The Book Mine Set

Book discussion blog with a Canadian bias.

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Saturday Word Play- Title Ties


The Three Day Long Road Running Too Close To The Home of The White Triffids With Bone Scissors

The terrible and terribly long title above mashes together at least 8 titles of popular books. I'll give you the authors, you find the title. (Hint: All titles run forward. Some words will be used in more than one title.)

As always, feel free to do all eight at home, but only answer one in the comment section, that way 8 people will have a chance to play along.

1. Cormac McCarthy
2. Barbara Gowdy
3. Linwood Barclay
4. Marilynne Robinson
5. Rose Tremain
6. Joseph Boyden
7. John Wyndham
8. Augusten Burroughs

Labels: ,

Blogger Sandra said...

#4 is Home by Marilynne Robinson, which I have read and highly recommend.

Saturday, 29 November, 2008  
Blogger Marg said...

#1 is The Road by Cormac McCarthy

Saturday, 29 November, 2008  
Blogger raidergirl3 said...

#3 Linwood Barclay is (the very excellent read) Too Close to Home.

Saturday, 29 November, 2008  
Anonymous gypsysmom said...

#6 (Joseph Boyden) is Three Day Road which I read recently and which I highly recommend.

Saturday, 29 November, 2008  
Blogger Wanda said...

#8 is Running With Scissors by Augusten Burroughs.

Sunday, 30 November, 2008  
Blogger Bybee said...

The Rose Tremain book is The Road Home -- saw it in my newest issue of Bookmarks.

Sunday, 30 November, 2008  
Anonymous Pooker said...

#2 is The White Bone by Barbara Gowdy

Sunday, 30 November, 2008  

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

The Great Wednesday Compare #3- Noam Chomsky VERSUS Vladimir Nabokov


The winner of last week's Great Wednesday Compare (Stephen Hawking Vs. Noam Chomsky) with a final score of 5-3 was Noam Chomsky.

Science versus politics? With the minds of last week's two contenders, it's difficult to reduce it to that, but certainly judging on literary merits alone would be a near impossible task.

This week Hawking leaves the Compare. I've read a couple of his books, and I was amazed at how interesting those were. He's able to make science accessible and that's not to be confused with making it easy. Can I explain wormholes and the expansion of the universe? Absolutely not, but while reading through A Brief History of Time and Black Holes and Baby Universes, I was momentarily convinced that I could. I used to be critical of such books, thinking it was folly to try and condense all of that knowledge into a single volume and simply hand it over to the average Joe and expect him to comprehend it. But, I think such books help make laymen become believers in their science and the possibility of the their theories, and that's more important than turning us all into amateur physicists.

But it's time to get back to literature.

Remember, vote simply by adding your comment below, base it on whatever merit you choose, voting does not end until Tuesday at 11:59 p.m. (Dec. 2nd, 2008), and if you want your author to get more votes, feel free to promote them here or on your blog!

Who's better?



***And if you're not too tired of voting, head over to Bybee's to vote on a new term. First there was "w00t!" Now there's "meh." Who knows? With your help maybe a brand new term will be coined...

Labels: , ,

OpenID Christine said...

I choose Nabokov!

Wednesday, 26 November, 2008  
Blogger Remi said...

Nabokov for sure. How can you not vote for a writer who made a name for himself in not one, but two languages - Russian then English.

Perhaps, if he wins, you should toss him up against Beckett, a writer who started in English then switched to French.

Wednesday, 26 November, 2008  
Blogger Barbara Bruederlin said...

I'm going with Nabokov too, but only because I am growing a little weary of Chomsky.

Wednesday, 26 November, 2008  
Anonymous August said...

Nabokov, no question.

Thursday, 27 November, 2008  
Blogger Melanie said...

Nabokov, no contest. He is amazing.

Thursday, 27 November, 2008  
Blogger Bybee said...

Nabokov...that reminds me...I'm finally ready to try Pale Fire.

Thursday, 27 November, 2008  
Blogger Rob Hardy said...

Another vote for Nabokov. He was a remarkable writer, and he was one of my mother's college professors!

Tuesday, 02 December, 2008  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I wish to vote for Nabakov this week because I want to vote for Beckett next week...
-Myshkin...

Tuesday, 02 December, 2008  

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Brainstorming Challenges

I'm half way through my last book for the Russian Reading Challenge right now, and my sights are already set on the next challenge I'll be joining. For those of you who haven't joined a reading challenge, I'd highly recommend it. If it's your first, I'd suggest picking something slightly less ambitious: one with fewer books required and with a topic or theme you'd likely to be reading anyway.

But even better than participating in a challenge is hosting your own. I encourage you to do so. I've hosted a couple of my own: The Obscure Challenge (which has been less than successful) and the 2 Canadian Book Challenges (which have been a lot of fun). I won't be starting up another one anytime soon, but I've had a few ideas running through my head for a while:


1. On A Roll Challenge - In this challenge you show your love for those people on your blogroll. Suggested rules and requirements: Pick four people on your blogroll and see what they've been reading. Choose any 5 of those books to read within one year.








2. Lost In Translation Challenge - In this challenge you read books not originally written in English. Two suggestions for rules and requirements: I. Pick three books originally written in three different languages to read in one year. II. Pick two different translations of the same book to read within 9 months.






3. I Read Dead People Challenge - In this challenge you only read books by authors who are no longer alive. Suggestion for rules and requirements: 3 books in 9 months; 1 from an author who died in the past five years, 1 from an author who died more than 10 years ago, and 1 from an author who died more than 50 years ago.




4. Challenge Challenge - This challenge encourages multi-tasking. Suggestion for rules and requirements: In one year, read four books that each meet a requirement of four other challenges. For instance, a book might fit into the Canadian Challenge, the Centuries Challenge, The A to Z Challenge, and the What's In A Name Challenge all at the same time.






As you can see, I've added suggested rules in case anyone wants to attempt hosting one of these. If you do, feel free to use the cheesy logos and rules, or revamp them to suit your tastes.


Can you think of any ideas for challenges? If you're not planning on hosting them yourself, feel free to throw them out here in the comment section for others who might be interested. Better yet, write a "Mock Challenge" post on your own blogs and simply add a link to it here. Just be willing to let someone use your idea, if they should be so inclined. Or, perhaps you'll pick up the torch yourself. There are a lot of challenges listed here and here if you want to make sure it hasn't already been done. Don't worry if you notice some overlap. For instance, the "On A Roll Challenge" listed above is similar in scope to the "I Heard It Through The Grapevine Challenge" and the "I Read Dead People Challenge" picks could count towards the "Decades Challenge" or many others.

Labels:

Blogger 3M said...

*laughs* Are you mocking me, John?!

The "I read dead people" Challenge was the funniest. I laughed out loud and even had my kids come over and look at your icon.

Thanks for the laughs!

Tuesday, 25 November, 2008  
Blogger Wanda said...

LMAO! I just signed in with the intention to post a "teaser" when I caught sight of your toilet paper roll (TBMS is in my reader). Well, then I just had to pop over here first to see what the heck you were up to now. Showing your love and TP...great combo, too funny!

Tuesday, 25 November, 2008  
Blogger Michele at Reader's Respite said...

Ha ha ha. Funny stuff! How 'bout an "Off With Their Head Challenge"....read a book on various royals who lost their head. Boleyn, Jane Grey, Marie Antoinette, etc.

Tuesday, 25 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

3M: I'd never mock you! You are a challenge queen!

Wanda: Nothin's says love like squeezin' the Charmin'.

Michele: A whole challenge around decapitations. Even more morbid than the "dead people" challenge, but I like it!

Tuesday, 25 November, 2008  
Blogger GeraniumCat said...

I'd like to suggest a Weighty German Novel Challenge, for people who haven't read Hesse (et al).

Tuesday, 25 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

GeraniumCat: There is a German Reading Challenge beginning in January of next year. Read about it here. It doesn't say anything about the books being "weighty" but I'm sure you could choose such books. Maybe you could even combine it with the "Chunkster Challenge." Unless of course, you didn't mean "weighty" in the literal sense.

By the way, I recently read a collection of Hesse's poetry and reviewed it here.

But though Germany has already been taken (along the US, Canada, Russia, and Japan just off the top of my head)I'm sure there are other countries left that someone could create challenges for. I was surprised for instance to not be able to find a British reading challenge.

Tuesday, 25 November, 2008  
Blogger Remi said...

Though I like the notion of challenges, I only do one.

If I were to run one though, I'd probably do a Back to School challenge - five books centred around grade or high school or five books set around university life.

Wednesday, 26 November, 2008  
Blogger Historia said...

I have a food book challenge already under way. It goes to next March so still list of time to join in.

http://booksaboutfoodchallenge.blogspot.com/

My Shakespeare challenge will be starting again on January 1st and going for the whole 12 months this time.

http://biblioshake.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, 26 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

Remi: And since you've been pretty exclusive with your challenges, I bet you picked a good one to join!

That Back to School Challenge isn't a bad idea. Maybe a similar challenge could look at the most common books currently being taught in highschools. I'd call it the "It'll Make You Look Younger" Challenge.

Historia: I've signed up for the Shakespeare challenge again! Thanks for hosting it.

Wednesday, 26 November, 2008  
Blogger Barbara Bruederlin said...

I am too busy being entertained by the notion of your suggested challenges to actually come up with any of my own. But I shall let this idea stew in my noodle for a bit.

Wednesday, 26 November, 2008  
Blogger Teddy Rose said...

John,

I love the On a Roll Challenge. LOL! However, until dec. 31 theres the Well Rounded Challenge that basically does the same thing. I don't know if Jan is going to host it again in the new year.

Thursday, 27 November, 2008  
Blogger Teddy Rose said...

Woops, I ment the Challenge Challenge.

Thursday, 27 November, 2008  
Blogger Dale said...

Please Use Anyone (of these challenges). Love that graphic!

Sunday, 30 November, 2008  
Blogger tanabata said...

Haha! These are great! There is a Lost in Translation challenge but I love your graphic!

Monday, 01 December, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

Thanks for the links to some of these that already existed! Awesome.

Monday, 01 December, 2008  

Monday, November 24, 2008

Reader's Diary #418- Romesh Gunesekera: The Library

Short Story Monday

As a hobby, I went through a brief phase of genealogical research about 7 or 8 years back. Growing up we knew of no Mutfords outside of my father's family. There were 3 Mutford males in his family, and each of those had 1 son (me being 1 of the 3). And, unless the girls stopped changing their last names upon marriage, it was believed that the name would eventually die out. My surname is rare and as a general rule that makes it a little easier to research, but the Internet made things easier still.

It was a productive search, uncovering a few distant relatives in the U.S. and Ontario, and while there are no Mutfords currently living there, a small village in England called Mutford. When I say small, I mean small. According to the Wikipedia entry, Mutford "consists of a crossroads, at which there is a village store with a Post Office, and a residential street..." and on the Facebook group, "Mutford Appreciation Society," the recent news reads, "Car passed through village at 7.29pm. 8.15am non local spotted in post office."

