Tuesday, December 13, 2011

What I am reading now- Moody Food

Moody Food
Moody Food (Biblioasis, 2002) by Ray Robertson
This 1960s rock 'n' roll tale about a bookseller makes the reader laugh out loud. Andrew Johnson wants to share the good times with you, writing:
"Moody Food is a fantastic rock 'n' roll novel that is also a terrific novel. Strangely under-appreciated, the book also draws on one of the great scenes in Canadian history, Yorkville in the mid-1960s, a rich place/time that deserves more celebration than it gets."
Accolades: Ray Robertson won over fans and critics alike with Moody Food. The Globe and Mail called it "clever, word-drunk and falling-down funny," adding that "Robertson is a moral writer and a bitingly intelligent one, a man who writes with penetrating insight of what needs to be written about: beauty, truth and goodness."

Monday, December 12, 2011

Pattern Recognition

Pattern Recognition
Pattern Recognition (Penguin, 2003) by William Gibson
Science fiction writer William Gibson broke out of the cyberpunk mould with this thrilling take on consumer culture and the quest for meaning in contemporary life. Sheila Barry was bursting with enthusiasm for the book:
"With Neuromancer, William Gibson invented cyberspace, and he has been imagining, and perhaps helping to create, our future ever since. His novels are inventive, exciting, scrupulously plotted, and full of unique and memorable characters. Even his darkest scenarios include a faith in the warmth and goodness of ordinary people, and his own warmth and empathy as an author come through on every page."
Accolades: Pattern Recognition picked up nominations for the British Science Fiction Association Award, the Arthur C. Clarke Award and a Locus Award, along with plenty of critical praise, including from Kirkus Reviews, which noted its "laser-perfect cultural radar."

So here's the story.  I haven't done this before, but I just couldn't finish this book.  It was borrowed from another library that only gave me 6 days to read it and it was REALLY dry and out there.  I knew that I didn't want to spend any more of my life reading it.  I was halfway through and not sure what it was about!

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

February


February by Lisa Moore February (House of Anansi, 2009) by Lisa Moore
In February, Lisa Moore uses a real-life tragedy (the sinking of the Ocean Ranger off the coast of Newfoundland in 1982) as the basis for a sensitive exploration of grief that won reader Penelope Williams's vote. She wrote:
"This is one of my top ten novels ever. Reasons? Spare beautiful prose, characters you want never to lose touch with because they are as real as family, strong sense of place [ ....] But most of all, her depiction and understanding of grief. How does a young writer understand with such empathy an older woman's feelings? Amazing. Moore is one of the writers today who can pierce your heart with one sentence eliciting an unexpected gust of tears, or causing a whoop of laughter (not the same sentence of course...). Her understanding of the human character resonates like a bell."
Accolades: February won an Independent Publisher Book Award, was named to the Globe and Mail's Top 100 Books of 2009 and was a New York Times Editors' Choice. It also showed up on the shortlist of numerous awards including the regional Commonwealth Writers' Prize, the BMO Winterset Award and the Newfoundland and Labrador Book Award.

I enjoyed this book.  Nothing too spectacular.  I'd give it a B-.

Monday, November 21, 2011

Far to Go

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Far to Go (House of Anansi, 2010) by Alison Pick
Lucy Valko feels that even though this heartbreaking tale of an affluent Jewish family in Czechoslovakia at the outset of the Second World War was published mere months ago, it's a novel every Canadian should read. She writes:
"A compelling story...but most powerful is the way the author was able to capture it. Alison Pick has a gift of painting the internal and external worlds of her characters with a lightness of depth that makes what is human — beautiful."
Accolades: A September 2010 pub date means Far to Go may still garner a nomination or two in future literary awards. In the meantime, it's had a warm reception from critics, earning a glowing review from the Globe and Mail, among others: "The writing in Far to Go is clean, crisp and unencumbered. Pick never dwells for too long in an image or metaphor, and she creates small moments that are both lovely and frightening."

This book was almost amazing.  It seemed that the author couldhave elaborated a little more and made it a better story.  Almost seemed that she was rushing it to finish at the end, like she had a 300 page limit!  Good read, though.

