LET’S TALK BOOKS

I love reading books. I’ve always loved reading books. I think this love came from my mother who taught me to read before I went to school. She had a bookcase headboard crammed with yellowing thrift store paperbacks—some you wouldn’t expect your mother to read like Messalina and Peyton Place—along with fat, hard-cover, Reader Digests. My mother was an armchair adventure who got “tight” after one glass of wine, giggled, and crossed her legs. Sorry, Mom, but I love that memory of you.

My criteria? If I like a book, I write about it. So, naturally, my reviews and musings end up here. I know what it takes to write a book, the endless hours, the sleepless nights; so I don’t write about a book if I don’t connect with it.

I’m a proud Canadian and have been writing reviews of fellow Canadian authors for the Ottawa Review of Books for the past few years. This has allowed me to discover some brilliant writers. They may not be New York Times Bestselling authors—because Canadian publishers cannot submit to the NY Times—but they’re wonderful just the same. So, if you like to discover new authors too, read on. Oh, interspersed you may find some superstar authors, like Maggie Stiefvater, who lives in the state of Virginia, and I read just because I wish I could write like her. Literary Envy. Argh!

Coraline

Coraline

I read Coraline last night. All of it. Every word. Wafting through my head in Neil Gaiman's deep slow British voice. It took hours, but I couldn't stop until the little girl had set her world back to rights. If you haven't met her, Coraline is a bored little girl who...

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Smoke

Smoke

I am mending from surgery and reading this giant book. Flipping page after page, devouring pretty words, precise and commanding. Sucked in by Daniel Vyleta's command of language, his descriptions, his metaphors, a voice that purrs like Dickens, HG Wells, Jules Verne....

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Wake of Vultures

Wake of Vultures

Why do I love this book? Nettie Lonesome is one tough, sympathetic, orphaned in childhood, raised by abusive idiots, going-to-save humanity heroine. Her friends are shapeshifters; her quest to kill monsters. Bowen has created a world resembling America of the 1870s....

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Career of Evil, Robert Galbraith

Career of Evil, Robert Galbraith

Most people know that Robert Galbraith is actually JK Rowling. Her latest series chronicles the misadventures of a burly, down-and-out private detective (once SIB in the British military) named Cormoran Strike and his bold red-haired sidekick, Robin Ellacott. I...

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The Ocean at the End of the Lane

The Ocean at the End of the Lane

It’s been years since I was SO enthralled by a book. I was choked up at the end of the final chapter and had to stop…couldn’t read the epilogue. Didn’t want to. Didn’t want the boy to grow up—though I knew it was inevitable: he was, after all, an adult reliving his...

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The Girl on the Train

The Girl on the Train

Something I've decided to do, to revive my passion for words, is tweet best lines from books I have loved, or am currently reading.  An intriguing line does not always fit into a 140-character block, so I'm taking some license with what to cut and what to keep....

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