A few weeks ago my wife booked us tickets to fly over and see Mutford in March. I've long known my ancestors were from England, it'll be nice to see what I can only assume to be part of our history. Can't wait to check out that post office!

I bring this up because Donald, the protagonist in "The Library," is also researching his family tree. However, he's the opposite of me: his ancestors moved to England, not away. Still, it was enough common ground to make the story appealing.

Donald is a likeable character, if somewhat dull. He reminded me of Akaky Akakievich in Gogol's "The Overcoat" in that both lives seem enriched only with banality. However, unlike Akaky, Donald actually catches a break...and then some. These breaks rest upon coincidence (or if you want to go down that road, fate). Coincidences happen in real-life all the time, yet when an author tries to stick one into a plot, more often they seem far-fetched. Gunesekera however, makes his coincidences seem entirely plausible.

It doesn't have a strong ending however, and as happened when I listened to Vincent Lam's "A Long Migration," I wasn't even sure if I'd managed to get the whole story. Maybe the ending had been left off my copy by mistake? But upon a second reading, I think it has more of an ending than I'd first acknowledged. It could be the first chapter of a novel, but then, it could also stand on its own.

If a mystery defines you, what happens when the mystery is solved?

Labels: , ,

Friday, November 21, 2008

Saturday Word Play- Mistabled Awards

This time of year seems to be award season for the book folk. This week alone saw the Governor General Awards handed out here in Canada (congrats to Ricci, Blatchford, Scheier and others) and the US National Book Awards south of the border (congrats to Matthiessen, Gordon-Reed, Blundell, and others). I'm sure it's a boost to their careers and booksales alike.

Below I've listed some of the other awards handed out annually. Can you find the titles of this year's winners in the chart that follows? Each 1st word can be found somewhere in the first column, 2nd in the second and so forth. But, to make things more difficult, I won't tell you the number of words in each title-- except to say that many of the titles are not seven words long and so, some of the words in the latter columns are duds, meaning they don't belong to any title. Don't fret too much though. As more people answer correctly and eliminate words, the easier it makes your task.

I apologize about the blurriness of the chart, hopefully it's still legible. To shrink it down from nine columns, and make it fit, I had to eliminate this year's Newbery winner, Good Masters! Sweet Ladies! Voices From A Medieval Village. The chart was just rendered so small and unclear, I had to replace it. I'm sure I've missed many of the others from the pass year. Feel free to let me know which others you know of. Also, just out of curiosity, do any of these prizes influence your decision to read those particular books?

As always, feel free to do all ten at home, but only answer one in the comment section, that way it'll allow 10 people to play along.

1. The Scotiabank Giller Prize
2. Hugo Award for Best Novel
3. The Orange Prize (The Orange Broadband Prize for Fiction)
4. The Griffin Poetry Prize
5. The Man Booker Prize
6. The International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award
7. Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize
8. Stephen Leacock Medal for Humour
9. Pulitzer Prize for Fiction
10. Caldecott

Labels: ,

Blogger Jo-Ann said...

#10 (Caldecott) is The Invention of Hugo Cabret. This is beautifully illustrated novel where the illustration are almost more important that the words.
I try to read the Newbery, Caldecott and GG children's winners.

Saturday, 22 November, 2008  
Blogger Sandra said...

#5 (The Man Booker) is The White Tiger. I read many award nominees, often enjoying those on the longlist or shortlist more than the actually winner. But being nominated for an award only confirms that a book I'm already interested in is well written.

Saturday, 22 November, 2008  
Blogger raidergirl3 said...

#3 is The Road Home by Rose Tremain

Saturday, 22 November, 2008  
Blogger Teena in Toronto said...

My brain is taking the weekend off. Ha!

I just finished my 10th Canadian book:

http://www.purple4mee.com/2008/11/book-here-for-good-time-on-road-with.html

It's written by the lead singer of Trooper, Ra McGuire

Saturday, 22 November, 2008  
Blogger Wanda said...

#7(Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize) went to: The Flying Troutmans.

Saturday, 22 November, 2008  
Blogger Barbara Bruederlin said...

Stop it, you are making my brain ache.

Saturday, 22 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

Jo-Ann: I get to a lot of the award winners, but only eventually. I have mixed feelings about many of the Caldecott winners. I know the award is for illustration, but sometimes the text is not great at all. At those times I question if the award shouldn't look at the book as a whole package.

Sandra: Reading a whole short-list is fun. Good way to compare your winner with the choice of the judges.

Raidergirl: Have you read it?

Teena: Hey, their other big hit could have made a good title, too: Raise A Little Hell.

Wanda: It's an award I hadn't even heard of until earlier this week. Not a shabby prize though.

Barbara: Next week it's "Literary Calculus." (Maybe not.)

Saturday, 22 November, 2008  
Blogger 3M said...

#6 IMPAC Dublin is Deniro's Game.

I'll include this in the carnival, John!

Saturday, 04 April, 2009  

Reader's Diary #417- Hermann Hesse: Poems (translated by James Wright)

If you'd asked me last month where Steppenwolf (Born To Be Wild, Magic Carpet Ride) got their name, I'd have smugly said from a German novel. Yet when I found the book on the left at a a used book sale recently, I admit this was the first man I thought of: Luckily, when I realized I'd been thinking of Howard Hesseman, not Hermann Hesse, I saw that it was safe to go back in the water, so to speak, and picked myself up a copy.

The first thing that struck me was the simplicity of the poems. Of course it probably helps (or hinders, depending) that translator James Wright has chosen poems that seem to represent "homesickness" and so a single theme runs through each. However, things got a little more complex when I was forced to reconsider what home meant: both to myself, and from poem to poem. Longing for something one cannot even describe seems to have been a common theme running through a few of the books I've read lately, but it's probably one we can all relate to; akin to feeling that something isn't right but having no idea how to fix it.

The second thing that struck me was the difference, or lack of, rhymes in the English version. Wright has the German originals followed by their English translations. Compare:

Wohl lieb ich die finstre Nacht;
Oft aber, wenn sie also bleich
Und duster wie aus Schmerzen lacht,
Graut mir vor ihrem argen reich

I like the darkness well enough;
But sometimes, when it turns bleak
And peaked, as my suffering laughs at me,
Its dreadful kingdom horrifies me.

Without understanding a lick of German, I can clearly see the rhymes at the end of the original (Nacht-lacht, bleich-reich). In the English counterpart, there is the doubling of "me" at the end and there's a near internal rhyme with bleak-peaked. This is about the closest Wright was able to manage.

A poem must be one of the most difficult pieces of language to translate. To find equivalent words in another language for all those subtleties and still convey the intent, possible connotations, and mood must require an amazing sort of skill to do well. And then to add in rhythm and rhyme? Is it even possible to do an adequate job? I'm not bilingual, so I can't answer.

Did I enjoy the poems in this collection? Absolutely. Did I understand them the way Hesse intended? I'm not sure. Then, I'm never sure of that, even with originally English poems. I usually consider it a moot point, but this time I got a little sidetracked. I started thinking of nectarines.

Last winter in Iqaluit, I couldn't get a decent nectarine. The ones at the local Northmart were half-rotten and overpriced, the ones I shipped up from Montreal were just rotten. Was it too much to ask for fresh tropical fruit in the Arctic?

Probably. It's the Arctic for God sakes! I'm not sure how it happened, but somehow I've come to expect the world to be completely accessible to me. (Blame globalization.) But judging by the outcry last year when food prices started to climb due to rising fuel costs, I don't think I'm alone.
And maybe it's not just commodities. Maybe it's also ideas. (Blame the Internet.) Surely that's not a bad thing... or is it?

Should a book of German poetry be accessible to me? If I have to rely on a translation, maybe not. How would I know if it was half rotten?

On second thought, what if I was to learn German? Maybe accessibility isn't the issue, maybe a sense of entitlement is. If I want to have a greater appreciation of Hesse's poetry-- in its German original-- I should have to work for it.

Nah. Who has the time for that?

I'll take Wright's nectarines. This one doesn't taste bad at all...

Without You

My Pillow gazes upon me at night
Empty as a gravestone;
I never thought it would be so bitter
To be alone,
Not to lie down asleep in your hair.

(Read the rest here.)

Labels: , , ,

Blogger david elzey said...

I, too, have often wondered about that entitlement of translation. With larger works like novels there is the intent of the author within a story, but with poetry and the choice of wording being so deliberate I do wonder if translation really aren't more of a disservice.

I do appreciate a good translation, but I always feel like I'm missing some nuance, or the punchline to the joke.

Friday, 21 November, 2008  
Blogger holly cupala said...

Hi, John - sorry about that - Mr. Linky crashed my blog post! Come on over and post your link.

Friday, 21 November, 2008  
Blogger Barbara Bruederlin said...

While I know some German, a lot of that poem uses words that I don't know, so I will refrain from commenting on the translation.

Sometimes though it's enough to love the words without the meaning. I would love to know the meaning to some of Sigur Ros' lyric, but not enough to actually learn Icelandic. And I would be terribly disappointed if I found out they were actually talking about the price of nectarines in Reykjavik.

Friday, 21 November, 2008  
Blogger Remi said...

While I did read Siddhartha, I much prefer Howard Hesseman. How can you not love Dr. Johnny Fever?

Saturday, 22 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

David: I once read a translation of some Neruda poems and enjoyed them so much that I didn't question how true to the originals they were. But I suspect in a lot of these cases, it comes down wanted to give credit where credit is due. And, especially with poetry, could the translator deserve more than the poet?

Barbara: It's true that some sounds are pleasant enough without understanding the words.

Remi: Oh, I'm okay with Johnny Fever. Not so sure what a book of his poetry would look like though.

Saturday, 22 November, 2008  

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Reader's Diary #416- Anthony De Sa: Barnacle Love

Somewhat like David Bezmozgis's Natasha and Other Stories in scope (connected stories about an immigrant family's experience in Canada), I found De Sa's more engaging. His is the story of the Rebelos, a Portuguese family from the Azores, that eventually ends up in Toronto. The first half of the book revolves around Manuel Rebelo, who has convinced himself that his obsession with Canada is about fulfilling a dream. Before long, however, it becomes apparent that Manuel's dream is ill-defined at best, and Canada really represents an escape (both from an overbearing, abusive mother and from memories of a pedophile priest). The latter half of the book moves to Antonio, Manuel's son, who struggles with his Portuguese heritage and more importantly, with a father who has not amounted to anything extraordinary, despite a few lame attempts.

At times Barnacle Love, as you've probably guessed, can be a downer. Most troubling for me was the inability to really understand Manuel. I was taking it as shoddy writing, that he wasn't really defined as a character, until I realized that it was Manuel's lack of real purpose and his self-delusion, that made him appear that way. If Manuel was really as two-dimensional, as I had first suspected he was, I wouldn't have found myself rooting for him despite his obvious flaws.

