A Moody Reader?

2014-02-27T16:50:25-05:00

Ray Robertson's Moody Food (2002) A hundred pages into Moody Food, I was still wondering if this was really The Book for Me. And, admittedly, that's the feeling I had right at the start: a football scene is not a cozy welcome for this reader. But there was also a

A Moody Reader?2014-02-27T16:50:25-05:00

Magazine: Brick

2014-02-27T19:01:49-05:00

When I re-subscribed to Brick Magazine earlier this year, a pull-down menu asked how I had heard about their publication. I sat and thought about it but finally filled the field with this: I feel as though I've always known about Brick. But, when I revisit my magazine files (carefully

Magazine: Brick2014-02-27T19:01:49-05:00

Settling in with Elizabeth Smart

2014-02-27T16:38:36-05:00

Elizabeth Smart’s Journals, Edited by Alice van Wart Necessary Secrets (1991) and On the Side of the Angels (1994) Let’s say you haven’t even heard of this writer before and, as a good little feminist, you wonder why I’ve chosen to read her for the Women Unbound Challenge, and you

Settling in with Elizabeth Smart2014-02-27T16:38:36-05:00

A Reader’s Great (or Not So) Expectations

2014-02-27T16:33:55-05:00

Click the cover to visit the author's site Douglas Coupland's Generation X (1991) Generation X should top my mental list of reads that remind me why re-reading is important. I read this book shortly after it was published, but I didn't remember much about it at all. And perhaps

A Reader’s Great (or Not So) Expectations2014-02-27T16:33:55-05:00

Unexpected literary pairings

2014-02-27T16:23:56-05:00

  I love it when one read brushes up against another and this happened twice with two of mine this reading month.First, in Christina Longford's Making Conversation (1931), I came across this: "Miss Spencer at the High School had always scolded her for saying 'well,' and used to ask, 'Where's

Unexpected literary pairings2014-02-27T16:23:56-05:00
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