Friday, November 4, 2011

Drive By Saviours

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Drive-by Saviours (Fernwood Publishing, 2010) by Chris Benjamin
Chris Benjamin's tale of a cross-cultural friendship struck a chord with David Cribbs, who wrote "It's highly demonstrative of contemporary Canada: the story of an immigrant and a Canadian born, who meet on the subway, and whose lives come to intertwine. Many can relate to this book, it crosses cultural divides."
Accolades: Drive-by Saviours is hot off the press (it was published in September 2010), so it hasn't had much time to earn any laurels. But it won a rave review from critic Stephen Patrick Clare in the Halifax Chronicle-Herald, who called it "one of the finest first narratives to emerge from Atlantic Canada in recent memory. Well-balanced and masterfully crafted with a prose that is both poignant and poised, the work is certain to be considered for literary awards."

It wasn't a page turner, but it was a lovely story.  Nice for a rainy day.

Through Black Spruce

 Through Black Spruce
Through Black Spruce (Viking Canada, 2008) by Joseph Boyden
Joseph Boyden's haunting follow-up to Three Day Road follows Annie, a young woman hunting her for disappeared sister, and their aging and lonely uncle.Many readers, including Deb Powell, found it stirring:
"It is very moving, emotionally, geographically and historically. Touching an essential essence of Canadian identity, it deserves to be the must-read book of the last decade."
Accolades: This winner of the 2008 Scotiabank Giller Prize also captured the CBA Libris Award. Fellow Top 40 author Zoe Whittall was one of the novel's admirers; in her review for NOW magazine, she praised it as "a complicated saga that is emotionally satisfying, suspenseful and well crafted."

Loved this book!!!!

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Conceit

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Conceit (Random House of Canada, 2007) by Mary Novik
Mary Novik's journey to 17th-century London, England, had many readers, including Heather Walter, swooning. In her nomination, she writes:
"I recommend Conceit because it is far and away the best and most ambitious novel on a literary theme that I have read."
Accolades: Conceit took home the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize, awarded annually to the best book of fiction by a B.C. author, and was a Scotiabank Giller Prize finalist. The Globe and Mail declared it a must-read, citing that "reading Conceit is like settling into a multi-course feast that shifts your ideas of food, of the wonders that art can conjure from the staples of life."

This book could have been great but it veered off a little and got a little off topic, I found.  I would have liked it to have focused more on the present time and not to have been so literal in assuming that you knew where the author was going.

Elle

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Elle (Goose Lane Editions, 2003) by Douglas Glover
This 16th-century romp is nothing short of brilliant, according to the many readers who recommended it to Canada Reads. Bethany Gibson writes:
"It's brilliant. Lusty and scary and smart and energetic, a true stand-out in Canadian fiction."
Accolades: Elle scored the Governor General's Award for Fiction and was a finalist for the Commonwealth Writers' Prize.

Loved this book.  Didn't think I could like a book about a woman turning into a bear, but surprisingly, I really did.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Bottle Rocket Hearts

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Bottle Rocket Hearts (Cormorant Books, 2007) by Zoe Whittall
This coming-of-age tale set in 1995 Montreal has it all: love, sex, a referendum and a large, devoted fan base. In his reader recommendation, Michel Sauve wrote:
"I read through this book so fast, it was like drinking a glass of water. It speaks so poignantly of queer life in Montreal during the referendum, that I felt like I had lived the story myself. It's witty, wry and insightful. A must-read!"
Accolades: Zoe Whittall's debut novel took home the Dayne Ogilive Grant Award and won rave reviews, including from the Globe and Mail, which wrote, "Zoe Whittall might just possibly be the cockiest, brashest, funniest, toughest, most life-affirming, elegant, scruffy, no-holds-barred writer to emerge from Montreal since Mordecai Richler." (The book's film rights have also been optioned, so keep your eyes peeled for a movie version in the near future!)

Good read.  Felt like I was really there in the action of Quebec in the 90's.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Inside

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Inside (Random House of Canada, 2006) by Kenneth J. Harvey
This unflinching story of a newly released ex-con's adjustment to life on the outside in a rough neighbourhood of St. John's was reader Craig Pyette's pick. He wrote: "Inside is the most effectively innovative and emotionally pointed Canadian novel of the decade. No boredom, stock characters or unlikely nonsense here. It's as precise as a needle in the bone — and after it's finished you feel it for just about as long."
Accolades: Critics and award juries obviously like 'em tough. Inside won the Rogers Writers' Trust Prize and the BMO Winterset Award and was a finalist for the Scotiabank Giller. It was also named one of the top books of the year by Quill & Quire and the Globe and Mail among other media outlets.

Really enjoyed this book.  It was written with very short sentences that were a little tough to get used to but very easy to read.  Liked the open ended ending.

