Pandexicon, by Wayne Grady. Pub 2023 I don't recall where I first heard of this book, but I know it was in the last month or so, likely on a podcast of some kind. Needing a book to fill the language category, this seemed like a timely fit, and promised (according to the cover) to... Continue Reading →
All the Frequent Troubles of Our Days, by Rebecca Donner. Book report #30 (2023)
All the Frequent Troubles of Our Days, by Rebecca Donner. Pub 2021 I can't remember when or where I first heard of this book, but it would have been last fall sometime, as I bought a copy for myself and sent a copy to a friend. Rebecca Donner is the great-great-niece of Mildred Harnack, an... Continue Reading →
Transcription, by Kate Atkinson. Book report #29 (2023)
Transcription, by Kate Atkinson. Pub 2018 I have a few Kate Atkinson's on my shelf. I've "read" (on Audible) a few other books of hers, and especially enjoyed Life After Life. She is also a mystery writer, with the Jackson Brodie series (also quite good). I wanted to try her in print so see if she's... Continue Reading →
Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam. Book report #28 (2023)
Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, rendered into English verse by Edward Fitzgerald. Originally published in 1859 (1st ed.), my copy from 1960. My current favourite podcast is Backlisted, and I may shortly breakdown and get a paid subscription just so I can get some of my favourite features, including a list of all books mentioned on the... Continue Reading →
Washington Black, by Edi Edugyan. Book report #27 (2023)
Washington Black, by Edi Edugyan. Pub 2018. I've had this one on my shelves for a while now, and recall starting it at least once but getting distracted from it as it seemed to be going in a very bleak direction. But a few months ago, another reader friend mentioned having finished and enjoyed it,... Continue Reading →
The End of Men, by Christina Sweeney-Baird. Book report #26 (2023)
The End of Men, by Christina Sweeney-Baird. Pub 2021 This was an impulse bargain buy at the local bookshop. It looked like a companion piece to The Power, with a different premise but same subject matter: what would the world look like if men were no longer in charge. A key difference: this book was much... Continue Reading →
Mrs. Bridge, by Evan S. Connell. Book report #25 (2023)
Mrs. Bridge, by Evan S. Connell. Pub 1959. This was a recommendation from two years ago from my book club partner. I got it a few months later and made a few false starts on it last year. This year, I got stuck in and enjoyed it. The novel has 117 short chapters that provide... Continue Reading →
Tauhou, by Kōtuku Titihuia Nuttall. Book report #24 (2023)
Tauhou, by Kōtuku Titihuia Nuttall. Pub 2023 This was an impulse purchase last month when picking up some other books. I've been encountering situations with Indigenous communities and relations more and more in my work, and so this book seemed like perhaps a timely way to engage with those, however obliquely. However, the author herself... Continue Reading →
Hangman, by Julie Burtinshaw. Book report #21 (2023)
Hangman, by Julie Burtinshaw. Pub 2022 I purchased this book because it is written by a friend-of-a-friend, and because I thought it was something my mom might enjoy. This is the story of Canada's first official executioner, one John Radclive (or Ratley or Ratcliffe or Radcliff as he variously calls himself). Drawing heavily on Radclive's... Continue Reading →
Unnatural Death, by Dorothy L. Sayers. Book report #20 (2023)
Unnatural Death, by Dorothy L. Sayers. Pub 1927 The third in the Wimsey series, and by far my favourite so far, the eccentric Lord Peter takes on a pseudo-murder investigation, almost on a whim, thus setting in motion a series of additional crimes and murders that ultimately lead to the capture of the killer. Sayers... Continue Reading →