Beaver Hills Forever – Conor Kerr

The author of Prairie Edge has now written a short Metis poetic novella. The are alternating poetic verses/pages of four Indigenous voices, two women (Baby Momma, Aunty Prof) and two men (Buddy, Fancy University Boy). A dominant theme is the constraints imposed on Metis people from institutional whiteness, class and even delusions of grandeur. The writing is funny and heartfelt, with an uncompromising focus.

Note from Amy: I read this too, and fell deeply in love with the complications of life, and the way that Conor Kerr wrote his short poetic prose

Katabasis – R.F. Kuang

Simply put, this is a fantastical story, one of Ms. Kuang’s best. Alice and Peter are graduate students in the Department of Analytic Magick at Cambridge. When their supervisor dies, they descend into Hell to retrieve his soul from the Underworld. What could go wrong? There are outstanding elements in this epic story-telling. First, the psychology of Alice and Peer as individuals is fascinating, and their relationship together largely based on competition and rivalry. And second, the description of the eight levels of Hell is brilliant with some parallels to academia (the first court, pride, is an academic library). As the courts become more sinister and dangerous, there is even an Escher trap, the Penrose Stairs. And finally, there are numerous philosophical discussions about principles like the Liar Paradox, and a brilliant Orpheus joke on page 536! This is a creative book about ideas, learning and thinking, an absolute must read.

The Cloisters – Katy Hays

Context is everything in this fine first novel. The Cloisters is a gothic museum of medieval, a branch of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Researchers search for 15th century tarot cards used for divination – telling the future had been the original purpose of these cards. There is a murder, of course, and academic obsession. What is fate and what is choice? Sinister secrets abound and the ending is especially seductive.

Lessons In Chemistry – Bonnie Garmus

This is a superb example of a book that is both delightful and meaningful. It is the 1950-60s, so Elizabeth Zott’s career as a graduate student and research chemist is subject to brutal sex discrimination. As a consequence, she eventually becomes the star of a cooking show, Supper At Six. Her motto: cooking is serious science because it is based on chemistry. There are laugh-out-loud sections and shrewd observations about human behaviours: highly recommended.