Ongoing saga of Shelf Discovery

2025-03-25T09:16:35-04:00

I really hadn’t planned to re-read more than one of Lois Duncan’s novels for the Shelf Discovery Reading Challenge but I enjoyed Down a Dark Hall so much that I re-considered. I was really expecting it to feel more dated (and maybe it would have if I wasn’t approaching it

Ongoing saga of Shelf Discovery2025-03-25T09:16:35-04:00

Dorothy Livesay’s Journey with My Selves 1909-1963 (1991) Part II of II

2025-11-10T12:49:53-05:00

One of the things that I love most of all about reading memoirs, journals and letters (of literary figures, especially, because they tend to read so much, but of anybody really) is taking note of what the writer is reading. This was particularly interesting in reading Journey with My Selves

Dorothy Livesay’s Journey with My Selves 1909-1963 (1991) Part II of II2025-11-10T12:49:53-05:00

Margaret Atwood’s Moving Targets (2005)

2014-02-27T15:52:26-05:00

Just browsing through the table of contents of this essay collection might lead you to believe that it was penned by a feminist. Depending how you define feminist, of course. Certainly Atwood is as willing to consider works by Toni Morrison, Carol Shields, Angela Carter and Hilary Mantel as she

Margaret Atwood’s Moving Targets (2005)2014-02-27T15:52:26-05:00

Margaret Atwood’s Negotiating with the Dead (2002)

2014-02-27T15:26:07-05:00

When I put my mind to thinking of Canadian feminists whose books I wanted to explore in 2010, Margaret Atwood's name came to mind immediately. I was a teenager when I first read The Edible Woman and Life Before Man and Cat's Eye, a young woman heading to university with

Margaret Atwood’s Negotiating with the Dead (2002)2014-02-27T15:26:07-05:00

Ethel Wilson’s Hetty Dorval (1947)

2014-02-27T15:25:14-05:00

It's still early, the winter morning that I begin reading Hetty Dorval, and the train is leaving the station hesitatingly, in the dark and snowless cold. I have my other book in my lap, my fun read, the sort of read that will be perfectly absorbing even after the bulk

Ethel Wilson’s Hetty Dorval (1947)2014-02-27T15:25:14-05:00
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