I also enjoyed comparing Antonio and Manuel. With Manuel, who wanted to get away from his mother, and Antonio who sometimes seemed loyal to a fault to his father, the two made easy contrasts. When Manuel was a young man, during his first stint in Newfoundland, he watches a moose being gutted with hardly more than a passing thought. Yet when Antonio watches his father and friends slaughter a pig, he is transfixed by the blood and winds up vomiting at the sight of the guts. But perhaps most interesting is the way De Sa tells Manuel's story in the third person, but tells Antonio's in the first. The effect is a son who seems more psychologically substantial than his father. Could this be Manuel's dream of fulfillment manifesting itself in his son? Perhaps Barnacle Love is hopeful afterall.

The Soundtrack
1. Mar De Canal- Cesaria Evora
2. Nem As Paredes Confesso- Amalia Rodrigues
3. Runaway- Great Big Sea
4. Força- Nelly Furtado
5. O Canada

Barnacle Love (2008) was published by Random House and shortlisted for the Giller Prize.

Labels: , , ,

Blogger Allison said...

Although as you say it does seem like bit of a downer at times, it certainly sounds intriguing. A good winter read.

Thursday, 20 November, 2008  
Blogger Wanda said...

Actually, based on your review, this sounds like one I'd rather like, another one for my tbr list. I don't mind a downer, it makes the more comedic novels that much more appreciated. So, what do you think, did it deserve it's spot on the short list?

Thursday, 20 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

Allison: Perhaps I should have said in the review, but there are ample doses of comic relief (albeit sometimes dark) as well.

Wanda: That's tough for me to say without reading a lot of Canadian fiction that was published this year. If I was to do a short-list from all the books I've read this year, definitely.

Thursday, 20 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

Kailana's review is here: http://myreadingbooks.blogspot.com/2008/11/barnacle-love-by-anthony-de-sa.html

Thursday, 27 November, 2008  

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

The Great Wednesday Compare #3- Stephen Hawking VERSUS Noam Chomsky


The winner of last week's Great Wednesday Compare (Art Spiegelman Vs. Stephen Hawking) with a final score of 4-1 was Art Spiegelman.

Oy Vey! The votes just keeping getting fewer and fewer.

This week we say goodbye to Art Spiegelman. Last week I made a reference to his "Garbage Pail Kids" days. Isn't it amazing that he could start on such a humble career note then end up winning a Pulitzer? And with a graphic novel that uses mice to tell a holocaust story?! I've yet to read a graphic novel, but I can't wait to read Maus.

On a trivial note, both Hawking and Spiegelman have made appearances on the Simpsons.

This week things get a little cerebral.

Remember, vote simply by adding your comment below, base it on whatever merit you choose, voting does not end until Tuesday at 11:59 p.m. (Nov. 25th, 2008), and if you want your author to get more votes, feel free to promote them here or on your blog!

Who's better?

Labels: , ,

Blogger Teddy Rose said...

I haven't weighed in for awhile. I had to get my two cent in for this one. Noam Chomsky hands down! I'm a big fan.

Wednesday, 19 November, 2008  
Blogger Bybee said...

Noam Chomsky.

Wednesday, 19 November, 2008  
Blogger Sam Houston said...

I have to admit that I seldom understand Hawking, but since I absolutely detest Chomsky, it's a vote here for Hawking.

Wednesday, 19 November, 2008  
Anonymous Myshkin said...

I wish to vote for Noam Chomsky in today's contest...Chomsky is not only a cunning linguist, he also inspires rebellious punks around the world by giving them analytical tools so they can achieve their own intellectual credibility and confidence and he gives their anarchic energy a bit of constructive focus.
Though many of his political works are almost as innaccessible as his science stuff - as an individual he makes his analysis accessible to a wide audience through public lectures, recorded interviews and dumbed-down articles. I once emailed him for an interview with a Canadian student newspaper and he responded within a couple of days. He said no because he had no time, but he responded. A classmate emailed him with a draft of a short article on the WTO and he responded to that, too, with quite a few words of encouragement.

Wednesday, 19 November, 2008  
Blogger Barbara Bruederlin said...

I'm going to have to toss a coin on this one.


Hawking

Wednesday, 19 November, 2008  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vkmczhkrKYA

This is a Chomsky related clip ---
THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING OF FREE TRADE

Chomsky's cinematic debut (after Manufacturing Consent)
-Myshkin

Thursday, 20 November, 2008  
OpenID bookchronicle said...

Chomsky!

Thursday, 20 November, 2008  
Blogger Melanie said...

Well, to even things up a little, and because I've actually read Hawking, I'll vote for Hawking again this week.

Thursday, 20 November, 2008  
Blogger Remi said...

How often do you get to vote for an anarchist? Chomsky.

Sunday, 23 November, 2008  

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

And The Winner Is...

Callista! Callista, like the others who entered the draw, linked A LOT of those books read for the 2nd Canadian Book Challenge to other challenges they could be used for. Some examples? Bookweird by Paul Glennon could work as for the Bibliography challenge and Six Seconds by Rick Mofina could count towards the Numbers Challenge. Each suggestion counted as an entry, and I then picked from those at random, leaving Callista the lucky winner of Brad Kelln's The Tongue of the Dead. Congrats Callista! (I was supposed to do this draw on the 14th and I apologize to the participants for the delay.) Thanks to ECW Press for donating this prize.

Labels: , , ,

Blogger Wanda said...

Congrats Callista, it sounds like a great book!

Tuesday, 18 November, 2008  

Monday, November 17, 2008

Reader's Diary #415- W. P. Kinsella: Waiting on Lombard Street

Short Story Monday

After my wife's last post about Carol Shield's Dressing Up for The Carnival, Gypsysmom commented "I generally don't like short stories as I often feel they don't develop the plot as much as I need."

Putting aside the "I" which implies it is a personal opinion, and the "generally" which acknowledges exceptions, Gypsysmom's statement is not uncommon. Even amongst avid readers, the short story form isn't always looked upon favourably. Given the usual complaints, it stands to reason that they'd care even less for flash fiction, which is an even more condensed form of short story.

As a fan of both short stories and flash fiction, I used to come to their defence whenever someone didn't share my enthusiasm. I still think there are those that just don't give the forms a fair chance, but I've also come to realize that it sometimes comes down to a matter of individual preference. And while I'm no longer disheartened by the detractors, I still cringe whenever I come across a story that lives down to their expectations.

W.P. Kinsella's flash story "Waiting on Lombard Street" is one such story.

It is the tale of couple waiting for their order at a I-HOP. A simple enough premise, but I don't have an issue with that. Plus the introduction of a supernatural element held promise of livening things up. The mention of the Bermuda Triangle the third paragraph has decidedly more relevance as the story progresses. Likewise waiting in vain for one's meal has some comedic potential. (I've only been in Yellowknife since July but on three separate occasions, at three different restaurants, I've had a waitress "forget" my order. I can relate to the premise.)

But jokingly suggesting that their order got accidentally served in an I-HOP in an alternate universe, isn't exactly a great conclusion to a story. Even non-Sci-Fi junkies have talked that idea to death. Kinsella presents it as if it were an original thought but does nothing original with it. A plot should be more than a passing thought. A story should be more than this.

Labels: ,

Anonymous Carrie K said...

It doesn't sound like a story that would lure you in.

Flash fiction? I've never heard the term before. I learn something new every day. '

I'm a bit of a short story snob myself - I don't know why, I've read some fabulous ones and you'd think it would suit my attention span so much more. Ingrained prejudices, a terrible thing. Terrible and silly.

Monday, 17 November, 2008  
Blogger Teena in Toronto said...

I'm not a fan of short stories either as I like getting to know the characters.

I finished another Canadian book recently ... Tommy Chong's bio:

http://www.purple4mee.com/2008/11/book-cheech-chong-unauthorized.html

Monday, 17 November, 2008  
Blogger splummer said...

Hi John,
I don't know if I let you know I wanted to do the Canadian book challenge. But I am. I have a list and have recently finished one book. You can see my post about that book here:
JUST BOOKS: THE IDEAL WIFE
Take Care!!

Sherrie

Monday, 17 November, 2008  

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Guest post (Debbie Mutford) - Carol Shields: Dressing Up For The Carnival


I started this book the first week of the challenge in July. I had great hopes of participating in this challenge, supporting my husband's blog (for which I admittedly pay little attention to, despite intentions), and doing more leisure reading. Instead, it has taken me over four months (120+ days) to read 237 pages. I'm blaming the lack of productivity on the choice of book (we'll see if that's true over the next few weeks as I've now chosen a book that I've previously loved to motivate me back into the spirit of the challenge and finish twelve books in eight months).

I chose Carol Shields' book of short stories primarily because I had previously read her novel Unless with mixed feelings. I guess you could say that I disliked the book as a whole. I didn't like it because it lacked enough plot to keep me entertained, however, once done, I missed the characters. I found myself attached to them and thinking about them as one does with old high school or university buddies; people interesting enough to wonder whatever happened to them yet not acquainted closely enough to warrant any real contact. I felt like I needed to find out through the grapevine the happenings of Reta since I last heard from her in the book. Thus, I concluded that Shields' talent was in the development of characters tragically trapped in dull, pointless lives (a little too realistic for my taste in entertainment).

Dressing Up for the Carnival is a collection of twenty-two short stories, most of which confirm my previous conclusion. The book reads more like a bunch of first chapters to novels waiting to be finished. The characters, settings, main themes are developed nicely and often touch on subject matter worthy of more depth, yet they just cease to continue. At the end of each story I kept hoping for a secret fold-out page outlining what actually happened to the people she had introduced me to. Avoiding plot altogether, she hides her talent (and lack thereof) in a genre of story writing where readers typically expect snippets so less development is required. Many good short stories still satisfy my need for purpose, but Shields absolves herself of any true commitment to her characters and divorces them before I'm ready.

When Shields has developed a solid character, instead of progressing a storyline she simply adds more characters. The short story 'Keys' is a prime example: meet Biff Monkhouse, the Dr Marianne Moriarty (and her mother and then her lover), Christopher MacFarlane, Cheryl Spence, the Museum of Keys founder (and his wife), and a seven year old boy. It could be argued that the whole purpose of the story is to follow a key (or set of keys) but that's not the case. It could be said that the characters are all linked in their experiences with keys, but that would be difficult to establish. I found the transitions between characters to be weak with brief conjunctions and limited connectivity. It was simply a bunch of people who happened to have an encounter with a key (or keys) each with their own story to be told but never given the chance.

Most of the stories left me with the feelings I imagine associated with extensive traveling - you get to meet a whole bunch of fabulous people during a single moment of their lives but the pre and post events will forever be a mystery. There are two exceptions where Shields creates either a plot or a purpose. 'Absence' is a story centred around the frustrations of an author using a typewriter with a broken letter i. While there's still not much of a storyline (just the introduction of what the story could have been), at least there's a purpose. Shields herself doesn't use the letter i and I could feel the connection between Shields and her main character. I imagined both brains searching for synonyms. It's a catchy gimmick and I can see her purpose...too bad it doesn't go anywhere.

