From the category archives:

BOOKS

BOOKS

12 Hommes, 12 Livres

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Second installment of Joseph Elfassi's series about men and their books.

by Joseph Elfassi
13.02.2012

J’ai demandé à 12 hommes de me recommander des livres importants pour eux. Mon but final est de réévaluer mon rapport avec eux et avec les hommes en général. Thé froid et feuilles de vigne avec mon ami Pierre-Olivier, guitariste, chanteur et parolier du groupe Winston Balafre et conseiller pédagogique. On explore Le Pouvoir du Moment Présent du guide spirituel Eckhart Tolle.

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BOOKS

Revolution Mother

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Interview with Carmen Rodriguez, author of Retribution (Three O'Clock Press)

by Heather Leighton
13.02.2012

Like many, I’m drawn to novels that explore Latin American politics, particularly those rooted in Argentina and Chile. I was immediately intrigued when I heard about Retribution by poet, translator and activist Carmen Rodriguez, mainly because the author lived through the 1973 coup d’état. Rodriguez, her husband and their two young daughters were exiled to Vancouver in 1974.

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BOOKS

Michael the Menace

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Here Comes Trouble, by Michael Moore, Grand Central Publishing

by Eric Hamovitch
12.02.2012

The world needs more Michael Moore. He’s a shit disturber. Here Comes Trouble opens with the almost murderous reaction to his denunciation of the Iraq war while accepting an Oscar at the 2003 Academy Awards. This act took place in a climate of supine acquiescence by most of the US political establishment to a war launched four days earlier under blatantly false pretences. For a brief time, Moore was effectively leader of the opposition. He spent a much longer period under armed protection.

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BOOKS

Forest for the Trees

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Deep Forests, Big Timber, and Life with the Tree-Planting Tribe, by Charlotte Gill, Greystone Books

by Gina Roitman
05.02.2012

Travelling by camper van around New Zealand, a land where 70% of the endemic forests have disappeared over the last 180 years, there seemed no more suitable place to crack open Charlotte Gill’s riveting and disturbing account of 20 years as a tree-planter in the forests of Canada. Make that, a tree-planter where the forests used to be.

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BOOKS

“Ain’t But One Kind of Crazy”

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Half-Blood Blues by Esi Edugyan, Thomas Allen Books

by Kate Orland Bere
29.01.2012

As one reads Half-Blood Blues, the terse, vivid vernacular of the aging Baltimorian light-skinned “black,” Sidney Griffiths, the first person narrator of Esi Edugyan’s Giller-winning novel, becomes a captivating force. A  powerfully persuasive instrument, the bassist’s laconic voice boldly sings throughout this novel.

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BOOKS

This Writing Death

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Death In Venice: A Queer Film Classic, by Will Aitken, Arsenal Pulp Press

by Will Aitken
24.01.2012

Writing non-fiction’s a bitch – a truth not universally acknowledged. You’ll hear fiction writers, especially novelists (I’ve written five, published three), going on about their own heroism. How wrenching it is, day after day, to dredge up eternal truths from the dank depths of their souls. One man (it would be a man) even told me writing a novel is “like going to war.” I like to picture him deep in a muddy trench, rats nibbling at his toes, his laptop powered by only the heat from his cojones. Yet another writer maintained it’s the moral rigor of the long fictional haul that drives novelists to drugs and drink. That’s a man with, in addition to possible substance abuse issues, a bad case of post hoc ergo propter hoc. (Actually, it was drugs that drove me to write novels, but that’s another story.)

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BOOKS

Quand on aime on a toujours vingt ans

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La serveuse du Café Cherrier, de Yves Beauchemin, Les éditions Michel Brûlé

by Mélanie Grondin
22.01.2012

Tout le monde recherche et le bonheur et l’amour. Peu importe l’action des gens qui nous entourent, au fond, ils cherchent tous, comme nous, à être heureux. Thème universel que cela; thème qui fait toujours un bon roman. C’est cette quête qui propulse le dernier roman d’Yves Beauchemin : La serveuse du Café Cherrier.

