Continuing yesterday’s talk of remembrance reading, while I reflect on other reading from 2025 and possibilities for reading this year.
The first of his books published in his mother tongue (Gikuyu), Weep Not, Child is the second novel by Ngugi Wa Thiong’o (b. 1938), who died on May 28. I read some of his essays on language and culture this spring, around the same time that Bill read this 1963 novel (he posted links to various obits too). There is heartache in the story, even though it’s only partially understood and experienced by the narrator, Njoroge, who is a young child in the 1950s. Nonetheless, he witnesses violence and struggle, against his mother and also against the modern idea that education leads to opportunity (it being inextricably linked with colonisation). His excitement about school (a theme which also surfaces in John Munonye’s Oil Man of Obange) not only signifies prosperity, but boarding school later removes him from the conflict which would come to be known as the Mau Mau Revolution/Rebellion. Torn between loyalty to his family members (who resist colonial forces) and loyalty to his childhood friend (whose father now inhabits the land previously inhabited by Njoroge’s family), he witnesses family dynamics shift too quickly to comprehend.
“Ngotho rarely complained. He had all his life lived under the belief that something big would happen. That was why he did not want to be way from the land that belonged to his ancestors.”


Jane Gardam (b. 1928) landed on my list of MustReadEverything authors early, when an English friend sent me a copy of Bilgewater; Jane Gardam died April 28, 2025. She is one of the few writers whose short story collections interest me even more than her novels (but I also love those). Even so, Missing the Midnight (1997) sat on my shelves for more than twenty years before I realised it’s a collection of Carols, Grotesques, and Hauntings: perfect for late-year reading. As usual, I enjoyed all the stories. Even the ones written like fairy tales or fables, which don’t win me over as easily as they once did (generally). Gardam manages to punctuate hers with the most peculiar but credible details—so, I’m all in. And I was especially keen to find “Old Filth”, which I had thought began as the novel of the same name (but it would seem he introduced himself in a shorter work). That might have been my favourite of the stories—“The Zoo at Christmas” was probably my next favourite, with “Soul Mates” a different (and darker) sort of delight. [Gift article for NYT obit]
“Snow settles lightly on the ground, on fur and hide. The snow leopard moves to a little distance on account of his rarity and distinction. He purrs. He sounds like a distant motorbike.”
Contents: Missing the Midnight, The Zoo at Christmas, Old Filth, Miss Mistletoe, Christmas Island, Grace, Light, The Girl with the Golden Ears, The Boy who Turned into a Bike, The Pillow Goose, Soul Mates, Green Man
Antonine Maillet (b. 1929) is a canonical writer in Canada, not-so-well-known in anglophone Canada because she’s French, and arguably not-so-well-known in francophone Canada because she’s Acadian. She died on Febuary 17th (Global News) She was one of the first Canadian writers I read, in my late teens, drawn into the cover of On the Eighth Day. My paperback copy of Pélagie (a 1979 translation by Philip Stratford) with the world’s tiniest print is well-worn; someone squinted their way through it a few times before I picked it up. And, no wonder: it’s that peculiar and quintessentially Québécoise blend of wickedness and sorrow, humour and enchantment. Opening with the departure (exile) of a group of Acadians from the southern United States, readers travel with them by cart to a place they can call home. The importance of storytelling, as a means of establishing identity when territory is not available, is omnipresent, but Maillet puts a distinctly feminine spin on it: female characters capable and feisty, authoritative and only tender with the trustworthy. (There’s no combat with the original inhabitants of these lands, only with other settlers.)
“He could roll you out the whole lineage without dropping a stitch. He could crochet you in a trice the history of a people who went from France to Acadie passing through exile, one little generation of exile, one wee little generation, Pélagie, nothing to get overheated about. Go on up, go on back up north, but don’t get so agitated, and don’t go kicking so hard against Destiny, who’ll always get the upperhand anyway.”