The one story that I believe can be considered a story (in that is has a beginning, middle, and end) is 'The Scarf'. Shields goes against her own plotless formula and creates a problem for the character that actually gets resolved (or at least ends on some level). This is completely spoiled, however, when her character (again, an author) blatantly shoves my enjoyment in my face.
Dorothy and Clarence are...simple in their judgments, and Dorothy in particular is fond of repeating her recipe for enduring fiction. 'A beginning, a middle, and an ending,' she likes to say. 'Is that too much to ask!'

This is quite obviously a swipe at readers like me who expect more from her. I understand her attempt to quell her critics, but resent that it had to be in the one and only story I'd been swept into. It leaves me with a bitter taste in my mouth and ruins the sixteen pages of what I perceive to be her best writing.

I generally enjoy her vocabulary and she obviously has a talent with words. Her flair for descriptions is what hooks my interest and I quickly become attached to some of the characters. A book of short stories (aka character introductions) was a great way for her to do what she does best - create personalities. However, I need more. She may call me "simple in [my] judgments" but I don't understand why she wouldn't want to do more with her characters. She surrounds herself with wonderfully captivating people and disregards any need to let them do something. Shelved away, there are a bunch of great characters waiting for their chance to live a life, solve a problem, tell a story.

Labels: , , ,

Blogger Bybee said...

Nice to see you posting, Debbie! I've got Dressing Up For The Carnival on my TBR..there's a vague plan to read it for the Canadian Book Challenge. Maybe I should try Larry's Party instead.

Sunday, 16 November, 2008  
Anonymous gypsysmom said...

I also have Dressing Up for the Carnival on my TBR pile but no immediate plans to read it (for this challenge or any other). I appreciated your thoughtful comments and I suspect that I will feel the same way about the book. I generally don't like short stories as I often feel they don't develop the plot as much as I need. Before you give up on Carol Shields though I recommend you read The Stone Diaries. I don't know anyone who hasn't liked it.

Sunday, 16 November, 2008  
Anonymous debbiem said...

I love the idea of trying another book by Carol Shields, but feel a little apprehensive about reviewing it for the challenge. In case there are many Shields fans out there, I wouldn't want to criticize a third book. But I'll put it on my TBR list and maybe mention it on the blog if I like it.

Sunday, 16 November, 2008  
Blogger Barbara Bruederlin said...

Great review! It really does sum up a lot of my feelings about both this collection of short stories and Unless. I think that Carol Shields' short story were most successful (for me anyway) when she wrote about small domestic battles and less experimentally as she did in Dressing Up for the Carnival.

Sunday, 16 November, 2008  
Blogger Wanda said...

Unless was my first and thus far, only Carol Shields read. Having two daughters of my own, one a teenager, I felt I should have been more interested in the story. Instead, I dragged myself through to the ending. It was a weird feeling not caring about her characters.

Your review of Dressing Up for the Carnival helps confirm my decision not to give this particular author another go.

Sunday, 16 November, 2008  

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Saturday Word Play- Lest We Forget Scrambles


I haven't exactly been rolling in responses for my Saturday Word Plays or Great Wednesday Compares lately, so pushing this week's usual 10 questions to 15 might seem like wishful thinking at best. However, it would seem a bit disrespectful to leave anyone out intentionally, and since I'm making a game out of it as it is, I need to balance things out. I'll admit I don't know many of these. It's like those montages they show at the Oscars of actors, directors, etc that have died throughout the the preceding year: I usually only recognize 3 or 4. Anyway, these are writers that have left us this year (if you know more, please let me know in the comments). Unscramble the name above his/her obituary.

As always, feel free to do them all at home, but only answer one in the comment section, that way 15 people will have a chance to play.

1. Chiemal Htiocrnc
"[...]was a brand-name author, known for his stories of disaster and systematic breakdown, such as the rampant microbe of The Andromeda Strain or dinosaurs running amok in Jurassic Park, one of his many books that became major Hollywood movies." - Chicago Sun Times

2. Dusts Kertle
"Beginning with Division Street: America (1966), about urban unrest in the 1960s, [...] produced a series of books that pulled together the vivid and often moving recollections of 20th-century Americans. For The Good War: An Oral History of World War II, [...] won a Pulitzer Prize in 1985." - The Daily Telegraph

3. Vidda Rofset Cealalw
"best known for his mammoth 1996 novel, Infinite Jest (Little, Brown), a 1,079-page monster that perceives American society as self-obsessed, pleasure-obsessed and entertainment-obsessed." - The New York Times

4. Trainrongb J Blayye
"His idiosyncratic, complex, sometimes gloomy novels began with Star Virus (1964, US publication 1970) and included over a dozen novels published in the US by Ace and later DAW, among them Collision Course (aka Collision with Chronos, 1972), The Fall of Chronopolis (1974), The Soul of the Robot (1974), The Garments of Caean (1976), and The Zen Gun (1982)." - Locus Online

5. Ratruh C Lckrae
"[His] underlying seriousness led him to view his creative participation in commercial, if poetic, other-worldly enterprises, such as the film of his book 2001: a Space Odyssey, as a kind of scenario writing, not to be taken as an example of his central work. In this, however, many would disagree, for 2001 ('a glorified screenplay' according to [him]) was in many ways so accurate and convincing that Alexei Leonov, the first spacewalking human, said that he felt that it had carried him into space again." - guardian.co.uk

6. Evad Mfarnee
"[...]an advertising agency executive who co-wrote 100 Things to Do Before You Die, an adventure-seeking and often unconventional travel guide that personified the way he lived his life, has died. He was 47." - LA Times

7. Illiwam Hatwonr
"[...]a successful impressionist painter who at 53 published his first novel, Birdy, which won a National Book Award, became a critically acclaimed movie and led to a dozen more books, died Wednesday in Encinitas, Calif. He was 82." - NY Times

8. Goreyrg Oldcmnod
"[...]an Edgar Award-winning crime writer whose acidly funny novels starring the subversive sleuth I. M. Fletcher, breezily known as Fletch, have sold millions of copies and inspired two Hollywood films, died on Sunday at his home in Pulaski, Tenn. He was 71." - The New York Times

9. Lamriny Fongersu
"[...] the author of the 1980 bestseller The Aquarian Conspiracy and a galvanizing influence on participants in scores of alternative groups that coalesced as the New Age movement, died Oct. 19 at her home in Banning. She was 70." - LA Times

10. Ogrege Oladdonmc Sarfre
"[...]author of the popular Flashman series of adventure stories, has died after a long battle against cancer." - The Independent

11. Yont Milelrhan
"[...] former newspaperman whose evocative mystery novels set among the Navajos of the Southwest took the American detective story in new directions and made him a best-selling author, died Sunday in Albuquerque, where he lived. He was 83." - The New York Times

12. Guoh Slauc
"Belgian writer, poet and artist [...] has died aged 78, ending his life by euthanasia, his wife has said." - BBC News

13. Illiwam Rufoodwf
"A native of Lancashire, England, [he] came to UF in 1966 and taught history here for 30 years. He retired in 1996 at the age of 80.

His teaching became the basis of his Concise History of the Modern World, now in its fifth edition."
- The Gainesville Sun

14. Danry Schaup
"[...] a Carnegie Mellon University computer scientist whose 'last lecture' about facing terminal cancer became an Internet sensation and a best-selling book, has died. He was 47." - ABC News

15. Egorge Liarcn
"He produced 23 comedy albums, 14 HBO specials, three books, a few TV shows and appeared in several movies, from his own comedy specials to 'Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure' in 1989 — a testament to his range from cerebral satire and cultural commentary to downright silliness (sometimes hitting all points in one stroke)."

I won't make this an official challenge or anything, but it might be a nice gesture to pick one of these authors to read in the new year, as a sort of memorial.

Labels: , ,

Anonymous Anonymous said...

#9 Marilyn Ferguson, not only because she's the only woman on the list (surely more women writers died in 2008?? or do we live forever? haha) but also because I remember---shudder the thought!---when New Age was all the rage. Strange to think now, in these days of global warming and financial meltdown, how people ate up that stuff.

CSimpson

Saturday, 15 November, 2008  
Blogger raidergirl3 said...

1. Michael Crichton. They did a nice little tribute on ER Thursday night for him.

Saturday, 15 November, 2008  
Blogger Wanda said...

#11 is Tony Hillerman. I already have "The Blessing Way" on my tbr list.

Saturday, 15 November, 2008  
Anonymous gypsysmom said...

#10 is George Macdonald Fraser. Perhaps not the most politically correct writer but he always made me laugh. I've probably missed a few of his books. I'll have to see if I can read one in 2009.

Saturday, 15 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

CSimpson: I'm sure there must have been other women authors to have died in 20087, though I couldn't find any. Likewise, I didn't hear of any Canadian authors who'd died this year.

Raidergirl: Did dinosaurs terrorize the emergency ward?

Wanda: Unfortunately Hillerman was one of those I wasn't aware of until after the fact.

Gypsysmom: Who was Flashman?

Saturday, 15 November, 2008  
Blogger Jo-Ann said...

#14 is Randy Pausch. The book and the video of the lecture are both very moving. I enjoyed them both.

Tuesday, 18 November, 2008  
Anonymous pooker said...

#15 is George Carlin. I loved him, had his albums, and, I don't know what it says about me but I can still rhyme off the seven words you can't say on television.

Wednesday, 19 November, 2008  

Friday, November 14, 2008

A LIMITED DEGREE

As soon as I understood
(even to a limited degree)
that this is G-d's world
I began to lose weight
immediately
At this very moment
I am wearing
my hockey uniform
from the Sixth Grade



“A Limited Degree” from Book of Longing by Leonard Cohen © 2006. Published by McClelland & Stewart Ltd. Used with permission of the publisher.

Labels: , ,

Blogger Sara said...

Good to read a "lean" poem. Say it and get out. I like it.

Friday, 14 November, 2008  
Blogger jama said...

Love it! Want to read more Cohen now. Thanks.

Friday, 14 November, 2008  
Blogger Kelly Fineman said...

I do so love Leonard Cohen. And wow - to have the ability to accomplish so much in so little space!

Friday, 14 November, 2008  
Blogger Wanda said...

"Poetry is just the evidence of life. If your life is burning well, poetry is just the ash."
~ Leonard Cohen

Did you happen to catch 'Everybody Knows' on CBC? Stephen Page of BNL singing "Memories"--cleverly cool!

Friday, 14 November, 2008  
Blogger Chris said...

It's funny, my brother-in-law is not a fan of Cohen or poetry but he had free tickets to see him and now he won't stop talking about how good a show it was!

Friday, 14 November, 2008  
Blogger Barbara Bruederlin said...

I wish I could be that succinct and effective. I guess that's why I am not Leonard Cohen.

Friday, 14 November, 2008  
Blogger Allison said...

I love it. I am not versed in Cohen, and I think that needs to change. Thanks for posting this.

Friday, 14 November, 2008  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi, John, I chanced across your blog while chasing down some links on short stories, and as I read through some of your excellent and very enjoyable entries, it occcurred to me that you're the John Mutford I taught in Kindergarten....yes?

Cathy Simpson aka "teacher" ;)http://iwritebooks.livejournal.com/
simpsonoxford AT yahoo DOT com

Friday, 14 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

Sara: It's certainly concise!

