Canada Reads: Ami McKay

2014-03-10T20:31:12-04:00

Ami McKay's The Birth House Toronto: Knopf-Random House, 2006. After all, our lives are but a sequence of accidents – a clanking chain of chance events. A string of choices, casual or deliberate, which add up to that one big calamity we call life. A Fine Balance Rohinton Mistry Readers of

Canada Reads: Ami McKay2014-03-10T20:31:12-04:00

Canada Reads Indie: Mavis Gallant

2014-03-10T20:29:40-04:00

Mavis Gallant’s Home Truths Gage-Macmillan, 1981. I discovered Mavis Gallant’s stories when I was nearly twenty. I was working in a bookstore and there was a fresh display of New Canadian Library mass-market pocketbooks. (It was the same display that got me reading Alice Munro, but that, too, took some

Canada Reads Indie: Mavis Gallant2014-03-10T20:29:40-04:00

Canada Reads: Carol Shields

2020-08-26T12:45:13-04:00

It was a bitterly cold, blustery day in January 2003. I started reading the book at my desk, which was under the eaves next to a small window. There was a small space heater humming near my feet because the walls up there were cold to the touch, and the

Canada Reads: Carol Shields2020-08-26T12:45:13-04:00

Canada Reads Indie: Stacey May Fowles

2014-03-10T20:23:35-04:00

Stacey May Fowles’ Be Good Tightrope Books, 2007 The substance of this passage, from the early pages of Stacey May Fowles’ first novel, could as easily have been pulled from one of Lynn Coady’s stories, or from Darren Greer’s Still Life with June: “Life is a series of painful, tragic,

Canada Reads Indie: Stacey May Fowles2014-03-10T20:23:35-04:00

Canada Reads: Terry Fallis

2014-03-10T20:19:54-04:00

Terry Fallis’ The Best Laid Plans McClelland & Stewart, 2007 Daniel Addison arrived on Partliament Hill in  Ottawa to work as a speech writer, “[n]aïve, innocent, and excited” and left five years later, “embittered, exhausted, and ineffably sad”. The Best Laid Plans begins after that, so you might expect a

Canada Reads: Terry Fallis2014-03-10T20:19:54-04:00
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