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Late Nights on Air

Late Nights on air
Late Nights on Air (McClelland & Stewart, 2007) by Elizabeth Hay
Late Nights on Air offers the story of an unforgettable cast of characters — outcasts working at a small CBC radio station in Yellowknife — set against the stunning backdrop of the Far North. It warmed the hearts of readers nation-wide, including Kitty Chavarie, who had this to say:
"A truly Canadian experience to read such a novel. As a person who moves books around by trading and sharing this is one that is mine and mine alone. Makes me wish I was a radio broadcaster with all these folks having this fresh new life."
Accolades: Late Nights on Air nabbed the coveted Scotibank Giller Prize and garnered rave reviews. The Toronto Star called it "Psychologically astute, richly rendered and deftly paced...a pleasure from start to finish."

I have to say, this was a really boring book.  It was short but took forever to get through.  I couldn't connect with any of the characters.  Thumbs down.

Friday, August 5, 2011

The Way the Crow Flies

The Way the Crow Flies (Vintage Canada, 2003) by Ann-Marie MacDonald
Ann-Marie MacDonald's story of an Ontario community shaken by a terrible crime (and inspired in part by one of Canada's most notorious murders) quickly became a bestseller and book club favourite. L.M. Afonso gave it a glowing recommendation:
"This is an awesome book, as is anything by Ann-Marie MacDonald. I love that it takes the Steven Truscott story and weaves it into her own fictional account from the eyes of a young girl on a Laval army base. Just the line, 'the crows saw the murder' is worth the read b/c it is sooo intriguing!!"
Accolades: The Way the Crow Flies walked off with the Canadian Booksellers Association Libris Award and made the shortlist of the Scotiabank Giller Prize and the Commonwealth Writers' Prize. Critics also showered praise on the book, among them the Chicago Tribune reviewer, who called it "Remarkable...an engrossing, disturbing and layered tale."

Finally finished this one.  Really gonna have to pull up my socks if I am to finish on time!  It was good.  Long, but good.  By the end I started thinking that the beginning was part of a different novel since it was so long ago that I started it! 

The Way the Crow Flies

Sunday, June 26, 2011

The Day the Falls Stood Still

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The Day the Falls Stood Still (HarperCollins Canada, 2007) by Cathy Marie Buchanan
Christine Leonard loved this love story set against the backdrop of Niagara Falls in the early part of the 20th century, and she thinks readers everywhere will too:
"This book has something for everyone.The compelling voice of the main character Bess Heath takes the reader on a page-turning journey that encompasses a history of Niagara Falls, hydroelectric power and WWI. Buchanan expertly weaves a very personal story with the larger themes of the war, class and the environment. I love that the book is not easy to classify — it is a story that will resonate with both women and men. And, while a very Canadian story, an international audience will be fascinated by her depiction of the famous waterfall."
Accolades: Who wouldn't want to read a book whose Globe and Mail review opens with: "What a wordsmith! What a work of depth and breadth! What a world newcomer Cathy Marie Buchanan brings to propulsively glittering and gorgeous life in The Day the Falls Stood Still."

Loved this book.  Lovely story.

Monday, June 20, 2011

The Stone Carvers

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The Stone Carvers (McClleland & Stewart, 2001) by Jane Urquhart
The Stone Carvers is one of the older books on the Top 40 list, but that doesn't mean its appeal has faded at all with time. Cynthia Gordon sings the praises of this epic story of love and war and the redemptive power of art, which is set in the early 20th century and ranges from southern Ontario to Europe after the First World War.
"This is a beautiful novel that brings the Battle of Vimy Ridge (and its importance to the Canadian identity) to life. I read it close to 10 years ago and it has stayed with me. It is timeless and a novel all Canadians should read."
Accolades: The Stone Carvers scored three big hits in 2001, being named to the shortlist of the Governor General's Award and the Scotiabank Giller Prize, and making the long list of the Man Booker Prize.

I enjoyed this book.  It took awhile to read but not because it was long or boring, just busy in the summer!

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

The Year of the Flood

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The Year of the Flood (McClelland & Stewart) by Margaret Atwood
Margaret Atwood's post-apocalyptic tale wowed many readers, including Laura Rochon, who wrote:
"This should be read by all Canadians as a cautionary tale of what may happen if we continue to stretch environmental patience and if we continue to flirt with what is ethical with technology and science."
Accolades: A runaway bestseller, The Year of the Flood was shortlisted for the Scotiabank Giller Prize and the Trillium Book Award. It also garnered critical acclaim at home and abroad, including from Publishers Weekly, which praised it as "a gutsy and expansive novel, rich with ideas and conceits."