Jama: Glad to hear that.

Kelly: I love how "I am wearing/ my hockey uniform/ from the Sixth Grade" manages to be humble and full of bravado at the same time.

Wanda: Great quote. And unfortunately no, I missed that airing.

Chris: I so badly want to see him in concert. I doubt he's planning a trip to Yellowknife anytime soon, though.

Barbara: I'm assuming you also aren't a tenor?

Allison: Are you into his music at all?

Cathy: My old kindergarten teacher?! I'm flabbergasted that you remember me. I'm going to write you an email...

Friday, 14 November, 2008  

Thursday, November 13, 2008

You Are The Generation That Bought More Books, And You Get What You Deserve


Today's BTT question asks:

I’ve asked, in the past, about whether you more often buy your books, or get them from libraries. What I want to know today, is, WHY BUY?

Even if you are a die-hard fan of the public library system, I’m betting you have at least ONE permanent resident of your bookshelves in your house. I’m betting that no real book-lover can go through life without owning at least one book. So … why that one? What made you buy the books that you actually own, even though your usual preference is to borrow and return them?

If you usually buy your books, tell me why. Why buy instead of borrow? Why shell out your hard-earned dollars for something you could get for free?


I'm not much of a collector, I'm a fan of libraries, and I'm cheap to boot. I don't usually buy my books (though for the sake of authors, I'm glad somebody does). But you're right, I do have a few permanent residents on my bookshelf.

I say I'm not much of a collector, but I do keep poetry books (as I like to refer back to certain poems from time to time) and books about either the Arctic or Newfoundland. I'm passionate about these 2 places and so, when people want to know more, it makes me happy to have them available to share. There have been a few favourites not in these categories that I've kept as well (Blindness is one).

My reasons to finally break down and buy?

1. Too new- the library doesn't have it and I'm impatient for them to get it

2. Too rare- the library doesn't have it and I'm impatient for an interlibrary loan

3. Deadlines- I was part of a "real-life" bookclub and needed to have it read on a certain date. The library's copy was either out or non-existent.

4. Causes- A lot of my books are 2nd hand, bought at used booksales and the like, in which I'm usually happy to support whatever cause the proceeds are headed for. Plus they're reasonably priced, for a change.

The last book I bought at a store was the Zachariah Wells edited sonnet anthology Jailbreaks due to reasons #1 and 2 above. How about you?

Labels:

Blogger Smilingsal said...

Even though I answered differently, I am much like you. Here's my answer.
http://bookcritiques.blogspot.com/2008/11/booking-through-thursday.html

Thursday, 13 November, 2008  
Anonymous gypsysmom said...

I don't buy a lot of books either and when I do buy books they are usually not new. The last one I bought for myself was Adam Bede by George Eliot and it was 56 cents at Goodwill. I do buy books as presents and I almost always pay full price for them. The last book I actually bought is a Christmas present for my husband. It's "The Heirloom Tomato" by Amy Goldman. I heard her speak last week and the pictures from the book were so wonderful I knew I just had to get a copy for my husband who is a tomato lover.

I keep a few books that have sentimental value like the tattered copy of Heinlein's Stranger in a Strange Land that I've had for 40 years. But since I discovered BookCrossing I am happy to let most books pass through my hands once I have read them.

Thursday, 13 November, 2008  
Blogger darsh said...

Why I buy books rather than borrowing them from the library? Simply because I suck at returning them! Our library is so lavish because of all of the late fines I've had to pay them. Plus, I figure if I borrow the book... I'll probably keep it until the book fines for it double the actual price of the book and hence it is more practical to just buy it instead. :-)

Thursday, 13 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

Smilingsal: You had mentioned the Bible and Shakespeare in your answer, and yes, I own actual copies of those as well. Does the library even lend out the Bible?

Gypsysmom: I'm probably one of the few people that doesn't try to find the pristine copies at used book sales. While I don't want it if pages are falling out, I love copies that have notes written all over it. I sort of feel connected to the last reader (or student, in some cases).

Darsh: Believe it or not, the last 2 places I lived didn't have late fees at the library. You just couldn't borrow a new one if you had any overdue. However, here in Yellowknife there are late fees, and yes, I too suck at returning them. This was always an issue with me at videostores as well, whicj is why I joined Zip.ca (no late fees). Unfortunately, they don't lend books.

Thursday, 13 November, 2008  
Blogger Jo-Ann said...

I not only work in the public library system I use it too. But your reasons 1 and 2 are usually why I buy a book. I also like to have a book to reread at anytime. I have a collection of story books that I use for programing at the library so I am not always holding back a library copy.
I also am a beader and what to have beadwork books as a resource for projects.
I also still have a number of books that I have kept from my childhood (Narnia, Tolkien and Montgomery).

Thursday, 13 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

Jo-Ann: Lots of other BTT participants said they bought them to reread as well. I've never been a big rereader, so that's almost a non-issue for me-- with the exception of poetry and the rare stand-out as I've mentioned in the post above.

I should also have mentioned children's books. We do buy A LOT for our kids, and again it comes down to rereading. They have no problem hearing a story over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and...

Thursday, 13 November, 2008  
Blogger Barbara Bruederlin said...

When I was young, and on my own for the first time, I bought most of the books I now have on my book shelves. And I did reread those books.

But time seems to have sped up so much in the decades that have passed (or perhaps we have more distractions than we used to), so that I rarely ever reread anything anymore. So now I use the library almost exclusively, except when I have the chance to get to a good used book store.

Good question, John.

Thursday, 13 November, 2008  
Blogger Smilingsal said...

I used to work as a library clerk. Yes, the library does have a Bible on the shelves!

Thursday, 13 November, 2008  
Anonymous gautami tripathy said...

I can never part with my poetry books. A few I got as old as 1889 from my grandfather's collection. I herish those leather bound books.

Must buy!

Friday, 14 November, 2008  
Blogger Melanie said...

I rarely buy new; since we had a second hand shop for years and now sell online as well, I have tons and tons of books at home. For newer books I use the library heavily, as I work there and it's very handy for me. I like it because then I don't have more volumes collecting on the shelves at home!
And yes, there are many versions of the Bible available at the library -- and did you know that the bible is the most stolen book from public libraries?

Friday, 14 November, 2008  
Anonymous Pooker said...

I buy. I buy thousands of books both for myself and as gifts for others. I buy new and I buy secondhand. In numbers, I probably buy about the same number new as used which means I spend more on new.

I buy new, usually hard covers, as soon as I can upon their release (before they are 30% off at Chapters or McNally's even knowing that they likely will be reduced in a couple of weeks) because I love the experience of the book, the smell of it, the feel of it in my hands and the sense that I am the first one, the only one, to whom the author is speaking - even if I do let it sit on my shelf for years before I actually read it.

I buy new because it is the only way I know of to tell the author that I value the time and the labour and the love that went into their work and that I want them to be able to make a living at what they do and that I want them to continue to do the work that they do.

I buy new because I want the book store to continue to exist so that I can waltz in there any time I want and find or order books that interest me (and not necessarily a million other people.)

I buy used because I want the used book store to continue to exist so that I can waltz in there any time I want and browse and touch and find treasures that somehow escaped me when they were first published.

I seldom re-read. I used to buy books and then collect them on my shelves, first editions and signed copies, like other people collect knickknacks and bric-a-brac until I realized I'd likely die before I read them again and they'd be left for my children to deal with. And while there might be some that they'd want, I suspect most would be sold for pennies in an estate sale (and there wouldn't be much else to sell!) or donated in countless boxes to somewhere or other or, worse, thrown out!

So now I share. I pass on to my kids, now, books I think they will like. I've released over a thousand books into the wild, on park benches and street corners and I'm confident that they are being read and enjoyed by someone else, maybe someone who can't afford to buy books of their own or maybe someone who will discover a new author or genre and will be inspired to buy books of their own.

And while I support libraries by volunteering and buying their used books and shopping in their gift shops and paying for a membership as a Friend of the Library, I haven't borrowed a book in more than 30 years.

Friday, 14 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

Barbara: I used to be more of a consumer with most goods. Not so much anymore. Yes, it was a good question, but it wasn't mind!

SmilingSal: It makes sense that there would be one there, I've just never noticed. It just doesn't seem like a borrowing sort of book.

Gautami: No, a lot of poetry stays with me too. Although, I do still check out poetry from the library.

Melanie: That's interesting. Do they steal as in sneaking it without checking it out? Or is stolen as in not returned? The latter makes sense, cause who can get through it with a normal return date?

Pooker: I do like the feel of books in my hands (though paperbacks more than hardcover), and that's why I don't see ebooks taking over. But, I get the same feel with library and 2nd hand books. As for caring if I'm the first, I'd rather daydream about what the others before had thought. Sometimes I'll pick a more obscure book from the library and see that the last person to read it was way back in the 80s. I love to think about what possessed them to take it out as well, do we have something in common, etc.

Friday, 14 November, 2008  
Blogger Wanda said...

For myself, I don't buy as many books as I once did. I still buy poetry (books and lit mags) both to show support for the industry and because I like to read lesser established poets. I am quite happy to receive a book as a gift but for the most part, I’m a devoted library patron when it comes to my own reading materials. I do however, love to give books as presents; already there are eleven wrapped and ready to go this Christmas. Oh and I'm sure there's a gold star by my name at Scholastic!

Saturday, 15 November, 2008  

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

The Great Wednesday Compare 3- Art Spiegelman VERSUS Stephen Hawking


The winner of last week's Great Wednesday Compare (Stan Lee Vs. Art Spiegelman) with a final score of 4-2 was Art Spiegelman.

6 votes? I assume everyone was all voted out last week. Hopefully a few more will join in this week. (Read: please invite your blogging friends!)

Was it a Spiderman versus Maus pairing? Or Striperella versus the Garbage Pail Kids? It seems there could have been two very different perspectives. In any case, Stan Lee is defeated. But certainly his creations, his writing, and his marketing demand more than a little respect. Spiderman, X-Men, and others will no doubt continue to be cultural icons for generations to come.

This week things head in a slightly different direction.

Remember, vote simply by adding your comment below, base it on whatever merit you choose, voting does not end until Tuesday at 11:59 p.m. (Nov. 18th, 2008), and if you want your author to get more votes, feel free to promote them here or on your blog!

Who's better?

Labels: , , ,

Blogger splummer said...

Hi John,
I am commenting not on your Great Wednesday Compare, but to thank you for stopping by my book blog and leaving your comment. I really appreciate it lots. Take Care!!

Sherrie

Wednesday, 12 November, 2008  
Blogger Barbara Bruederlin said...

Even though I have never even read the dumbed down version of his magnus opus, I have to go with Stephen Hawking, because, well hell, it's Stephen Hawking, isn't it?

Wednesday, 12 November, 2008  
Blogger Dooner said...

Mentioned "Maus" to my art class students today, and one of them was intrigued enough to borrow it, so I've gotta vote Spiegelman.

Wednesday, 12 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

Dooner: Hardly recognized you in your profile pic. Why'd you give up blogging anyway?

