My good friend Karen recommendd this book by stating “It has been a long time since I dreaded the approaching of the end of a book”, and I concur completely although the story will not be for everyone. The anonymous narrator, a writer and single mother, creates a fictitious character named Duchess Goldblatt to post on social media. Why create a fictional persona? Is it for personal privacy? Is it to construct an alternative reality, a social construct that is a better person, kinder and more compassionate? DG becomes a bright light in the darkness of social media. In contrast, the anonymous narrator is extremely introspective with intense relationships with her late father, son, a brother with mental illness, and yes, even Lyle Lovett. Highly recommended for a challenging read.
Category: Book themes
Book of Lives – A Memoir of Sorts – Margaret Atwood
Ms. Atwood is, of course, a Canadian literary treasure with books of poetry, fiction and non-fiction. Her memoir is, predictably, fascinating with her droll sense of humour. First, there is her somewhat unconventional childhood with summers spent in remote northern bush country with her entomologist father and resourceful mother. Second, key moments in her life are linked to books, like writing the Handmaids Tale in 1980s Berlin. And finally, the important people in her life are acknowledged, especially Graeme Gibson. Overall, an insightful and often very funny memoir from an imaginative and thoughtful author. Highly recommended.
Unless – Carole Shields
Sometimes when the CPL hold system fails to provide a new book, it is a great pleasure to revisit a classic book from my personal library, like this great novel from 2002 by Ms. Shields, a Canadian literary icon. Full disclosure: this is a book about and for women. Reta is a 44-year-old married mother with three daughters, and a writer/translator. Her female relationships are complex. Notably, her 19-year-old daughter Norah is living on the street; her motivation of choose a path of self-abnegation is a mystery. And Reta’s interactions with her female fiends and colleagues are also complex with profound feelings of powerlessness. As always, Ms. Shields’ writing is exquisite; for example, the description of a library trip is sublime.
Black Cherokee – Antonio Michael Downing
This is a book about belonging, identity and race. It is also a tender coming-of-age story. Ophelia is a mixed-race Black-Cherokee child of uncertain parentage, raised in South Carolina by her indominable grandmother. Ophelia’s lack of belonging is evident in her community where whe is neither Black or Cherokee, in her school, and in a devastating exposure to church hypocrisy. A chance listen to this author at the October WordFest has resulted in a very worthwhile read.
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
What We Can Know – Ian McEwan
This is one of McEwan’s best books, one that should be read slowly to savour his exceptional writing. In 2014, an acclaimed poet reads a new poem dedicated to his wife on her birthday, at a dinner party in England. But the poem is never published and so is lost. Over the next 100 years, the world undergoes a collapse of civilization with cataclysmic climate change exacerbated by nuclear wars. So in 2119, an academic in a Humanities Department discovers an astonishing clue in surviving archives. Thus a literary thriller about life and love provides profound insight into human nature.
Bury Our Bones In The Midnight Soil – V.E. Schwab
Ms. Schwab (author of the fantastic The Invisible Life of Addie La Rue) has created an epic story of three women vampires that unfolds over 500 years! Of course, there is graphic blood lust and killing, but also interesting group dynamics, learned restraint, and conflicted love. Thus there is both monstrosity and humanity; a haunting and worthwhile story about cruelty, grace, jealousy and yes, immortality. Finally, this story of three vampires in contemporary Boston evolves into a pursuit thriller. Truly, a must-read book that I could not put down, so highly recommended.
The City And Its Uncertain Walls – Haruki Murakami
Full disclosure: I have a conflicted response to Murakami’s writing, only loving some books like the brilliant 1Q84. Happily, this new book definitely belongs in the great must-read category. This review is necessarily enigmatic because of magic realism content. Can different worlds like a walled-in town with unicorns co-exist with the natural world? Can a shadow and a real person be separated and trade roles? Overall, the story is a fantastical quest, and an ode to love, loss and yearning. And yes, there are dreams and books and libraries!
My Name Is Emilia Del Valle – Isabel Allende
Another excellent novel of historical fiction by Ms. Allende. Emilia is born in San Francisco in 1886 after her Irish mother was abandoned after a brief affair with a Chilean aristocrat. She grows up to become a strong self-sufficient young woman and an independent thinker. She begins to write pulp fiction and then turns to journalism, all using a male pen name. In 1891, she travels to Chile and becomes embroiled in a brutal civil war. Her war experiences are truly harrowing; overall, this novel is spellbinding.
