Pushing my bookish luck

2010-04-21T14:26:12-04:00

So, here's the thing. I'm reading like a fiend this year. And it's been making me a little crazy. Pleasantly crazy. But crazy all the same. And I look at the list of books I've read and I start to believe that spending every spare second reading is a balanced

Pushing my bookish luck2010-04-21T14:26:12-04:00

What You Miss on the Other Side of the Trees

2014-03-09T14:25:05-04:00

Attica Locke's Black Water Rising Harper Collins, 2009 So if I was relieved to see how relatively short Laila Lalami's The Secret Son was, when I picked it up from the library, as part of my insane Read-the-Orange-Prize-Longlist plan, you can imagine how disheartened I was to see how relatively

What You Miss on the Other Side of the Trees2014-03-09T14:25:05-04:00

Revisiting the Castle

2014-03-09T13:18:57-04:00

This is my second-last Shelf Discovery Challenge post and read. I deliberately chose both this and Jean Auel's The Clan of the Cave Bear to round things up because they were among the books that helped me shift away from kidlit and YA books to adult reading. The transition via

Revisiting the Castle2014-03-09T13:18:57-04:00

Anticipation and Hesitation

2014-03-09T13:16:33-04:00

Ethel Wilson's Love and Salt Water (1956) McClelland & Stewart, NCL 1990. The advantages of reading an author's works through are many; I love the sense of truly-getting-acquainted that comes with this reading immersion, the intense satisfaction of recognizing interconnections (and divergences) between stories and longer works, the sense of

Anticipation and Hesitation2014-03-09T13:16:33-04:00

Secrets = Complications

2014-03-09T13:14:38-04:00

I admit it: the first feeling that I had when I saw Laila Lalami's novel was relief, relief that it was obviously shorter than so many of the novels I wanted to read so quickly as part of the Orange Prize longlist reading I wanted to do. Not very propitious,

Secrets = Complications2014-03-09T13:14:38-04:00
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