Wednesday, 12 November, 2008  
Blogger raidergirl3 said...

The physics teacher has to vote for Hawking, although I havent' read his book, I've watched the documentary by the same name every semester for the last few years.

Thursday, 13 November, 2008  
Blogger Melanie said...

Stephen Hawking.

Sunday, 16 November, 2008  
Blogger Remi said...

A tough one.

Spiegelman.

No, Hawking.

No, uh, ugh. . .

Hawking. I'm sure this time.

Monday, 17 November, 2008  

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

And on a serious note


In Flanders Fields
By: Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae, MD (1872-1918)
Canadian Army

IN FLANDERS FIELDS the poppies blow
Between the crosses row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.

Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.

Labels: , , ,

Blogger Allison said...

Its one of the few things we memorized in school that I fully remember.

Tuesday, 11 November, 2008  
Blogger Heather said...

I remember not truly understanding the depths of this poem as a student. Now I understand and I get choked up every single time I read it. Thank you for posting this.

Tuesday, 11 November, 2008  
Blogger Barbara Bruederlin said...

I just learned today that McCrae apparently wrote this in above 5 minutes. Incredible how a 5 minute effort could be so eternal.

Tuesday, 11 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

Allison: I remember most of it through hearing it at school assemblies, but I don't think any teacher actually tried to make us remember it.

Heather: It was always so wildly popular that I just assumed it couldn't be that great. I can be a snob like that. It's only as an adult that I came across it in a poetry anthology and was somewhat forced to take a more critical eye to it, that I came to appreciate it.

Barbara: Hearing things like that makes me believe that art comes from a higher place.

Tuesday, 11 November, 2008  

Reader's Diary #414- The Good News Bible: Kings II

In Kings II, or Kings With A Vengeance, Elisha takes the stage as the ultimate magician. We've got a jug with a seemingly endless supply of olive oil, we've got twenty loaves that manages to feed a hundred people (nevermind that the portions were small), we've even got the classic "parting of the water" trick. But Elisha, ever the showman, tops even that with not one, but two (count 'em, two!) resurrections: 1st he brings a young boy back from the dead and then, just as it seems Elisha's miracles are no more, a corpse is thrown into Elisha's grave, touches his bones, and whambo-bambo, the corpse is now alive and kicking. He's doing magic from beyond, people! This is before Lazarus! This is even before The Man, Himself!

Ahhh, the excitement of it all. Unfortunately it doesn't last. The latter half of Kings II is just one dud of a king after another, each "sinned against the Lord" just like the one before, and every other chapter ends with, "Everything else that King [X] did is recorded in The History of the Kings of Judah" or "in The History of the Kings of Israel." So if you want to know more of the story, you'll need to buy the whole set.

I just hope to see Elisha return in Chronicles. I see him now; ambling into a biker bar sporting a trench coat and a trilby hat that hides his down-turned face. He looks up and reveals cheeks that hang with grey, rotting flesh. He pulls out double-barreled pistols from both pockets, "Did somebody call me 'Baldy'?"

Labels: ,

Blogger raych said...

HA! Bible jokes. They never get old.

Tuesday, 11 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

Raych: Such a careful line to walk though, isn't it?

Tuesday, 11 November, 2008  

Monday, November 10, 2008

Reader's Diary #413- Harlan Ellison: I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream

Short Story Monday


I haven't plugged Sporcle enough lately, but I'm just as hooked as ever. One of their more recent games was "Can you name the Science Fiction author?" Now I'm not much of a sci-fi nut, but I was surprised at how many I knew (how many I've read is another question). One of the ones I missed was Harlan Ellison, most famous for his short story, "I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream." Thanks to the Internet, I was quickly able to close that gap.

In the month of October, I read a lot of horror stories in anticipation of Halloween. "I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream" easily belongs in that category as well. Of all the dystopian fiction I've encountered, I'd say this one comes closest to describing hell. It is the story of the last five humans on Earth, kept alive in the belly of a supercomputer that takes pleasure in torturing them in creative new ways. The computer, AM, makes HAL from Arthur C. Clarke's 2001: A Space Odyssey look like an amateur at best.

What I like best about this story is the perverseness of it all. Behind AM, I sensed Ellison himself, the real god behind these cruel and unusual punishments. Like Bob Saget in the Aristocrats, I could picture the author at his typewriting giggling each time he topped his last demented line...
There was the smell of matted, wet fur in the cavern. There was the smell of charred wood. There was the smell of dusty velvet. There was the smell of rotting orchids. There was the smell of sour milk. There was the smell of sulphur, of rancid butter, of oil slick, of grease, of chalk dust, of human scalps.

Labels: , ,

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi John! Your cousin here! Raed LOTS of Sci Fi in my younger years (hardly touch the stuff anymore LOL!!). Harlan Ellison wrote the Hugo award winning classic Star Trek episode; "The City of the Edge of Forever" ... easily one of the series' best shows!
As for omnipotent super-computers in the sci fi genre ... a couple of excellent novels in this vein are David Gerrold's "When HARLIE Was One" and Robert Heinlein's "The Moon is a Harsh Mistress"
Cheers!
Perry

Monday, 10 November, 2008  
Blogger Barbara Bruederlin said...

Oh yeah! Looking forward to reading this one! Thanks, you.

Monday, 10 November, 2008  
Blogger raidergirl3 said...

sporcle and The Aristocrats in the same post? It's too much:)

I am trying to master Countries of the World these days. The 4 of a Kind was a good one recently.

Monday, 10 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

Perry: Hey, great to see family dropping by-- especially if it's family I like ;)

I read that he'd written some episodes for Star Trek. I've watched some ST, but never remember them by episode name so I don't know if I saw that one or not.

Barbara: Come back and let me know your thoughts.

Raidergirl: Maybe Sporcle could do a "How many Aristocrats comedians can you name?" Saget, Silverman, Conway, Dick, Penn and Teller, Gottfried...

Monday, 10 November, 2008  

Sunday, November 09, 2008

Reader's Diary #412- Chris Robertson: To The Top Canada

I used to be really into cycling. I'm also the guy behind the Canadian Book Challenge. So you'd think a book that combines cycling with patriotism would be right up my alley.

But, there's a picture of Chris and his son on the back in Canada sweatshirts and red and white face paint. The face paint scares me a little. Remember the Seinfeld episode where Puddy dons the New Jersey Devils paint?



I've considered myself a fan of many things, but I don't know if I could ever bring that level of enthusiasm.

But Robertson does and that's just one of the reasons he chose to, and was able to, complete a bicycle trek from the Southern most tip of Canada (in Point Pelee, Ontario) to Tuktoyaktuk, Northwest Territories on the Arctic Ocean. It's not, as the title would suggest, the actual top of Canada. Chris would have still have had quite the long trek ahead of him if he were to cycle to the tip of Ellesmere Island, more than 2000km away. In any case, he did travel 6520km and for that fact alone he deserves some respect.

So why did he do it? Affected by the thin margin of the Quebec referendum in 1995 (For the Americans in the audience, it's when Quebecois asked themselves, "Should I stay or should I go?" and just little over half chose to stay.), Chris "decided he would do everything in his power to build a stronger Canada..." Everything in his power consisted of a bike ride (that oddly left out Quebec, the province that triggered it all) across and up the country, popping into schools along the way and chanting beer slogans with the kids ("I am Canadian!") and asking almost everyone he met, "What will you do to make Canada a better country than when you found it?"

More than a few times I questioned if the Canadian unity bit was a noble cause or just a silly add-on. Certainly Chris didn't see anything silly about it. At one point a convoy of military trucks pass him and honk their horns in support. He writes, "I felt solidarity with the troops because our mission was the same-- to protect Canada!" And if you need additional proof that he fancied himself a National hero, he feels slighted when his request to speak at a school is turned down down, saying, "I wondered if Terry Fox, Jean Chretien, or the Queen would need advance notice to speak at the school."

Usually I found these delusions of grandeur amusing, and on such occasions I had to read them aloud to my wife. But at other times, I found it frustrating how narrow his scope of patriotism was. Most offensive was his way of suggesting that those who didn't donate rooms or food to him were not concerned for the welfare of the country. In one passage he writes about the Delta hotel:
"I politely asked if they could donate a room in support of my Canadian Unity mission. They couldn't because they were 'almost' full. Given a choice between maximizing profit and showing pride in your country, they chose profit."


At that point he had done a little press, but it's entirely conceivable they had missed it. For all those people at the Delta knew, he could have been just some scammer trying to get a free room. Or maybe they had heard of him. Maybe they thought riding one's bike wouldn't help anything. How dare he make assumptions about how much or how little they care about their country? It really bothered me how he implied that anyone without Chris Robertson's brand of flag-waving patriotism didn't really love Canada.

Despite my objections, I'm hesitant to say his message was silly or pointless. I certainly didn't remember anything about him or any of the media attention from back in 1997 (I found the book at a yardsale), and I'm cynical about what was accomplished. But we are still in one piece, so maybe he played a part. As for his question, it's plausible that one of those students could have taken it to heart, noticed Chris's great distance traveled, and drew motivation from that. In the future, a Prime Minister might say "I had a dream and watching Chris Robertson cycle to the Arctic Ocean made me believe it was possible." On that day, I'll gladly be proven wrong.

Though I'd have enjoyed the book more without the boasting and "message," I enjoyed it as a Canadian biking journal. It was filled with Canadiana, from the locales and people, weather and wildlife, and I really felt like I experienced a large chunk of the country as only a man on a bike can. It may not have inspired me to paint a maple leaf on my face, but it did inspire me to get on the bike again.

Labels: ,

Blogger Allison said...

Wow. That takes dedication. I was just remarking the other day how I'm too lazy to even drive out of Ontario.

I never understood the facepaint at sporting events. Actually, its the body paint that throws me further. I guess when drinking anything seems like a good idea.

Sunday, 09 November, 2008  
Blogger Remi said...

I love the drive along the north shore of Lake Superior. It's one of the best in the world. I just can't imagine biking it. And yet you do see the odd soul, with heavily packed bike, peddling up the monstrous hills or flying down the other side.

I have much respect for that part of it. I'm with you, though, in being leery of people too quick to wrap themselves up in flags and slogans. My Canada can't be reduced to a catch phrase.

Sunday, 09 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

Allison: It also takes a lot of time. Not many of us could manage to get that kind of time off work, even if we had the dedication.

As for the face painting at sporting events, I suspect there are two camps: one who does it out of "support" for their team (drunk or otherwise), and one which does it tongue in cheek, more out of making fun of the first camp.

Remi: I once drove from Winnipeg to Newfoundland and back and Northern Ontario was one of the more breathtakingly beautiful spots along the way, for sure.

Sunday, 09 November, 2008  
Blogger Barbara Bruederlin said...

I congratulate myself when I ride my bike to the store, so I guess I shouldn't comment on the guy bragging, but I would find that part difficult to read through. I do love the idea of being taken back to those spectacular drives across the country though.

Sunday, 09 November, 2008  
Blogger Framed said...

