Margaret Atwood’s Maddaddam (2013)

2019-08-28T13:07:42-04:00

Because Maddaddam is the last work in a trilogy, it's appropriate to consider the author's comments on endings. McClelland & Stewart - Random House of Canada, 2013 They are hard, she says, in interview with Martin Halliwell in 2003, the same year that Oryx and Crake, the first

Margaret Atwood’s Maddaddam (2013)2019-08-28T13:07:42-04:00

Why Richard van Camp’s Godless but Loyal to Heaven landed his works on my MRE list

2025-08-08T11:28:00-04:00

As an object, this collection from Enfield & Wizenty is striking. And -- I can't tell you how much I love this detail -- it has a ribbon to mark your place. Great Plains Publications - Enfield & Wizenty, 2012 Immediately upon finishing the first story ("On the

Why Richard van Camp’s Godless but Loyal to Heaven landed his works on my MRE list2025-08-08T11:28:00-04:00

Lauren B. Davis’ The Empty Room (2013)

2021-07-02T16:34:34-04:00

"No, drinking oneself to death took too long." Harper Collins, 2013 Ironically, Colleen thinks this almost at the end of Lauren B. Davis' The Empty Room. But once a reader has resolved to begin, the narrative is so tightly constructed that readers are as caught in the momentum

Lauren B. Davis’ The Empty Room (2013)2021-07-02T16:34:34-04:00

Timothy Findley’s The Wars (1977)

2014-03-20T19:58:47-04:00

"In the lane, I had already lost a boot and fallen on my knees so that now my trousers were soaked and one of my socks was sodden and the bottoms of both my sleeves were freezing against my wrists." Harper Collins, 1990 This is Timothy Findley, writing

Timothy Findley’s The Wars (1977)2014-03-20T19:58:47-04:00
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