Another slogger!  I don't quite know who these people are who think that this is one of the top 40 books of the last decade, no offense Margaret!  Some of Margaret's books are my favourite!

Monday, May 16, 2011

Essex County

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Essex County (Top Shelf Comics, 2007) by Jeff Lemire
One of two graphic novels to make the list, Essex County tells the tale of, well, Essex County in southwestern Ontario. This critically acclaimed collection scored legions of fans, including Jeffrey Wegener who wrote:
"Essex County is a beautifully and intimately written and drawn graphic novel trilogy that captures not only the feel of rural Canada, but its people. It is emotional, real, and heartbreaking."
Accolades: Jeff Lemire is a graphic novelist on the rise, recently being named one of Wizard magazine's 25 "rising stars" and taking home the Joe Shuster Award for Outstanding Canadian Comic Book Cartoonist, the Doug Wright Award for Best Emerging Talent and a 2008 Alex Award from the American Library Association.

Loved it!  Loved even more that it only took me a day to read!  Great timing, just before another Margaret Atwood book.

Friday, April 8, 2011

Three Day Road

Three Day Road
Three Day Road (Penguin Canada, 2005) by Joseph Boyden
Like many Canadians, A. Johnson was captivated by the power of Joseph Boyden's prose:
"I read this book at the cottage in the summer of 2006, and four years later the tale still sits in my heart. The bravery, loneliness and love of the main characters as well as the Canadian and European setting of the novel, mark it as the quintessential Canadian novel of the decade. It could be hoped that the theme of healing in this novel inspire readers to seek peace with difficult memories in their own lives."
Accolades: Three Day Road didn't win Canada Reads (it came second to A Complicated Kindness), but don't feel bad for Joseph Boyden: his book took home several smaller prizes, including the Amazon.ca/Books in Print First Novel Award, and made the Governor General's Award shortlist.

Enjoyed this book.  I liked how it kept switching the point of view. 

The Bishop's Man


The Bishop's Man (Random House of Canada, 2009) by Linden MacIntyre
Set in a remote Cape Breton village The Bishop's Man is a powerful exploration of the scandal of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church through the eyes of a conflicted priest. Jenny Ormson called it "brilliant. timely. economy of words. riveting. horrifying. beautiful. compelling. relevant. provoking."
Accolades: The Bishop's Man was a heavy hitter, winning a clutch of major prizes, led by the Scotiabank Giller Prize. (The others were the Canadian Booksellers Association Libris Award, the Atlantic Independent Booksellers' Choice Award and the Dartmouth Book Award.)

I really enjoyed this book.  The author made the priest very human with human problems.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

The Last Crossing

The Last Crossing
The Last Crossing (McClleland & Stewart, 2002) by Guy Vanderhaege
Elske Kuiper thought The Last Crossing deserves a second look:
"It's beautifully written. It deals with a part of Canadian history and geography that many urban Canadians are unaware of."
Accolades: The Last Crossing snagged the Canada Reads title in 2003, and was named Fiction Book of the Year by the Canadian Booksellers Association.

I enjoyed this book.  It wasn't the kind of book that you could just skim over;  I really had to give it my full attention but the story was great.

Monday, March 21, 2011

The Bone Cage

The Bone Cage
The Bone Cage (NeWest Press, 2007) by Angie Abdou
This tale of two Olympians struck a chord with the athletic and non-athletic alike. Lyndsay Belisle thinks all of Canada should get a behind-the-scenes look at the world of elite athletes. She wrote:
"This book really made me feel what it must have felt like to be a wrestler and a swimmer. The author did an excellent job making the reader 'see into' the daily lives of a Canadian amateur athlete. Once I started reading The Bone Cage, I could not put it down!"
Accolades: The Bone Cage was number one on our own CBC Book Club's Top 10 Sports Books and it won critical praise from reviewers nation-wide, including Quill & Quire, which called it "well paced and readable, memorable for its fresh perspective on the lives of athletes and the obstacles they must overcome."

Sunday, March 13, 2011

The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks

The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks

Her name was Henrietta Lacks, but scientists know her as HeLa. She was a poor Southern tobacco farmer who worked the same land as her slave ancestors, yet her cells—taken without her knowledge—became one of the most important tools in medicine. The first “immortal” human cells grown in culture, they are still alive today, though she has been dead for more than sixty years. If you could pile all HeLa cells ever grown onto a scale, they’d weigh more than 50 million metric tons—as much as a hundred Empire State Buildings. HeLa cells were vital for developing the polio vaccine; uncovered secrets of cancer, viruses, and the atom bomb’s effects; helped lead to important advances like in vitro fertilization, cloning, and gene mapping; and have been bought and sold by the billions.