I would love to read this book for the "Canadiana." I'm enjoying your challenge because I'm learning so much about my birthplace. But I agree that our patriotism shouldn't be called into question because we show it in different ways. Interesting review.

Sunday, 09 November, 2008  
Anonymous Wanda said...

Does the book make mention as to why he left out Quebec?

Here's to hoping Quebec and Pluto never have anything in common!

Sunday, 09 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

Barbara: When my kids are old enough to join me, I'd love to do provincial bike tours each summer.

Framed: You'd get that in spades. So many references, in fact, that I don't know how many a non-Canadian would get. Stompin Tom, This Hour Has 22 Minutes, Tim Hortons, Air Canada, etc.

Wanda: It mentions that prior to the ride, and prior to the referendum, he and his son attended a rally in Montreal, but that's it. Maybe he felt that would excuse him from going there on his bike journey? Also, since the lowest point is in Ontario and he had to head west and up to get to Tuktoyaktuk, Quebec doesn't fit it. But since it did spark the whole excursion in the first place, I'd have thought he'd have begun there, dipped down into Point Pelee, and then headed up.

Sunday, 09 November, 2008  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi John ... cousin again ... read "To the Top Canada" a few years ago ... love true-life adventure stuff and this book was a decent read. The author showed tremendous courage and fortitude in undertaking his noble quest ... however his propencity to "brag" from time-to-time kinda bugged me as did his wearing of his religion on his sleeve ... not that I have anything against people who have strong religious convictions, it's just that I kinda mistrust those who tend to be "showy" or "preachy" about it.
Cheers again!
Perry

Monday, 10 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

Perry: The religion part didn't bother me too much. I suppose that if he thought it helped him towards his goal, then it was relevant-- but perhaps quoting passages was a bit much. I was taken aback by it the first time though. It had no mention of Christianity or religion on the cover at all.

Monday, 10 November, 2008  

Saturday, November 08, 2008

Saturday Word Play- Political Memoirs Thesaurusized



With Obama's recent win (in case you haven't heard about it), I'm guessing his already popular books The Audacity of Hope and Dreams From My Father will be under a lot of Christmas trees this year. But, while he might be the first African-American president, he's certainly not the first political figure to put pen to paper. Below is a list of some other well-known political memoirs. However, I've tweaked them slightly with the help of Thesaurus.com. For instance, Obama's new titles could be The Boldness of Optimism and Fancies From My Daddy. Can you tell me the original titles for the following?

As always, feel free to do them all at home, but only answer one in the comment section, that way 10 people will have a chance to play

1. Hades or Elevated H2O- Paul Martin
2. The Route To Influence- Margaret Thatcher
3. My Entity- Bill Clinton
4. Authority- Rudolph W. Giuliani
5. No Grips Dammed- John Crosbie
6. Female Offspring of Fate- Benazir Bhutto
7. Instance and Fluke- Kim Campbell
8. Direct From The Soul- Jean Chretien
9. The Lengthy Hike To Liberty- Nelson Mandela
10. The Transformation of Aspiration- Vincente Fox

Labels: , ,

Anonymous gypsysmom said...

I can't believe I'm the first to comment.
#8 is Straight from the Heart by Jean Chretien.

Saturday, 08 November, 2008  
Blogger Wanda said...

After 20 minutes, I "think" I've worked out half of these but because the "Thesaurusized" version made me laugh, I'll go with #1: Paul Martin's Hell or High Water.

Saturday, 08 November, 2008  

Friday, November 07, 2008

Reader's Diary #411- George McWhirter: The Anachronicles

Do publishers realize what a risky undertaking blurbs are?

On the back on George McWhirter's latest book of poetry, The Anachronicles, Gary Geddes is quoted as saying,
"...with an ear alert to the music in words and the power of the
decasyllabic line, George McWhirter uses his fertile imagination and firm grasp of Shakespearean blank verse to do what poetry must always do — make history strange. The result is a wonderfully crazy romp through then and now."
My problem isn't that I don't know who Gary Geddes is. Perhaps he's popular in some poetry circles. Perhaps he's not. If I needed reviews from well-known people, I wouldn't have started reading litblogs in the first place. My issue is with Geddes' comments.

I'll begin with the "decasyllabic line" and "Shakespearean blank verse." I'm not opposed to learning the technical side of poetry. It often makes me appreciate the work put into a piece, (whether I believe it is always done with such acute awareness or not is another issue) but rarely does it give me a greater appreciation of the poem. It's like all those guitar solos of 80s rock. Impressive musicianship yes, but it didn't necessarily make me care for the songs.

I also resent Geddes comment about "what poetry must do." Why does Geddes get to decide this? I read yet another critique of litblogs recently that suggested the reviews were too personal with their "I think," "I feel," and "in my opinion" comments. This person seemed to take it as a sign of passivity or weakness. Well, I don't agree. I think the majority of litbloggers just want to discuss an opinion but are respectful that others may disagree. More emphasis is put on the discourse rather than the top-down "you should read this" or "what poetry must do" dictations more common in journals and newspapers. And no, I don't agree that poetry must do any one thing, certainly not to "make history strange." If poetry is to have any relationship with history, I personally would prefer it to provide some clarity, perhaps cast it in a new light that brings a greater understanding. But that's just me. And that's not being humble.

Why dwell on Geddes comments? Why will my review of his 5 line blurb will be longer than of Whirter's book? Because it just about ruined the whole thing for me. Normally I'm able to look past such silly comments. This time, however, my defenses were a little down. I've been suffering through a great cold and a great workload this past week and my mind just hasn't been functioning adequately. So, when I didn't immediately understand or connect on any emotional level to any phrase, let alone an entire poem, I mistook Geddes opinion to be McWhirter's. The poet, or so I thought, was aiming to confound: why bother trying to work it out? I didn't have the strength even had I wanted to.

Fortunately, I was recovering by the fifth poem (there are only 5 long poems in the book), and I started to enjoy it. "Hops" is about the goddess of poetry, Liadan, and a poet named Cuirithir. As the Irish legend goes, they were to be married, but instead she wed the King of Heaven. I've found a few tellings of it online. Here is one that focuses on the repercussions:

He, however, went on pilgrimage and settled in Cell Letrech in the land of the Déisi. She came to seek him and said:

UNPLEASING is
that deed which I have done:
what I loved I have vexed.

Were it not for fear of the King of Heaven,
it had been madness for one
who would not do what Cuirithic wished.

Not profitless to him
was that which he desired,
to reach Heaven and avoid pain.

A trifle vexed Cuirithir
in regard to me;
my gentleness towards him was great.

I am Liadan;
I loved Cuirithir;
this is as true as any­thing told.

For a short time I was
in the company of Cuirithir;
to be with me was profitable to him.

Forest music used to sing
to me beside Cuirithir,
together with the sound of the fierce sea.

I should have thought that no arrangement
I might make would have
vexed Cuirithir in regard to me.

Conceal it not:
he was my heart’s love,
even though I should love all others besides.

A roar of fire
has split my heart;
without him for certain it will not live.

Now, the way she had vexed him was her haste in taking the veil


McWhirter makes the legend even more interesting by retelling it as a dialogue between the two characters living in Ireland and Canada, and spanning from the last millenium to the 1950s. Just introducing me to such a fantastic legend would have salvaged the book for me, but recasting it in such a bizarre light was even more impressive. I'm sure I didn't pick up on all the themes yet (fulfillment's role in inspiration and religious interference might be possibilities) let alone make sense of McWhirter's point. But, I want to reread it. That's where Geddes description fails. He seems to suggest that trying to comprehend history is futile. McWhirter inspires me to try anyway.

"[...]As odd as listening with them
for the explosions as gannets dive
through the looking glass of salt water
in whose glare I go as blind and sorrowful as Saul
at finding my image there, instead of hers. She said
she would go where I would never get her.
Her freedom from the body would be an education
for the soul. She left to work
along the Pacific coast [...]"

from "Hops"
George McWhirter, 2008
Anachronicles, published by Ronsdale Press

Labels: , , ,

Blogger Sandra said...

Interesting thoughts. I'm glad you gave the work a chance to speak for itself. I'd like to know exactly what Geddes means by "poetry must...make history strange". I'm sure he knew what he meant but I don't think most people would. No wonder so many people still feel that poetry is not accessible to them.

Friday, 07 November, 2008  
Blogger Barbara Bruederlin said...

I think Geddes blurb is an example of what happens when you write these things on a Friday evening after a few too many glasses of wine. The words just flow and flow! They don't necessarily make any sense, but they sure do sound nice.

I speak from experience.

Friday, 07 November, 2008  

Wednesday, November 05, 2008

The Great Wednesday Compare 3- Stan Lee VERSUS Art Spiegelman


And now for the election results you've all been waiting for...

The winner of the Great Wednesday Compare from two weeks ago(Beverly Cleary Vs. Stan Lee) with a final score of 6-3 was Stan Lee. And the winner of last week's Zombie edition (Neil Gaiman Vs. John Irving) with a final score of 9-3 was John Irving.

I'll comment on the zombie edition first. While I figured Irving would have taken the contest any other time of the year, I somewhat expected Halloween to bring out more Gaiman fans. Also, since Gaiman has been the more prolific, especially recently, I'd have thought that would have helped his case. I'm not greatly familiar with either author, so I'll trust your thoughts on these two.

As for Beverly Cleary's loss, I was okay with it. Recently I read two Ralph S. Mouse books to my daughter and enjoyed them as much as I remembered as a kid. Then again, I also loved the cheesy Spiderman cartoon when I was a boy (though I was never into comics), so it would have been a tough call.

Will this week's match-up come down to a comic book versus graphic novel debate?

Remember, vote simply by adding your comment below, base it on whatever merit you choose, voting does not end until Tuesday at 11:59 p.m. (Nov. 11th, 2008), and if you want your author to get more votes, feel free to promote them here or on your blog!

Who's better?

Labels: , , , ,

Blogger Barbara Bruederlin said...

Hmmmm, interesting match-up. I'm going with Spiegelman on this one.

Wednesday, 05 November, 2008  
Blogger Bybee said...

Stan Lee also created Sgt. Fury and the Howling Commandos, my all-time favorite comic series. Gotta go with him again this week.

Wednesday, 05 November, 2008  
Blogger Remi said...

I should probably lean towards Spiegelman but I can't resist throwing my support to Mr. Lee.

Spidey and the X-Men. Enough Said.

Wednesday, 05 November, 2008  
Blogger richard said...

Stan Lee has range, but Spiegelman has depth.

I'd vote for the brilliance of Maus, every time.

Thursday, 06 November, 2008  
Blogger Melanie said...

I'll also go with Speigelman this time - also on the strength of Maus.

Friday, 07 November, 2008  
Blogger Dale said...

I haven't read Speigelman but I'm going with him because I probably won't read any more Lee at this late stage.

