Summer Reading To-Do List for Sunny Days (1 of 4)

2020-03-31T12:17:26-04:00

Such good reading this summer, so far. In other respects, perhaps mine has not been the most productive summer. But it all depends what one puts on a to-do list, doesn't it! What if your to-do list was all about the books in your stacks? Doubleday Canada - Penguin Random

Summer Reading To-Do List for Sunny Days (1 of 4)2020-03-31T12:17:26-04:00

Young Love, Complicated Love: Walking on Trampolines

2023-10-12T11:06:51-04:00

For weeks after reading Frances Whiting's Walking on Trampolines, my vocabulary was peppered with LuluBelle-isms. That's how I thought of the habit that young Lulu and Annabelle had, of mashing-up synonyms to intensify the meaning of each individual word. Gallery BooksSimon & Schuster, 2015 (2013) "I'm starmished," I would

Young Love, Complicated Love: Walking on Trampolines2023-10-12T11:06:51-04:00

Young Love, Complicated Love: Nothing Like Love

2023-10-12T11:07:55-04:00

Reading about Sabrina Ramnanan's love of Anne of Green Gables made me really want to read the debut novelist's Nothing Like Love. And it's a good thing that I understood this about her reading past, because it prepared me perfectly for her prose style. Random House CanadaDoubleday Canada, 2015

Young Love, Complicated Love: Nothing Like Love2023-10-12T11:07:55-04:00

Young Love, Complicated Love: Where Did You Sleep Last Night

2015-07-14T10:10:17-04:00

"A man could do a lot for you, he added. I mean, like bulldozing and roofing, heavy lifting, he said. Maybe more." House of Anansi, 2015 So says a character in Lynn Crosbie's Life is about Losing Everything (2012). It might not be the kind of statement that

Young Love, Complicated Love: Where Did You Sleep Last Night2015-07-14T10:10:17-04:00

Jodi Picoult and Samantha van Leer’s Bookish Fairy Tales

2017-07-20T17:40:48-04:00

On the outside? Between the Lines is an ordinary, kinda chunky YA novel. But, inside? Some full-colour illustrations and a generous amount of silhouette artwork are scattered throughout the text, which is printed in three different colours. Simon Pulse, 2012 It begins with "The Beginning", in black text, and a once-upon-a-time

Jodi Picoult and Samantha van Leer’s Bookish Fairy Tales2017-07-20T17:40:48-04:00
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