Yet Henrietta Lacks remains virtually unknown, buried in an unmarked grave.

Now Rebecca Skloot takes us on an extraordinary journey, from the “colored” ward of Johns Hopkins Hospital in the 1950s to stark white laboratories with freezers full of HeLa cells; from Henrietta’s small, dying hometown of Clover, Virginia—a land of wooden slave quarters, faith healings, and voodoo—to East Baltimore today, where her children and grandchildren live and struggle with the legacy of her cells.

Henrietta’s family did not learn of her “immortality” until more than twenty years after her death, when scientists investigating HeLa began using her husband and children in research without informed consent. And though the cells had launched a multimillion-dollar industry that sells human biological materials, her family never saw any of the profits. As Rebecca Skloot so brilliantly shows, the story of the Lacks family—past and present—is inextricably connected to the dark history of experimentation on African Americans, the birth of bioethics, and the legal battles over whether we control the stuff we are made of.

Over the decade it took to uncover this story, Rebecca became enmeshed in the lives of the Lacks family—especially Henrietta’s daughter Deborah, who was devastated to learn about her mother’s cells. She was consumed with questions: Had scientists cloned her mother? Did it hurt her when researchers infected her cells with viruses and shot them into space? What happened to her sister, Elsie, who died in a mental institution at the age of fifteen? And if her mother was so important to medicine, why couldn’t her children afford health insurance?
       
Intimate in feeling, astonishing in scope, and impossible to put down, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks captures the beauty and drama of scientific discovery, as well as its human consequences.

This book was not on my list, but I was on holiday and had to buy a book, as I had finished the ones that I had brought.  I think this book deserved to be read.

The Birth House

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The Birth House (Random House of Canada, 2006) by Ami McKay
Naomi MacKinnon found this story of a midwife in early 20th-century Nova Scotia irresistible. She writes:
"There are many things I love about this book. I love the setting, I love the subject, I love the history, and I love the characters. It was one of those rare books that you are very sorry to be finished."
Accolades: A national bestseller, The Birth House won the Evergreen Award and was number 30 on the Globe and Mail's list of the decade's bestsellers. It scored laudatory reviews across the country, including from the Ottawa Citizen, which called it "An astonishing debut, a book that will break your heart and take your breath away."

Loved this!  Read it on holiday!  Read this book now!

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Sweetness in the Belly

 Sweetness in the Belly
Sweetness in the Belly (Anchor Canada, 2005) by Camilla Gibb
The story of Lilly, an orphan whose remarkable life takes her from Ethopia to England, touched many readers. Lynne Inkster was one of them, writing:
"I admire Camilla Gibb's writing skills that transported me to an Ethiopian walled village (as well as an immigrant enclave in London) by invoking the sights, sounds and smells so well that I can still smell the dust and hear the squabbling. I highly recommend this novel to all Canadian readers."
Accolades: Sweetness in the Belly won Ontario's Trillium Book Award and was a finalist for the Scotiabank Giller Prize. The Ottawa Citizen loved it too, writing, ""A marvellous, highly absorbing read bound to strike up conversations at award time."

This was a lovely book to read.  I really enjoyed reading about a topic and a religion that I didn't know anything about.  Very much recommend!

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

The Best Laid Plans

The Best Laid Plans
The Best Laid Plans (McClleland & Stewart, 2008) by Terry Fallis
This previously self-published satire introduces us to a political strategist turned campaign manager who secretly wants everything to go very, very wrong (and, of course, it just happens to go very, very right). Barbara Brown enjoyed Terry Fallis's tale and thinks you will too, writing:
"It's been a long time since I've read anything that has made me laugh like this satirical novel! And yet there are some beautifully poignant moments mixed in to create a great snapshot of life, love and politics in Canada — quite the mix! And very difficult to put down once started — all in all a wonderful read and I've recommended to everyone I know. I only hope this is the beginning of a wonderful writing career for Terry Fallis."
Accolades: The Best Laid Plans was officially declared the funniest book in Canada in 2008 when it snagged the Stephen Leacock Memorial Medal for Humour. Terry Fallis also emerged from his humble self-published roots with a book deal and legions of fans, including Canada's U.N. ambassador, Allan Rock, who called it "a great read for anyone thinking of running for office, and especially reassuring for those who have decided not to."

