Egregious errors and great gaps?!

2014-03-09T15:53:34-04:00

David Stouck's Ethel Wilson: A Critical Biography UTP, 2003 Here is what David Stouck wrote about Mary McAlpine's book about Ethel Wilson's life: "When I read the book I was aware of egregious errors and great gaps in the life. In the opinion of many reviewers, the book was poorly

Egregious errors and great gaps?!2014-03-09T15:53:34-04:00

Nalo Hopkinson’s The Salt Roads (2003)

2021-02-01T11:28:24-05:00

Nalo Hopkinson The Salt Roads Warner Books, 2003 Reading Nalo Hopkinson’s work makes me stretch. I don’t mean that literally: I pretzel myself to avoid interruption so I can read just one more story, just one more chapter, really, just one more page. But even when my legs are wedged

Nalo Hopkinson’s The Salt Roads (2003)2021-02-01T11:28:24-05:00

Joan Barfoot’s Abra (1978)

2014-03-09T16:11:01-04:00

Joan Barfoot's Abra McGraw-Hill Ryerson, 1978 Edition shown: Women's Press (UK) 1999 The first Joan Barfoot novel that I read was Family News (1989), dating to a time when I only irregularly noted the books that I read in a coilbound exercise book, so I know that I sought out

Joan Barfoot’s Abra (1978)2014-03-09T16:11:01-04:00

Orange Prize Winner and The Good Fiction Guide

2014-03-09T15:24:59-04:00

Well, I can't complain. Although I found the audio version of Barbara Kingsolver's work very tedious listening, I don't think there's any question of the sophisticated storytelling in The Lacuna. (After 5 hours of listening, I realized that I wasn't going to adjust to her delivery style, but I did

Orange Prize Winner and The Good Fiction Guide2014-03-09T15:24:59-04:00
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