To Pack and Not to Pack

Packingbooks

I just finished Jane Smiley's Good Faith, and I gotta say, what the hell is so good about this book? Quite frankly it was a chore to read. But I hate not finishing books, and even though I had a pretty good idea of how the story would end, I still had to read the whole damn thing just to be sure. I dunno. Perhaps I didn't like it because I'm not that fascinated with the world of money and power and real estate. Or perhaps because of the fact that I did not like one single character in the book, or even find them remotely interesting. Or perhaps it's because the 80's are just best forgotten. If anyone else enjoyed this book, then please tell me why.

So anyway, now that this book is finished, it will now be packed away with all the the many other books that I will not be able to access until the end of January. So can you imagine my dilemma? What do I pack, and what do I set aside for reading until the very last damn minute? This is a make or break decision, folks, because once that tape gun goes over those boxes, there's no turning back. I will not re-open a box, no matter how desperate I am. (I think).

So here is a list of some of the books that I have decided are just too interesting to pack in a cardboard box just yet (and yes, in hindsight, Good Faith could have been packed away much earlier).

Dorothy Parker: Complete Stories
Things You Should Know: A Collection of Short Stories by A.M. Holmes
Is Sex Necessary? Or Why You Feel The Way You Do by James Thurber & E.B. White
First Writers edited by Kellye Aitken, Sue Goyette, and Barbara Scott
Bookmark Now: Writing in Unreaderly Times edited by Kevin Smokler
Bel Canto by Ann Patchett
Mailman by J. Robert Lennon
Nothing That Meets The Eye: The Uncollected Stories of Patricia Highsmith

I have been hearing some very good things lately about Bel Canto, so that's next on the list. Hopefully Ann Patchett will have what it takes to remove the bad taste of Jane Smiley from my mouth.

Pop Goes The Book Review 4!

Swoons

My fourth review for Popmatters is up.

Sigh.... if anyone else has read Martha Cooley's Thirty-Three Swoons, and enjoyed it, I would sincerely like to know their reasons as to why. I cannot begin to express how disappointed I was in this book, after waiting seven long years for her to produce her second novel.

So please, if you liked this book, tell me what's right with it, and what's wrong with me.

Pop Goes The Book Review 3!

Popmatters3

My third review for Popmatters is up! The book is Home Land by Sam Lipsyte, and if you haven't read it yet – well, honey, get thee to a bookstore toot sweet.

Pop Goes The Book Review! 2

Popmatters2

My second book review is up at PopMatters, this time for the novel A Changed Man by Francine Prose.

Someone else at PopMatters also reviewed A Changed Man; I think it's worthwhile to read many reviews of the same book.

Pop Goes The Book Review!

Popmatters

Thanks to the encouragement of a very nice and talented friend, I now have the opportunity to do the occasional book review for this media web site known as PopMatters, which is "an international magazine of cultural criticism" covering "music, television, films, books, video games, computer software, theatre, the visual arts, and the Internet."

Now I know that I already have a category called Reviews and Interviews, but I wanted to keep my reviews on PopMatters separate from my own personal review work. They have been kind enough to take me and my big mouth on, so I feel that I should show them respect, and thus give them their own distinct category.

Anyway, enough blathering. If you're interested, check out my first book review of Jon Fasman's debut novel, The Geographer's Library.

If Andy Warhol Had A Girlfriend

Alison_1

Allow me to introduce you to Alison Pace, who has just published her first novel, If Andy Warhol Had A Girlfriend; it's a humorous story about Art-gallery assistant Jane Laine, whose life has recenlty taken a downward turn after her boyfriend dumps her for another girl. As if that wasn't bad enough, she's then forced to go on a five-month international art tour with famed sculptor Ian Rhys-Fitzsimmons, a guy whose art she doesn't quite understand, and whom she suspects is just a big fraud. But perhaps the trip won't be a complete nightmare, since she at least will be getting away from the clutches of her wretched boss, Dick Reese. What starts off as a punishment in Jane's eyes ends up being a liberating learning experience in art, travel and love.