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BOOKS

12 hommes, 12 livres

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21.01.2012

J’ai demandé à 12 hommes de me recommander des livres importants pour eux. Mon but final est de réévaluer mon rapport avec eux et avec les hommes en général. Un soir de janvier, je rencontre Youssef, ami, photographe, penseur, voyageur, pour parler du dernier livre de Dany Laferrière, que l’auteur qualifie d’autobiographie de ses pensées. On parle.

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BOOKS

Hypothetically Speaking

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Hypotheticals, by Leigh Kotsilidis, Coach House Press

by Matthias Lalisse
15.01.2012

Alan Sokal, the physicist who famously “debunked” a Cultural Studies journal by tricking its editors into publishing a finely crafted parody, threw down the following glove to his wishy-washy colleagues in the humanities: “Anyone who believes that the laws of physics are mere social conventions is invited to try transgressing those conventions from the windows of my apartment. (I live on the twenty-first floor.)”

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BOOKS

Grand Dames

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Midsummer Night in the Workhouse, by Diana Athill, and The Things We Fear Most, by Gloria Vanderbilt

by Elise Moser
08.01.2012

It is surprising that there are not more well known editors-turned-writers. Toni Morrison is the great one; Diana Athill is another shining example, best known for her lively memoirs, especially Stet: An Editor’s Life. With the exception of a 1967 novella, she appears to have published no fiction except Midsummer Night in the Workhouse, her collection of short stories, written in 1958 and just reissued as a very attractive paperback. Her mastery of the language makes it a very smooth read, but it is far from inspired.

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BOOKS

Brrrrrrrr!

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The Joy of Spooking: Sinister Scenes, by P.J. Bracegirdle, McElderry Books

by Luca Brown
18.12.2011

It’s that time of year again. The time where we escape the falling snow, lock ourselves in warm houses, and curl up with a good book. But that doesn’t mean we can’t enjoy some chilling horrors. P.J. Bracegirdle’s Sinister Scenes can put you in a terrified mood along with some mystery and a bit of humour no matter what the time of year.

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BOOKS

Cold Hard Kevin

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Cold Hard Truth, by Kevin O'Leary, Doubleday Canada

by Eric Hamovitch
11.12.2011

Kevin O’Leary has often been called an asshole, or so he likes to brag. As the tough-guy venture capitalist on CBC Television’s Dragons’ Den (and a similar show on ABC in the U.S.), where proposals from incipient entrepreneurs are diagnosed and often demolished, he is bound to draw a few barbs. You might think he would want readers to see him in a more sympathetic light, but this is not a safe assumption.

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BOOKS

Mommy, What Colour Do I Use for Zombies?

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The Stephen Harper Colouring & Activity Book, by Dave Rosen, Pop Boom Bang Books

by Mark Shainblum
09.12.2011

It’s delicious to imagine that, somewhere out there in this vast land of ours, some diehard, arch-conservative literalist will wander into the unfamiliar surroundings of a bookstore, spot Dave Rosen’s Stephen Harper Colouring & Activity Book and take it at face value. “Hey! What a great stocking-stuffer this’ll make for the kids!”

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BOOKS

The Meat of the Matter

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Feed your food brain with the free-ranging non-cookbook cookbook The Art of Living According to Joe Beef

by Melora Koepke
06.12.2011

In September, I went to a friend’s farm in Aquitaine, France, and the first thing I saw when I entered the converted pigeonnier, on the big French farmhouse table, was an advance copy of The Art of Living According to Joe Beef: A Cookbook of Sorts. Then, in October in San Francisco, a cookbook store [...]

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BOOKS

The Bigness of Things

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This Will Be Difficult to Explain, by Joanna Skibsrud, McNally Robinson

by Martyn Bryant
04.12.2011

“Somewhere, that is, between the verifiable and measurable tick and the ensuing, and otherwise unremarkable, tock…” Johanna Skibsrud moulds time and space to investigate the contents of what is shared and isn’t shared between friends, close relations and strangers.

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