With his 1984 novel Jitterbug Perfume, Tom Robbins (b. 1932) landed on my MRE list before I had a MRE list. The only one I’ve missed was 2003’s Villa Incognito, but when I learned that he died on February 9th (USA Today), it was the first of his novels I read, that I longed to reread (and not for the first time). What does ‘cult writer’ mean anyway? A certain element of surprise (here, a reimagination of the “old Gods”, ribald and trickstery, which felt daring back then) on the writer’s part, and dedication (purchasing, pressing copies on friends) on the reader’s part? But from a marketing perspective, I suppose it also whispers that one shouldn’t expect anything super-literary: pop culture, not poetry? But Robbins’ use of language is lyrical: or—is it just “over the top”—now I’m not sure. It’s hard to imagine writers like Christopher Moore and Kevin Hearne smashing onto the scene, selling so many copies of their crazy imaginings and reimaginings, without Tom Robbins having done his Thing for so many years. Jitterbug Perfume did feel like a favourite of younger-reading-me more than it felt like a book that would spark a full exploration of his backlist now, but I still loved rereading it, even so.
“A sense of humor…is superior to any religion so far devised.”
Working in an independent bookshop when I was young, I learned about Jane Goodall (b. 1934) (Canadian Geographic) and, when the movie tie-in for Virunga later appeared on the shelves, I couldn’t resist. And although my (step) kids’ bookshelves were mostly stocked with fiction, a biography of Goodall was amongst them. She’s someone I’ve always viewed as an inspiration and although I mostly valued her speeches and presentations, her books too. The Book of Hope (2021) I’ve recommended many times (subtitled A Survival Guide for Trying Times), but 2014’s Seeds of Hope (subtitled Wisdom and Wonder from the World of Plants) is every bit as good. I loved the drawings from her childhood notebooks, and she incorporates difficult subjects in a broader context, so that it’s informational (not only inspirational) and you have the agency to translate that into action (i.e. you’re not told what to do, not scolded for what’s already happened). Even though she often referenced her age in recent events, her death still took me by surprise: such a force.
“Compared to a chemical-dependent tea field, an organic one hosts 44 percent more birds in the autumn and winter, has 57 percent more animal species, and has five times more wild plants.”

And, finally, Canadian author JD Derbyshire also died this year; here is Goose Lane’s remembrance and a link to my reading of their latest book, Mercy Gene.
Isn’t it sad about Jane Goodall. It’s been months probably now … but still I thought she might live a great deal longer. She had this aura of hope & light about her when no one else does. She was a beacon for wildlife in many forms.
There’s an interview on YT between her and MArgaret Atwood which was a real delight to watch: such intrepid women indeed!
I’ve been meaning to read Jane Goodall, well, ever since I saw the movie Gorillas in the Mist all those years ago! And Mario Vargas Llosa’s death in April reminded me I have a couple of his books unread on my TBR (although I did nothing about it!)
Kerry Greenwood’s death in March certainly prompted me to read her final Phyrne Fisher book when it was published in September, I think. A nice way to honour someone who has provided so much reading enjoyment over the years and I appreciate how you do this consciously instead of the haphazard way I do it 🙂
I had previously dismissed MVL (decades ago), except for a slim volume about writing, but now feel the need to read his fiction: partly due to his canonical status, but also because I confuse him with Carlos Fuentes and I think reading more by both is the solution. In the past, I confused people writing about unlikeable characters with the authors themselves sharing/promoting certain thoughts and ideas, so these gaps exist.
Haphazard is how I’ve been doing it until recently. #relate But it actually worked so much better to be making notes/plans in my calendar about it all year, gradually acquring copies: November and December were much less stressful (despite how busy November is) than ever before. But as a bookseller, it’s harder to not “do new” in those months.
I don’t think I’d even realized Tom Robbins died this last year, though at 92 (!) I suppose it’s not surprising. Jitterbug Perfume is my favorite of his (though I haven’t quite read all of them). Is it the Classical-ish theme to it? Maybe. Tempting to reread it.
I’ve also got one unread Ngugi on my shelves which would be an appropriate memorial.
Happy New Year!
I think I learned of it via Poets & Writers. For me, I think it was the vegetables! heheh But Pan didn’t hurt.
The only one I have at home unread is A Grain of Wheat.