Alison Pace knows a few things about the art world; she holds a degree in Art History from American University in Washington, D.C. and received a graduate certificate in American Art from Sotheby's Institute in New York. She has worked at Sotheby's and has also been an independent fine art researcher. She lives in New York City.

Alison very kindly set aside some time for me, to answer a few questions.

BL:If Andy Warhol Had A Girlfriend is a great title for a book. I'm curious. What came first, the title or the idea for the book? Is there a story as to how the title came to be?

AP:Thanks. The idea came first and the title didn't come until I was almost done with the first draft. Close to the end of the book, someone asks "Did Andy Warhol have a girlfriend?" This question gets my narrator, Jane, to thinking about the fact that some things just aren't meant to be. As I intended that to be a theme of my book, as soon as I wrote that dialogue, I just knew I had my title.

BL:When I was a teenager, I didn't 'get', or like, a lot of abstract art. My tastes have changed as I have gotten older, but there is still a lot of abstract art that I don't understand, so I appreciated Jane not 'getting' the art that Ian created. From your own experience in the art world, is there a lot of art that you don't 'get'?

AP:Definitely. I think with a lot of contemporary art, you really do need to put some time and work into understanding it and appreciating it. In a way that can be challenging and stimulating, but in other ways, it can be a bit frustrating, too. Working in the art world, I was constantly asked, "what's so good about that?" or told, "I could do that!"...answering those questions / statements often made me yearn for a time / art that was simply instantly understandable. I tried to get at that a bit with Ian's art and Jane's reaction to it.

BL:I love the work of Alexander Calder, Joseph Cornell, Robert Rauschenberg and Jackson Pollock. Who are some of your favourite artists?

AP:I love those artists, too. I am a big fan of anything that was done in the 60s, 70s. I also love Ed Ruscha, Bruce Nauman, Jenny Holzer, Lorna Simpson....I'm very drawn to artists who use words in their work, which I guess makes sense as words and art are of two of my favorite things.

BL:Have you always wanted to write, with the ultimate goal of publishing something?

AP:I have always wanted to write, and actually always have. For most of my life though, it was always something I did on the side, almost in a journaling sort of way. I never tried to publish short stories or anything like that. I never really thought I could get published. Once I started working on this novel though, as it started to turn out in a way that I thought worked really well, I built up a certain level of confidence in my writing and started showing it around, and once I was finished, decided to look for an agent.

BL:Did you get an agent before you got published, and if so, what was your experience like, in your search for an agent?

AP: I got an agent before I was published, yes. I made a list of agents who represented books that I thought were similar to my book (that's easy to find out with publishersmarketplace.com and google and many times by looking in the acknowledgments sections of books) and by doing a little research, I narrowed down that list to who was accepting queries (again, publishers marketplace was extremely helpful). In most cases, I sent emails titled Did Andy Warhol Have a Girlfriend? I think it's quite fitting that I got my agent via email, as now I email him constantly.

BL:So.... was any part of this story cathartic? Basically, have you ever encountered a Dick Reese in your own career?

AP:I have encountered Dick Reese-like people in my career, yes, but no one exactly like him.

BL:Who are some of your favourite authors?

AP:I like Pam Houston because I think she has a beautiful style, and she loves dogs, and she has bad taste in men. When I first read her, it was like the mother ship calling me home. I told her this when we met. I also love Ann Patchett who writes wonderfully and is so brilliant at keeping a story moving along; Darin Strauss because he is so imaginative and so talented and because we were next door neighbors growing up; Anthony Lane, more of a critic than an author, but I love everything he writes. On the lighter side, Jenny Colgan makes me smile.

BL:These days, authors are expected to help out in the promotion of their novel. What are your feelings about being closely involved in the promotion of your book?

AP:I have enjoyed tremendously being involved in the promotion of my book. Writing can be such a solitary experience that it has been wonderful switching gears and brainstorming and being out there trying to drum up publicity.

BL:Are you working on a 2nd novel, and if so, can you say anything about it?

AP:I'm working on my second novel now. For any schnauzer fans, there are many more dogs in this one.

