Alistair MacLeod’s “The Boat” (1968)

2021-03-30T14:17:43-04:00

Those of you who are reading here now, but not reading Alistair MacLeod’s short stories, will probably only be interested in the first couple of paragraphs after this introduction. Feel free to skip past the section that I've titled The Underneath, written with those who know the story-or other

Alistair MacLeod’s “The Boat” (1968)2021-03-30T14:17:43-04:00

Slavery: Past and Present #280898 Reasons (1 of 4)

2021-09-27T18:06:32-04:00

In the past few weeks, I’ve read a few books for this reading project; at this rate, I will easily read the 32 books I’m aiming for (representing the percentage of people in one American state, who voted in November 2020 on a bill which maintained the legal option to

Slavery: Past and Present #280898 Reasons (1 of 4)2021-09-27T18:06:32-04:00

Return Trips: Here and Elsewhere

2020-12-27T14:26:34-05:00

Over the year, my #HereandElsewhere project took me to the following places in my reading: Copenhagen, London, Havana, Kyoto, Paris, San Francisco, Marrakech, Mexico City, Rome, Shanghai, Amsterdam and New York City. But even while an ordinary desk-top calendar inspired me to read and watch beyond my usual borders, I was even more acutely aware of

Return Trips: Here and Elsewhere2020-12-27T14:26:34-05:00

Margaret Atwood Reading Month: Launch, Week One #MARM

2020-11-18T09:18:33-05:00

This year, for Margaret Atwood Reading Month #MARM, we’re playing BINGO. (If you’re printing your playing card, don’t forget to select “Shrink to Fit” in your printer’s options, so your card will fill a single sheet of paper.) In recent weeks, looking ahead to November was like having a

Margaret Atwood Reading Month: Launch, Week One #MARM2020-11-18T09:18:33-05:00

The Final Chapter of My Mavis Gallant Reading Project

2020-08-11T08:27:05-04:00

In his introduction to Mavis Gallant’s Paris Stories (2002), Michael Ondaatje describes her Europe as a place of “shipwrecks” (a recurring word in this collection, he notes). Her characters are “permanent wanderers”, often from Canada and Eastern Europe, and not always from or in Paris, but Mavis Gallant

The Final Chapter of My Mavis Gallant Reading Project2020-08-11T08:27:05-04:00
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