Loved this book!  I am definitely not a political junkie but this book was so well written and enjoyable that you don't have to like politics at all.  In fact, I think I actually learned a little!

Friday, January 28, 2011

Come Thou Tortoise

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Come, Thou Tortoise (Random House of Canada, 2009) by Jessica Grant
A cross-country plane trip to the bedside of a father in a coma in Newfoundland; a pet tortoise, Winnifred, left at the mercy of an unreliable friend in Oregon. Life holds its challenges for Audrey (a.k.a. Oddly) Flowers, the narrator of Jessica Grant's first novel. Book Club member Lorrie Morris called it "...a beautifully funny, quirky, poignant story that made me laugh as I cried... it is one of my all-time favourites."
Accolades: Come, Thou Tortoise was no slouch in the race for literary honours: it nabbed the Amazon.ca/Books in Canada First Novel Award and the BMO Winterset Award, which celebrates excellence in Newfoundland and Labrador writing. It was also a finalist for both the Ontario Library Association'sEvergreen Award and the Canadian Library Association's Young Adult Canadian Book Award (this is a novel for adults that can be enjoyed by younger readers, too).

Well, I can't say that I ever fell off my chair laughing, but I did chuckle a few times. 

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Clara Callan

Clara Callan
Clara Callan (HarperCollins, 2001) by Richard B. Wright
Set during the Great Depression, this tale of two sisters who choose radically different paths in life captivated readers across the country, including Kathryn Sutherland, who wrote:
"I particularly enjoy epistolary novels and this book was exceptional in its depiction of two sisters who both challenged the conventions of their time in radically different ways."
Accolades: Clara Callan was a powerhouse on the awards circuit, taking home three major prizes: the:Governor General's Award, the Scotiabank Giller Prize and the Canadian Booksellers Association Libris Award for Book of the Year. Critics at home and abroad fell for it too — "Wright has accomplished an amazing feat by allowing his characters to emerge, fully formed and true, without authorial intrusion into their intimate psychological world," wrote the reviewer in Publishers Weekly.

Enjoyed this book.  Nothing too heavy or dramatic.  Just a lovely story about a woman maybe ahead of her time, dealing with situations that she really wasn't prepared for or that were unsuitable for a woman her age in the 1930's.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Crow Lake

Crow Lake
Crow Lake (Knopf Canada, 2001) by Mary Lawson
Mary Lawson's compelling story of the Morrison family, part of a close-knit farming community in Northern Ontario, had reader Alisa Groot singing its praises nearly a decade after its publication. She wrote:
"Amazingly written, this book is tragic without being obvious. The characters are real, their reactions to events are understandable but not predictable. The Northern Ontario setting reveals a place that I've never been but can now feel I've visited. It was heart-wrenching and shows what sacrifice for loved ones is truly about."
Accolades: This beloved bestseller took home the 2003 Amazon.ca/ Books in Canada First Novel Award and the McKitterick Prize. Critics across the country applauded, including the Globe and Mail reviewer, who predicted, "A lot of readers are going to surrender themselves to the magic of Crow Lake."

I only started this book today and I am already loving it!  Finally, a Canadian novel that's not completely depressing, nor difficult to understand without all the hidden meanings!  I shouldn't say that they are all like this, but the last few that I have read have been.

I very much injoyed this book.  It was a very lovely, fluidly written novel.  By the end of the story, I was very attached to the characters.

Monday, January 3, 2011

Heave

Drive-by Saviours  Heave (Random House of Canada, 2002) by Christy Ann Conlin
This lively coming-of-age tale of Seraphina Sullivan, set in rural Nova Scotia, was recommended by Heather Morse, who wrote: "Set in Nova Scotia's beautiful Annapolis Valley, Heave is a fabulous read with vivid characters, authentic dialogue and a captivating plot. It's a bold look at a young woman's desire to escape her turbulent past while trying to grab onto an uncertain future..."
Accolades: Christy Ann Conlin's debut was a finalist for the Amazon.ca/Books in Canada First Novel Award and won rave reviews across the country, including from the Globe and Mail ("simply a marvellous book") and Vancouver Sun ("fresh as a sea breeze").

I didn't find this book to be a page turner but I did enjoy it none the less.  I was sympathetic to the character, but I didn't quite understand why she had so much pain.  I am going to give this book a so-so.