BL:Any pearls of wisdom for aspiring writers out there?

AP:I think the most important thing is to stick with it and to believe in what you are working on. And make sure you like spending a lot of time alone with imaginary people, because as far as I can tell, there's a lot of that.

Girl, Don't You Stop

Stopthatgirl_1

Apparently it's the newest trendy thing in writing to create a novel in short story format. That's news to me, but I'm not hip to these things. I know that David Bezmozgis' Natasha was a collection of short stories which were all loosely connected, and which revealed to the reader the coming of age of the main character, Mark.

Stop That Girl, by Elizabeth McKenzie, is a debut collection, which clearly states on the cover "a novel in stories". Well, if it's trendy, I don't care. Because it works for me, and it certainly worked for this stellar piece of debut fiction. Stop That Girl chronicles the life of the sharp and witty Ann Ransom, from a young girl caught in a uniquely dysfunctional family, through to her adolescence and adulthood. As a child, Ann is surrounded by strong but sometimes destructful women, her hypochondriac mother, and her controlling, scary grandmother, known to the family only as 'Dr. Frost'. Throughout these clever and bittersweet stories, we see Ann making decisions about her future, developing relationships with men, and trying to find happiness while she searches for herself.

Elizabeth McKenzie is definitely an author to watch out for. Her writing is crisp, sharp, hilarious, touching, and utterly original.

Terri Brown-Davidson Interview

Terri_2

One of the many wonderful things about having a blog that focuses on books is that I get to meet through email like-minded people; people who love books and reading, and also people who love writing. One of the fine people that I have chatted with via email is the author and poet Terri Brown-Davidson, who has recently published her novel Marie, Marie: Hold On Tight.

Since I love to review books, and I love to talk to writers, I thought I would start a new category, entitled Reviews and Interviews. It will contain reviews and/or recommendations of recent reads, as well as interviews with authors who want to talk with me. As much as I enjoy discussing the subject of author's books, being the nosey person that I am, I am even that much more interested in the more personal aspects of a writer's life.

PS:Can you discuss your educational and professional background?

TBD:I’m trained as a scholar, with the usual plethora of degrees to mark me as such:  Ph.D., M.F.A., M.A.  And I was the Chancellor’s Doctoral Fellow (a mark of distinction among grad students) at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln while I was earning my Ph.D. there.  But I’ve always considered myself a renegade within academia.  Cutting-edge ideas attract me more than sound scholarship principles, and I prefer artistic pursuits—creativity, per se—to academic ones.  That’s why working at Gotham Writers’ Workshop (www.writingclasses.com) is such a perfect fit for me.  I’m on both the fiction and poetry faculty there, which helps me take advantage of my own cross-genre tendencies.  But, more importantly, the students at GWW are the most serious I’ve ever worked with, definitely the highest caliber as well.  I view GWW as a creative form of academia, one that can exploit my own tendency—and the students’—for risk-taking in art, which is wonderful and difficult to find.  Academia isn’t risky, no matter how you look at it.  I remember when I was teaching a sophomore-level fiction-writing class at UNL.  Of course, that’s my metier (teaching creative writing), and that was one of the first times I taught a creative writing course at UNL, and I was understandably excited.  But I had almost all football players enroll in that class, and—not only were they not excited about the class—but they were also all taking it as an elective and didn’t actually understand what they’d signed up for (I’m not denigrating university athletes, btw; they’re just a different breed altogether from artists).  So, as I was explaining the syllabus to these young gentlemen, I was expecting excited interjections about the possibilities of the course…and received none.  Finally, one young man looked up at me and said, “You mean…we’re supposed to ‘lie’ in this course?”  On the basis of this experience, all I can do is reassure you that it’s the most satisfying thing in the world for artists to have the opportunity to work with other artists.  Minds in synchronicity, you understand.

PS:What attracted you to writing when you were young?

