Weekend Sampling: ReLit (Week Two)

2019-10-16T15:36:34-04:00

You might remember that I've been sampling books from Indie presses that have been shortlisted for this year's ReLit Awards. Not just novels, but short stories, even poetry (which is adventurous for me). For a month of Sundays (at least), I'm Buried in ReLit Print. Last weekend's samples? (You can check them out

Weekend Sampling: ReLit (Week Two)2019-10-16T15:36:34-04:00

Dear Autumn

2014-03-13T21:23:47-04:00

I’d’ve thought it more your style to sneak in. I mean, it’s not like those leaves turn colour overnight: it happens on the sly, doesn’t it. But nobody could’ve missed your arrival today. Oh, sure, the sky was grey in the morning. There was even a skitter of

Dear Autumn2014-03-13T21:23:47-04:00

Big Bang: Better Living through Plastic Explosives

2014-03-13T21:23:20-04:00

Zsuzsi Gartner’s Better Living through Plastic Explosives Penguin, 2011 I was stunned by All the Anxious Girls on Earth when it was published in 1999 (tell me: how has it happened that a dozen years have passed since then?). Partly because I read it all-in-a-rush. Partly because the stories are

Big Bang: Better Living through Plastic Explosives2014-03-13T21:23:20-04:00

George Elliott Clarke’s Whylah Falls (1990)

2014-03-13T21:01:24-04:00

George Elliott Clarke’s Whylah Falls (1990) Raincoast Books - Polestar, 2000 George Elliott Clarke’s Whylah Falls tells the story of a group of Afro-Canadians on the south shore of Nova Scotia. Readers can gather that from a quick glance at the book’s front and back covers. But what readers won’t

George Elliott Clarke’s Whylah Falls (1990)2014-03-13T21:01:24-04:00
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