Annabel Lyon’s Imagining Ancient Women (2011)

2014-03-18T12:07:07-04:00

To begin, Annabel Lyon turns to books. You know you're in the hands of a writer who truly loves storytelling when that happens, right? Sure, she's making a point: "literary fiction is uniquely poised to perform an important ethical function in our lives -- namely to teach us compassion". But

Annabel Lyon’s Imagining Ancient Women (2011)2014-03-18T12:07:07-04:00

“Miles City, Montana” Alice Munro

2014-06-02T14:35:55-04:00

The turkeys, Steve Gauley, a young girl: drownings. (In my memory of this story, only one of these stood out: wrongly, as it turned out.) Re-reading "Miles City, Montana" reveals the intricate layering of Alice Munro's stories, the multiple threats of drowning and its actual occurrence. One. Then the next.

“Miles City, Montana” Alice Munro2014-06-02T14:35:55-04:00

Annabel Lyon’s The Sweet Girl (2012)

2021-02-01T10:46:38-05:00

Annabel Lyon says that she knew, almost immediately upon beginning to write The Golden Mean, that she would be writing the other half of its story. That was "a very male book...all male characters...about warfare and public life and politics and rationality [and] science, all the things that Aristotle represented".*

Annabel Lyon’s The Sweet Girl (2012)2021-02-01T10:46:38-05:00

The GG’s (at the IFOA) and Other Current Bookish Obsessions

2020-09-16T15:58:45-04:00

It's a busy reading season, and being smitten with prizelists adds to its intensity. As does the amazing schedule of events at the International Festival of Authors. Which included a reading, on Monday night, of the Governor General's English Fiction shortlist, which includes Tamas Dobozy's Siege 13, Robert Hough's Dr Brinkley's Tower, Vincent

The GG’s (at the IFOA) and Other Current Bookish Obsessions2020-09-16T15:58:45-04:00

Three Stages, Seventeen Authors: A Weekend of Bookishness

2014-03-18T12:01:12-04:00

Jonathan Goldstein's short reading from I'll Seize the Day Tomorrow was very funny. He read its introduction, along with a short piece about Mary Poppins and The Penguin and umbrella usage, and a longer story about the time his mother asked him to go with her to the store to

Three Stages, Seventeen Authors: A Weekend of Bookishness2014-03-18T12:01:12-04:00
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