TBD:I think that the attraction was always there though I was never particularly conscious of it.  Even now, I don’t understand why writing picked me as opposed to painting, for example; I also drew a lot while I was young.  One hesitates to say it, but I suppose I had a gift for the tall-tale (a euphemism, yes) when I was a girl that predisposed me to fiction writing.  One whopper from my youth involved my telling my first grade teacher that my mother had just had a baby girl (she hadn’t; she wasn’t even pregnant) and that the days-old child had tossed a bowl of chicken-noodle soup at my head and was gleefully riding a bicycle sans training wheels!  An imagination that’s out of control has to be put to good use, and fiction-writing is a pragmatic and satisfying excuse for those with a propensity to inhabit other worlds.

Plus, admittedly, the creative act gives me a high that can’t be replicated in any other way.  When I’m inhabiting a character, that thrill is, I imagine, akin to that an actor experiences.  I’m besotted at the possibility of inhabiting other lives, shedding the own tight confines of my skin, and fiction offers me this possibility.

PS:Can you recall what family and friends thought of your artistic pursuits, especially of your desire to write?  Did they encourage you?

TBD:They thought it was essentially “natural,” I suppose.  I come from a long line of creative types:  my mother was a pianist, my father sketched and did various types of designs, my brother is a  painter/photographer/filmmaker. Now, my husband is a fiction writer, and my daughter (four years old) loves to draw.  There were always stacks of books around my house when I was a child, and my parents didn’t encourage me to read “baby books” when I was young but anything that struck my fancy.  I read WAR AND PEACE in the third grade, gave an oral book report on it, and mispronounced probably every name in the novel (I had the teacher in stitches, as I recall). I read IN COLD BLOOD when I was twelve years old, and it probably reinforced my natural tendency toward darkness as a fiction writer:  though it was a nonfiction novel and thus a rare beast indeed, I admired its marvelous complexity as well as its ability to extend empathy toward those who seem singularly undeserving, in a humanistic sense:  Dick and Perry are rendered with the same sensitivity and sense of humanity as the Clutter family (whom they murder), and that definitely captured my attention. But creativity was always an essential part of my life.  And now—to continue tendencies that emerged when I was young—my best friend, Season Harper-Fox, is a talented poet and fiction writer and also a faculty member, as I am, at Gotham Writers’ Workshop.

PS:What was your first publication in a literary magazine?

TBD:My first publication was in a tiny rag called Up Against the Wall, Mother.  The editor, Lee-lee Schlegel, accepted a poem, “To a Mannequin.”  The magazine had cheap graphics and was saddle-stapled, and a lot of the work in it was awful, but I didn’t care: I was thrilled.  I still remember the acceptance letter; Lee-lee had drawn a smiley face on it on this tiny printed acceptance slip.  Hey—it worked for me!

PS:What was it like working with that editor?

TBD:Well, she was the first editor I’d ever encountered, and she was very hospitable to my work, so that was a psychological boost.  To tell you the truth, this was so many years ago that I have some trouble remembering exactly what that first publication “felt like” (it was more than twenty years ago, I think).  But there was the usual general euphoria.  My first big publication wouldn’t come until a few years later, when TriQuarterly accepted a poem.

PS:What drove you to publish work in so many literary magazines?

TBD:It feels like the next step to me, seeing my work in print.  It formalizes or makes public the more private act of writing.  It’s as much sharing the work with myself (as an impetus) as sharing it with an audience, in some strange respect. Plus, there’s something delicious about “framing” your hard work in the gorgeous graphics of a well-mounted, well-produced litmag.

PS:What publication are you proudest of?

TBD:If you’re not referring to book publication, I’d have to say my appearance in TriQuarterly New Writers, which was very important for me and my work.  And, apart from book publication (which is always the most significant), my chapbook rag Men, which won the first The Ledge Competition and was published to excellent reviews.

PS:What was the genesis for your novel?

TBD:Marie, Marie arose from one hour in my Modern American and British poetry class at UNL, when we were all reading The Wasteland together.  There’s the passage that’s cited in the book which contains the figure of Marie.  When I read that passage in class, I recalled that some Eliot scholar had said that the “Marie passage” was the least-discussed in The Wasteland.  That meant, for me, that Marie was the “least interesting” character in the poem for a number of readers, and that intrigued me:  it turned her into an instant underdog, you might say.