My unread Ngugi is Weep Not, Child, the one you just read. Your thoughts have been an inducement.
Lucky: it took me forever to find this copy!
I found a couple at a UofT fall sale a couple of years ago. The last one I read was The River Between, which was good, but deals with female circumcision, and it didn’t send me off to read the last one I had immediately afterwards.
Hmmm, I think that one is on my shelves too. I love it when a college booksale offers up a couple/few by the same author in a little clump. You know someone really enjoyed their work (at one point, anyway heheh).
The death of JD Derbyshire was so sad to hear about. I remember seeing JD speak at a few events here in Calgary. Goodall of course was also one I was incredibly saddened to hear about – inspirational as a word just doesn’t seem enough to describe her incredible impact.
I’ve never seen them live, but I bet those events were entertaining.
Yeah, I know what you mean; I think ‘inspiring’ must be overused, because she IS the definition of it but somehow it feels weak alongside her presence.
I’ve been meaning to read Jane Gardam. In fact I thought I had read a book by her but she’s not in my reading log (from about 2000). She might be in my handwritten diaries but she’s not on my shelves and I would have thought she was if I’d read her. So … I still have to get to her.
I have always loved the title Jitterbug perfume, but I’ve never read it, or Even cowgirls get the blues. Mea culpa. But, I do love this quote, “A sense of humor…is superior to any religion so far devised.”
I would have thought Old Filth might have been on your stack at some point. It’s the best-known, I think? But recent enough to be in your log if you’d read that one. Bill read her Flight of the Maidens not long ago, on Kim’s reco I think, and I took his response as, “it was fine” (which I’d agree with, but because I have been fond of her for so long, I had more reminders of what I’d loved in her other books to take the sting out of that).
That statement of his probably stood out even more for me back in the 80s!
Yes, a few years ago, I thought I had read Old Filth as it rang such a bell, but I can find no evidence so I think I haven’t!
Jane Gardam is someone I keep meaning to read and never get to. It’s encouraging to hear how highly you rate her!
Bilgewater could be a candidate for A Book a Day in May. It’s not novella-length or anything, but it reads very comfortably (for a story about a solitary bookish misfit, if you know what I mean) and I gobbled it nearly-whole.
Tom Robbins! I read Jitterbug Perfume ages ago in my much younger days. My sister and I both loved him but then he just got to be too much and I haven’t read him since. Brings back memories though!
Still grieving Jane Goodall’s passing. What a shining light she was. If you have Netflix, be sure to check out the Famous Last Words series. They record interviews and keep them in a vault until the interviewee dies. Goodall’s is amazing and beautiful.
I tried to binge all those little Bantam paperbacks when they were reissued, so I can see how easily one could overdose.
I was hoping you would have seen it; so far, I can’t even look at the button in my queue without tearing up. Thanks for the nudge though.
That’s an interesting idea – a good idea – to write of writers we have lost during the year. I don’t generally pay enough attention to bookish news to see the announcements at the time. The exception this year of course was Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o who I was writing up when I saw something in Nigeria’s The Republic I think.
Of your other writers I have only read Robbins, his Even Cowgirls get the Blues (re-reading my review I see the issue of children and ‘consent’ comes up/gets me riled up). I am meant to have read Robbins’ memoir Tibetan Peach Pie. Perhaps this reminder will spur me on.
I missed Assata Shakur (noted in this week’s New York Magazine) so I have her autobiography down for next year now.
How unexpected that he’s known down under when so many other North Americans aren’t! Yes, there are all sorts of reasons one could get riled via his quips and comments and, even, whole plotlines (partly, too, because it’s hard to see how much is story and how much is storyteller). Wholly improbable as it is, there’s a copy of Pie in the library; once things thaw, perhaps I’ll give it a peek.
I had heard of Cowgirls GTB, saw the movie. But I read the book because Melanie (GTL) pushed me
Ahhh, The Thorn Birds effect, but in reverse. And perhaps Sissy’s abundant travelling on the roadways of the continent suggested an affinity? I liked that one well enough, but it felt more like a collection of good lines and fun scenes than a novel, and I was solidly inhabiting novels-only territory at the time.