Thoughts on Emma Donoghue’s Room (2010)

2014-07-11T16:03:31-04:00

Emma Donoghue's Room HarperCollins, 2010 (Looking for a swallow rather than a full glass? ORANGE Squirt below.) I’d hoped to re-read Room before writing about it here, in the context of the Orange Prize shortlist, but I still have two fresh reads from this year’s shortlist ahead of me (The

Thoughts on Emma Donoghue’s Room (2010)2014-07-11T16:03:31-04:00

Kathleen Winter’s Annabel (2010)

2014-07-11T17:22:23-04:00

Kathleen Winter's Annabel House of Anansi, 2010 (Looking for a swallow rather than a full glass? ORANGE Squirt below.) Like Margaret Atwood’s Surfacing and Kate Grenville’s The Secret River, it’s impossible to imagine Kathleen Winter’s Annabel being set anywhere other than the landscape therein. “In Croyden Harbour human life came

Kathleen Winter’s Annabel (2010)2014-07-11T17:22:23-04:00

Caves paved with linoleum

2014-03-11T20:29:13-04:00

Remember those book banners whose knickers were all twisted up over this collection? I bet this week’s stories, “Baptizing” and “Epilogue: The Photographer”, really got them going. Del has ::whispers:: met a boy. She’s still sorting out what that means. She’s still unsure what it means to be a boy.

Caves paved with linoleum2014-03-11T20:29:13-04:00

Lives of Girls and Women (1971) III

2014-03-11T20:34:55-04:00

Blindfolded, only hearing the prose, or seeing the opening lines pulled from the narrative, would you recognize these stories to be the work of Alice Munro based on the first few sentences alone? The opening of “Changes and Ceremonies”: Boys’ hate was dangerous, it was keen and bright, a miraculous

Lives of Girls and Women (1971) III2014-03-11T20:34:55-04:00

On a Reader’s Plate

2014-03-11T20:34:37-04:00

Massimo Marcone’s Acquired Tastes Key Porter, 2010 The subtitle of Massimo Marcone’s book gives it all away: “on the trail of the world’s most sought-after delicacies”. After briefly considering what constitutes a delicacy, and how the concept shifts across time and varies between cultures, the author focuses on a handful

On a Reader’s Plate2014-03-11T20:34:37-04:00
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