PS:Did you base Marie, the main character, on experience, observation, or a combination?

TBD:I had her look like Frida Kahlo in that beautiful/homely way Kahlo had (no mustache, though, and no unibrow!).  Apart from that, the character arrived in my mind; I didn’t have to look for her; she came to me fully formed.

PS:Tell me about your current projects, if any.

TBD:I’ve just finished a novel on Diane Arbus and now I’m writing many new short stories and poems:  this week I’m working on four new short stories, which is eminently satisfying.

Terri Brown-Davidson's novel Marie, Marie: Hold On Tight is published by LitPot Press.

My 2004 BookLust, Part II

Well it's a lovely quiet snowy Saturday morning, so what better time to finish off my curiosity list of 2004? Oh, I could list so many books, but then I would never leave this damned computer.

Drinkingcoffee
Drinking Coffee Elsewhere: Stories by ZZ Packer
I confess I had never heard of ZZ Packer before I encountered this book. I saw it in my local bookstore, and yes, what got my attention was the beautiful blue cover, the intriguing title (anything with the word 'coffee' makes me look twice) and Ms. Packer's delightful name. I read some of the titles of the stories, and simply based on that, bought the book. Do other people buy books that way? I hope so. Anyway, as you can well imagine, ZZ did not disppoint. She has a warm, soft, welcoming style that beckons you into her bittersweet, complicated world of the black woman trying to find her way (and often not succeeding) in this unforgiving life. It would take too long to describe the power of these stories (and besides, I might spoil it for you), all I can simply say is pick up this book, and be amazed by this young woman's wisdom and insight.

Natasha
Natasha: and Other Stories by David Bezmozgis
Yes, it's true. I love short stories. And I guess I love short stories with amazingly designed covers and authors with funky names. But I digress again. This is a small collection, but it really packs a strong, silent punch. Mr. Bzmozgis is an extremely talented writer, someone who is very careful with his words and who understands the power of grace and sensitivity in language. Natasha is a collection of loosely connected stories that introduce you to the family of the Bermans, Russian Jews who have fled the Riga of Brezhnev for Toronto, Canada. Told through the eyes of the son Mark, these stories delicately capture the immigrant experience, and the pains of self-discovery for a young Jewish boy.

Drbloom
Dr. Bloom's Storey: a novel by Don Coles
Whatever would compel a 76-year-old successful Canadian poet to decide at this point in his life and career to write a novel? I don't know, but I'm eternally grateful that Mr. Coles did. Behold another Canadian novel which in my opinion, did not get the attention it so richly deserved. Intelligent, witty and full of emotional depth, Dr. Bloom's Story introduces the reader to cardiologist Nicolaas Bloom, who sells his house and practice and leaves Europe for Toronto, following the death of his wife. Harbouring an unfulfilled desire to become a writer, Dr. Bloom joins a writing class where he meets the enigmatic and intelligent Sophie, a woman whom Dr. Bloom suspects is being abused by her husband. In a strange twist of circumstances, Sophie's fate ends up resting in Dr. Bloom's hands. It's a fascinating study of human relationships at the centre of a troubling moral dilemma. In the words of the writer Katherine Govier: "Reading Don Coles is like listening to an erudite, judicious friend tell the story of a life of the mind that doesn’t for a moment neglect the delights of the flesh."

Mortification
Mortification: Writer's Stories of Their Public Shame edited by Robin Robertson
Like I stated in my previous post, I'm the kind of person that Margaret Atwood probably doesn't appreciate, because I seem to have this need after reading a book, to meet the duck. But if I can't meet the writer, surely the next best thing is to read personal experiences of public humiliation written by the authors themselves. What a wonderful collection of schadenfreude for those who think all writers are elitist pompous asses, and what an eye-opener for those who believe that the life of a writer is one of glamour, big book deals and adoring fans. And just what sheer fun! Deliciously humiliating stories of authors on horrific promotional tours, readings where no one shows up, excessive drinking and bad, bad, behaviour, and television interviews that one wishes had never, ever happened. If you are a writer, or want to be one, I think it is mandatory to read this book for your own emotional preparation for what is inevitabley to come.

