Summer Challenges

2010-06-23T19:03:43-04:00

I took some courses in university in Japanese History and read a fair number of novels then, but, since, I have read Japanese authors spottily. One particular favourite, however, is Banana Yoshimoto and I still have one of her works to look forward to: Hardboiled and Hard Luck Trans. from

Summer Challenges2010-06-23T19:03:43-04:00

Ever-evolving TBR list

2012-04-17T15:35:27-04:00

A couple of weekends ago, I was able to attend an event which included three novelists from Africa: Brian Chikwava (Zimbabwe), Carole Enahoro (Nigeria) and Ngūgī wa Thiong'o (Kenya). They focussed on the following works, respectively: Harare North, Doing Dangerously Well, and Dreams in a Time of War. And, so,

Ever-evolving TBR list2012-04-17T15:35:27-04:00

Calamity’s Brand of Sassy Compassion

2025-06-25T08:41:29-04:00

Nalo Hopkinson's The New Moon's Arms Warner, 2003 Last Sunday I mentioned Nalo Hopkinson's 2003 novel, The Salt Roads; today I've got her 2007 novel The New Moon's Arms on the book-brain. I finished reading it on the front porch on an exceptionally lovely summer afternoon, the sort which is

Calamity’s Brand of Sassy Compassion2025-06-25T08:41:29-04:00

Charmed by Once Upon a Time?

2014-03-09T15:56:56-04:00

P.K. Page's The Old Woman and the Hen Illus. Jim Westergard The Porcupine's Quill, 2009 I wasn't planning to include a Once Upon a Time read for this Saturday. I thought last Saturday's Silverwing would have been my last. And what a fine final read that turned out to be.

Charmed by Once Upon a Time?2014-03-09T15:56:56-04:00

Joan Barfoot’s Dancing in the Dark (1982)

2014-03-09T15:55:22-04:00

Joan Barfoot's Dancing in the Dark Macmillan, 1982 (not the image shown) When I re-read Abra earlier this month, I mentioned that it felt both quiet and revolutionary at the same time. The narrator's self-discovery is relayed through the filter of memory, and the bulk of the action is internal,

Joan Barfoot’s Dancing in the Dark (1982)2014-03-09T15:55:22-04:00
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