Announced, The 2010 Orange Prize

2014-02-27T17:40:25-05:00

Here is what I like about this year's Orange Prize list. Although I really don't need much convincing on this one: reading the OP backlist is an ongoing pet project of mine. First: Rebecca Gowers' The Twisted Heart Lorrie Moore's A Gate at the Stairs (Because I've already read them

Announced, The 2010 Orange Prize2014-02-27T17:40:25-05:00

Proust in a Rose Garden

2014-02-27T17:38:55-05:00

Kristjana Gunnars' The Rose Garden (1996) When I bought my copy of The Rose Garden, it was shelved in Fiction at The Bookshelf in Guelph,  which is such a good bookstore that eventually I had to move to the town so that I could visit there more often than once

Proust in a Rose Garden2014-02-27T17:38:55-05:00

Feisty orphans: gotta love them

2014-02-27T17:32:35-05:00

This Saturday marks the beginning of a series of Saturdays devoted to Shelf-Discovery reads, or Shelf-Discovery-inspired reads. I joined the actual Challenge late, else there would have been more Saturdays filled with nostalgic re-reading of kidlit heretofore. But better re-read later than never to have read at all. This Saturday

Feisty orphans: gotta love them2014-02-27T17:32:35-05:00

Canada, Between the Pages

2025-06-25T08:43:54-04:00

One of the issues considered in today's show is: how important is a strong sense of place and time for a book to engage a reader with a story. It is important, isn't it. So important that, just with reading that sentence, at least one book, more likely several, came

Canada, Between the Pages2025-06-25T08:43:54-04:00

The smell of chalkboard dust and soil

2014-03-09T12:46:03-04:00

Image links to Pickle Me This, home of the Challenge   Martha Ostenso's Wild Geese (1925) This feels, to me, like the quintessentially Canadian novel, the sort that I can imagine being assigned by English teachers (well, except for a couple of scenes that would have undoubtedly ruffled

The smell of chalkboard dust and soil2014-03-09T12:46:03-04:00
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