Casehist
Case Histories: A Novel by Kate Atkinson
I may not have mentioned this before, but I love mysteries, especially British mysteries; I don't know what it is, but those Brits just know how to weave a delicious mysterious tale. I think my favourite mystery authors are Ngaio Marsh, P.D. James, Josephine Tey and Minette Walters. And I can now add Kate Atkinson to the list. But hers is not your 'typical' mystery (and in fact, the other authors I mentioned, don't exactly write your 'typical' mysteries either). Perhaps this is due to the fact that it's Ms. Atkinson's first foray into this genre? Who knows. Case Histories focuses on the rather sad and messed-up life of Jackson Brodie, former police inspector turned private investigator, and how three of his investigative cases weave themselves into his personal life. Like I stated before, in general terms, I believe that I am a 'Contract' reader; I want to be challenged, but at the end of the day, I want to enjoy the books I read; ultimately, I want to be moved, stirred, pulled emotionally. This is the kind of book that really gets to me. I could not put it down. It's full of suspense and intrigue, yes, but also heartbreak and misfortune, and human frailty desperately trying to come to grips with the imperfections and tragedies of life.

My 2004 BookLust, Part I

It's the sixth day into the new year, and I've noticed that on various lit blogs and web sites people are posting their 'best of' lists for books published in 2004. Most of the titles I haven't read; quite a few I've never even heard of. Based on that information, I think I can safely classify myself as a gentleman intellectual (keeping in mind that old phrase 'gentleman farmer'). I love books, I love reading, but I am not a 'serious intellectual'. I will never, ever, ever read 'Ulysses' (I can still remember this girl in highschool who would deliberately carry that book around with her to every class, making every effort to bring to my attention that she was reading it, and understanding it all); I don't read books because I want to show off or even because I want to improve myself; I read books because I'm curious. For me, a good book should be a joy to read; it shouldn't be slogging hard work involving excessive trips to the dictionary or encyclopedia. My kind of book, as Jonathan Franzen so aptly described in his essay Mr. Difficult, "deserves a reader's attention only as long as the author sustains the reader's trust. This is the Contract model. The discourse here is one of pleasure and connection." The opposing model, according to Franzen, is called "the Status model. It invites a discourse of genius and art-historicial importance" ... "The Status position is undeniably flattering to a writer's sense of importantce. In my bones, though, I'm a Contract kind of person."

I spent many torturous years in highschool pretending to be a 'Status' reader, but in my bones I've always known that I am a good ol' 'Contract' reader, too, and damn happy to be one.

So I thought I would share some of last year's curiosity with you, and list some of my favourite 'Contract' books that I read and enjoyed. This doesn't mean that the book was actually published in 2004, it just means that I either discovered it last year, or I finally got around to reading it. Because this post is going to be so lengthy, I decided to write it in two parts. Part II will follow in a day or two.

Howtobe
How to Be Alone: Essays by Jonathan Franzen
Ahh, poor Johnny. If anyone must feel alone at times, it's gotta be him. So why not get together a collection of essays that somehow all touch upon that somber subject? From the sad and heart-felt essay about his father's Alzheimer's ('MyFather's Brain'), to his enlightening perspective on reading, writing and the death of the novel ('Why Bother' and 'The Reader in Exile'), to, of course, his never-to-be-forgotten experience with the all-powerful Oprah ('Meet Me in St. Lous'), this collection of Franzen's writing is provocative, sincere and often quite funny. Franzen is a talented writer and his heart is in the right place.

Quirkyq
quirky QUWERTY: a biography of the typewriter and its many characters by Torbjörn Lundmark
Well geez, how could I not read this book? It's got a cool title, the cover is just plain delish (designed by a very talented book cover designer by the name of Joe Montgomery; keep an eye out for his stellar work), the author has a funky name and the subject is fascinating! What a wonderful idea, to write the history of something that most of us take for granted: the keyboard. Lundmark provides an intriguing history of the creation of the typewriter (hey, let's not forget that I.B.M. used to make typewriters before they got into computers), as well as delving into the delightful archaeology of each letter and symbol on the keyboard. Did you know why we dot our i's, or the origins of the amersand? Well I sure didn't. This is a fun and friendly reference tool for all you curious word buffs and linguist wannabes.

