Margaret Millar’s An Air that Kills (1957; 2016)

2017-02-24T17:02:31-05:00

Because so many of Margaret Millar's novels consider married couples - often at the point in which the relationship is strained, if not fractured - one wonders about her relationship with Ken Millar (better known as Ross MacDonald, who also wrote mysteries). Did they squabble like Esther and Ron do

Margaret Millar’s An Air that Kills (1957; 2016)2017-02-24T17:02:31-05:00

The Fold’s 2016 Reading List (Part Three)

2017-07-24T14:23:15-04:00

The FOLD (The Festival of Literary Diversity) is an annual event, in Brampton (Ontario, Canada) dedicated to telling more stories, to having audiences connect with a wider variety of storytellers. You can check out their lineup of terrific writers and storytellers who were a part of the debut festival in May

The Fold’s 2016 Reading List (Part Three)2017-07-24T14:23:15-04:00

The Fold’s 2016 Reading List (Part Two)

2016-09-12T13:54:08-04:00

The FOLD (The Festival of Literary Diversity) is an annual event, in Brampton (Ontario, Canada) dedicated to telling more stories, to having audiences connect with a wider variety of storytellers. You can check out their lineup of terrific writers and storytellers who were a part of the debut festival in May

The Fold’s 2016 Reading List (Part Two)2016-09-12T13:54:08-04:00

Bloody Summer 2016, In My Reading Log

2016-07-19T11:15:27-04:00

Massacre, killer, murder: when these words appear on a novel's first page, readers are fore-warned. And, yet, the first third of Sara Taylor's Boring Girls (2015) is a coming-of-age story. "It was becoming more and more apparent that I had been right all along. No one could truly understand me, unless they got

Bloody Summer 2016, In My Reading Log2016-07-19T11:15:27-04:00

Quarterly Stories: Summer 2016

2020-12-18T16:00:14-05:00

Jill Sexsmith's Somewhere a Long and Happy Life Probably Awaits You (ARP Books, 2016)   "Tulip stopped at the doorway. She had grown up with the whir of a mitre saw in the background, always cutting her thoughts and sentences and songs in half. Still, the sound of the blade

Quarterly Stories: Summer 20162020-12-18T16:00:14-05:00
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