Michael Ondaatje’s In the Skin of a Lion (1987)

2024-09-03T11:49:47-04:00

Michael Ondaatje’s In the Skin of a Lion Knopf, 1987 I first read this as a teenager. I’d already been reading a lot of adult literature, even if I was still regularly re-reading childhood favourites like the Anne books and still discovering some classics like K.M. Peyton’s Flambards stories and

Michael Ondaatje’s In the Skin of a Lion (1987)2024-09-03T11:49:47-04:00

Holding My Reader’s Breath

2014-03-10T20:45:53-04:00

Robert Kroetsch’s What the Crow Said General, 1978. Some students are introduced to Robert Kroetsch in university; his novel Badlands was on my introductory English course, but apparently the professor opted for another work. So I discovered What the Crow Said thanks to a list compiled by Aritha van Herk.

Holding My Reader’s Breath2014-03-10T20:45:53-04:00

Canada Reads: Middle (Day Two)

2014-03-10T20:44:31-04:00

If I was coming into these debates not having read these books, I think I’d be readily swayed by Lorne Cardinal’s defense of Carol Shields’ novel, Unless. (With Sara Quin weighing in on the other end of the table.) I’m not just saying that because Unless is one of my

Canada Reads: Middle (Day Two)2014-03-10T20:44:31-04:00

Canada Reads: Beginning (Day One)

2014-03-10T20:44:40-04:00

Launching with an hour-long show is great. A half-hour launch leaves a scrambled sense of the panelists, and their passion for their chosen works is nothing but a blur before it’s time to relegate one of those to the sidelines. Did the montages for each book make the best use

Canada Reads: Beginning (Day One)2014-03-10T20:44:40-04:00

Canada Reads: Angie Abdou

2014-03-10T20:43:15-04:00

Angie Abdou’s The Bone Cage NeWest Press, 2007 Chlorine and sweat: Angie Abdou’s debut novel is soaked. And if you can’t abide the smell of either, you might not want to cozy up to the tale of Sadie and Digger. These two are splashing their way to the top, elite

Canada Reads: Angie Abdou2014-03-10T20:43:15-04:00
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