Negotiating
Negotiating with the Dead: A Writer on Writing by Margaret Atwood
This book probably slips into the 'Status' model in a few sections, but Ms. Atwood is one damn clever woman, and she just can't help being so smart. I don't know why this book didn't get more coverage and acclaim when it first came out; I loved it; it's just so rich and pithy, chock-full of candid insights on what it means (to Atwood) to be a writer, and just who are these strange creatures, these 'readers' out there? And why this need to meet the author after you have read their book? Atwood has a great answer for that one: "Wanting to meet an author because you like his work is like wanting to meet a duck because you like pâté." I must confess, that far too often I have a strong urge to meet the duck. So if you want to read an intelligent, insightful and humorous book about all the mysteries and marvels of the writing life, pick up this book. Do it for Peggy.

Outofflames
Out of the Flames: The Remarkable Story of a Fearless Scholar, a Fatal Heresy, and One of the Rarest Books in the World by Lawrence & Nancy Goldstone
Oh yeah, that subtitle hooked me in. Well, what the hell did you expect? A story about a heretical book considered so evil by some that a man is eventually put to death for creating it? And the story is true? Oh, I'm there, baby, with bells on. Michael Servetus is the man credited with the discovery of pulmonary circulation in the human body, and oh yeah, in 1553 he wrote this book called Christianismi Restitutio, in which among other things, he challenged the veracity of the Holy Trinity. Well, this put a bee in nasty ol' John Calvin's bonnet and "Servetus was tried and agonizingly burned at the stake, the last known copy of the Restitutio chained to his leg". But guess what! Three copies of the Restitutio managed to survive, despite all efforts to destroy them. I'll wager a bet Mel Gibson's already bought the rights to the movie. But seriously, this is an engrossing, extraordinary tale, involving the history of printing and religion and politics, told with all the most fascinating and influential people of that time; you'll learn about Johann Gutenberg, Johann Fust, Aldus Manutius, Erasmus, Martin Luther and Andreas Vesalius, and you'll get down on your knees and thank God you live in an age where you can express your thoughts on a blog without fear of being burnt at some stake with your computer chained to your leg. Not yet, anyway.

Blackbird
Black Bird by Michel Basilières
I actually read more fiction than non-fiction, but I guess last year I went through a real non-fiction phase. Hmmm....how to describe this story? Takes place in Montreal. During the October Crisis. There's an eccentric French Canadian family. Grave-robbers and mad scientists and a crusty black crow and a gripping denouement on Hallowe'en night. Dark, and funny and utterly outrageous and well-written to boot. Mr. Basilières was the recipient of 2004's First Novel Award for Canadian writers, sponsored by Amazon.ca and Books in Canada magazine. And I recall hearing somewhere that his manuscript was just another of the many from Random House's slush pile. Heartening news. And I'm looking forward to his next book, for sure. So get writing, Mr. Basilières.

Exlibris
Ex Libris: Confessions of a Common Reader by Anne Fadiman
Words almost fail me, honestly. One of the most delightful collections of essays I have ever read. Ms. Fadiman has a passion for books and reading, and in these beautiful, erudite, witty and enchanting essays she welcomes you into her lifelong love affair with books and language. Oh, that I could express my thoughts like her! So many delicious anecdotes, like the essay 'Marrying Libraries' in which she recounts the holy (and stressful) event of when she and her husband finally decide to mix their books together. Or how one should lovingly care for their books, in the essay 'Never Do That to a Book'. Ah, the romantic delight of 'Words on a Flyleaf', all about what people write in the books they give to their lovers and friends. This book is a keeper. It's the warm, loving friend you pick up on a cold rainy sunday, and read and re-read, snuggled in your favourite blanket with lots of hot tea. A few warm cats couldn't hurt either. Oh and yes, of course, the cover is pure delight.

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