T08:42:28-04:00

This from Hugh MacLennan to young Marian Engel in 1956: "If I can be of any help to you, don't hesitate to write and tell me so. I'm cynical about theses, having done one myself, but I suppose they are necessary if you can avoid taking them too seriously." University

Letters Between Canadian Writers2014-03-23T08:42:28-04:00

Ian Thornton’s The Great and Calamitous Tale of Johan Thoms (2013)

2014-03-23T08:40:43-04:00

Everything I know about the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand, which precipitated WWI, I learned from fiction. First, Aleksandar Hemon's short story, "The Accordian", which explores the very moment of the shots' impact, inspired by the presence of a bystander. This man seems to be the author's grandfather, standing in the

Ian Thornton’s The Great and Calamitous Tale of Johan Thoms (2013)2014-03-23T08:40:43-04:00
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