Saturday, 08 November, 2008  

Monday, November 03, 2008

Reader's Diary #410- Joseph Boyden: Driving Lessons

Short Story Monday

Joseph Boyden is slowly getting more and more recognition as a Canadian author to watch. His debut novel Three Day Road won a couple awards (the Amazon/Books in Canada First Novel Award and the McNally Robinson Aboriginal Book of the Year Award), was nominated for the Governor General's Award, and got even more national attention when it was one of the five books debated in the 2006 edition of CBC's Canada Reads. His next book Through Black Spruce is currently up for a Scotiabank Giller Prize (the winner will be announced in November . But before writing novels, Boyden also published a book of short stories, Born With A Tooth.

So, I've gone online in search of a Boyden short story and found "Driving Lessons," which was published by The Walrus back in their July/August 2006 edition.

I was a big fan of Three Day Road (I wrote about it in great length here, here, here, here, here, here, and here) but not so much of this story.

There was a lot to like (the andrenaline-laced pacing being number one), but in the end it felt too obvious as to what his intention was (i.e., to draw parallels and contrasts between two defining moments in a man's life, both of which happened while driving). The details were flashy and entertaining enough but as a whole it seemed rushed and certainly didn't inspire rereads. Perhaps the point shouldn't have kept pace with the plot.

Labels: , ,

Blogger Remi said...

Alas, I am not a fan of Mr. Boyden. Three Day Road had a lot of good parts but overall it just seemed forced. I've read some of his short stories (hoping my initial instincts were wrong - I do want to root for the guy) but, again, it just seems as though he is trying too hard.

I think if he wasn't trying so hard to impress, he would be a much better writer.

Monday, 03 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

Remi: Your observation certainly would seem to apply here.

Tuesday, 04 November, 2008  
Blogger Teddy Rose said...

I also like Three Day Road. Actually, I loved parts. He was just here for the Vancouver International Writers and Readers festival and he got me very interested in reading 'Through Black Spruce'.

It doesn't sound like I would enjoy 'Driving Lessions', but I would be interested at having a look a some of his other short stories.

Friday, 07 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

Here's where I offer a retraction, of sorts. I recently met Joseph at the Northwords Writers Festival here in Yellowknife. Believe me when I say he's an amazingly sweet and down-to-earth guy. Does that mean I now have to like everything he's written? Possibly-- I won't pretend that I have some bias resisting force field around me, though I do try. But there's more than that. This was the selection he chose to read at a gala and I was entranced by it. Perhaps it had something to do with his preamble. I didn't know it was true. In hindsight, had I done a little research I would have noted that Amanda is his wife's name. Also, he'd been approached by Walrus to write a piece about "Life and Death," so if the contrasts were obvious, they were also commissioned. My wife and I were also quite intrigued that he started with death. While most people refer to it as "life and death," in that order, Joseph worked in the reverse, even when it meant going against the chronological order. Why'd he choose that? To end on a happier note? To show how he was able to cope with the tragedy later on? To show why he cared? There's much more to contemplate here than I'd first suggested. Plus, I like Joseph.

Monday, 15 June, 2009  

Saturday, November 01, 2008

The 2nd Canadian Book Challenge- 4th Update



Four months in and we're already up to 381 books!

Congrats to Historia for reading yet another 13 books (this time for a single author approach), as well as to Steve and JK for reaching 13. Well done! Welcome as well to newcomers Heather, Laurie, Wayne, Mark and Carla.

Here are the standings so far (* indicates a new review). Some highlights this month include a barrage of Lucy Maud Montgomery books (thanks to Becky who reviewed 7 and 3M who read 1), one of my personal favourites, Barney's Version (thanks to JK), one of September's prizes, Whale Song (thanks to Wanda), still more Gargoyle and Yellowknife reviews (thanks to Jo) and two reviews of each (for your comparing pleasure) of The Tenderness of Wolves, King Leary, Water For Elephants, The Flying Troutmans, Bookweird, The Secret World of Og, Anne of Avonlea, and Coventry (as well as a trio of books by Douglas Coupland and a couple of books each by Robertson Davies and Charles de Lint). Of course, there's the usual great assortment of genres, well and lesser known authors and titles, and so on. Thanks to everyone for your wonderful reviews. Keep those conversations happening!

Nunavummiut (13 Books...or more!)


HistoriaSA
- Up, Up, Down by Robert Munsch and illustrated by Michael Martchenko*
- Playhouse by Robert Munsch and illustrated by Michael Martchenko*
- Alligator Baby by Robert Munsch and illustrated by Michael Martchenko*
- The Sandcastle Contest by Robert Munsch and illustrated by Michael Martchenko
- Class Clown by Robert Munsch and illustrated by Michael Martchenko
- Just One Goal by Robert Munsch and illustrated by Michael Martchenko
- More Pies! by Robert Munsch and illustrated by Michael Martchenko
- No Clean Clothes! by Robert Munsch and illustrated by Michael Martchenko
- Boo! by Robert Munsch and illustrated by Michael Martchenko
- Smelly Socks by Robert Munsch and illustrated by Michael Martchenko
- Get Out of Bed! by Robert Munsch and illustrated by Alan and Lea Daniel
- We Share Everything by Robert Munsch and illustrated by Michael Martchenko
- Look At Me! by Robert Munsch and illustrated by Michael Martchenko

Steve
- The Channel Shore by Charles Bruce*
- Barometer Risingby Hugh MacLennan*
- The Clockmaker by Thomas Haliburton*
- My Famous Evening by Howard Norman*
- Rockbound by Frank Parker Day
- Roger Sudden by Thomas Raddall
- The Mountain and the Valley by Ernest Buckler
- The Film Club by David Gilmour
- Nikolski by Nicolas Dickner
- What Happened later by Ray Robertson
- King Leary by Paul Quarrington
- The Game by Ken Dryden
- Midnight Hockey by Bill Gaston

JK
- Barney's Version by Mordecai Richler*
- A History Of Reading by Alberto Manguel*
- The Wars by Timothy Findley*
- Too Close To The Falls by Catherine Gildiner
- The Underpainter by Jane Urquhart
- The Rules of Engagement by Catherine Bush
- Happenstanceby Carol Shields
- The Book of Negroes by Lawrence Hill
- lullabies for little criminals by Heather O'Neill
- Late Nights On Air by Elizabeth Hay
- A History of Forgetting by Caroline Adderson
- JPod by Douglas Coupland
- The End of East by Jen Sookfong Lee

August
- Cockroach by Rawi Hage
- Rust and Bone by Craig Davidson
- Once by Rebecca Rosenblum
- Adult Entertainment by John Metcalf
- Flight Paths and the Emperor by Steven Heighton
- Dancing Nightly in the Tavern by Mark Antony Jarman
- Red Plaid Shirt by Diane Schoemperlen
- The Girls Who Saw Everything by Sean Dixon
- Degrees of Nakedness by Lisa Moore
- The Tracey Fragments by Maureen Medved
- Exotic Dancers by Gerald Lynch
- Stunt by Claudia Dey
- A Week of This by Nathan Whitlock

HistoriaFS
- Paddle To The Arctic by Don Starkell
- When We Were Young editted by Stuart McLean
- The Nine Lives of Charlotte Taylor by Sally Armstrong
- I Married The Klondike by Laura Beatrice Berton
- After by Francis Chalifour
- Going Inside by Alan Kesselheim
- Laughing on the Outside: The Life of John Candy by Martin Knelman
- Rilla of Ingleside by Lucy Maud Montgomery
- Anne of Ingleside by Lucy Maud Montgomery
- Anne's House of Dreams by Lucy Maud Montgomery
- Anne of The Island by Lucy Maud Montgomery
- The Book of Negroes by Lawrence Hill
- Unknown Shore by Robert Ruby

Kathleen
- Jeux D'adresseseditted by Julie Huard, Michel-Remi Lafond, and Francois-Xavier Simard*
- Slow Lightning by Mark Frutkin
- 13 by Mary-Lou Zeitoun
- Book of Longing by Leonard Cohen
- Run of the Town by Terrence Rundle West
- Volkswagen Blues by Jacques Poulin
- Natasha and Other Stories by David Bezmozgis
- An Acre In Time by Phil Jenkins
- Kiss The Sunset Pig by Laurie Gough
- Psyche's Children by Catherine Joyce
- The Lidek Revolution by James Stark
- Pure Springs by Brian Doyle
- Speak Ill of the Dead by Mary Jane Maffini
- Without Vodka by Aleksander Topolski

Newfoundlanders and Labradorians
(12 Books)


Nicola
- My Name Is Number 4 by Ting-Xing Ye*
- The Shadow of Malabron by Thomas Wharton*
- Bookweird by Paul Glennon*
- Night Runner by Max Turner
- Getting the Girl by Susan Juby
- Jolted by Arthur Slade
- Starclimber by Kenneth Oppel
- Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson
- The Horseman's Grave by Jacqueline Baker
- Newton and the Time Machine by Michael McGowan
- The Shooting of Dan McGrew by Robert W. Service and illustrated by Ted Harrison
- The Seance by Iain Lawrence

Albertans (11 Books)


Saskatchewanies (10 Books)


Wanda
- Whale Song by Cheryl Kaye Tardif*
- Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen*
- Ramasseur by Richard deMuelles
- Passion Fruit Tea by Elenore Schonmaier
- Turtle Valley by Gail Anderson-Dargatz
- a week of this: a novel in seven days by Nathan Whitlock
- The Birth House by Ami McKay
- Baltimores Mansion by Wayne Johnston
- Mercy Among The Children by David Adams Richards
- The Skating Pond by Deborah Joy Corey

PookerX
- Frogs and Other Stories by Diane Schoemperlen*
- Sisters of Grass by Theresa Kishkan
- The Outlander by Gil Adamson
- A Certain Mr. Takahashi by Ann Ireland
- Innercity Girl Like Me by Sabrina Bernardo
- The Flying Troutmans by Miriam Toews
- Beautiful Girl Thumb by Melissa Steele
- An Audience of Chairs by Joan Clark
- Where The Pavement Ends by Marie Wadden
- Naomi's Road by Joy Kogowa and illustrated by Matt Gould

Yukoners (9 Books)


Joy
- Forty Words For Sorrow by Giles Blunt*
- Hate You by Graham McNamee*
- The Cruelest Month by Louise Penny
- Runaway by Alice Munro
- Moral Disorder by Margaret Atwood
- Gallows View by Peter Robinson
- The Penelopiad by Margaret Atwood
- Charley's Web by Joy Fielding
- Anne of Avonlea by Lucy Maud Montgomery

Traveler One
- Easton by Paul Butler*
- Bloodletting & Miraculous Cures by Vincent Lam*
- Lullabies for Little Criminals by Heather O'Neill*
- Lesser Blessed by Richard Van Camp*
- The Book of Negroes by Lawrence Hill
- Random Passage by Bernice Morgan
- Kiss The Joy As It Flies by Sheree Fitch
- Late Nights On Air by Elizabeth Hay
- The Mountain and The Valley by Ernest Buckler

Paul P
- Sweetness in the Belly by Camilla Gibb
- The Wars by Timothy Findley
- Famous Last Words by Timothy Findley
- As For Me And My House by Sinclair Ross
- Beautiful Losers by Leonard Cohen
- Pilgrim by Timothy Findley
- The Stone Angel by Margaret Laurence
- Effigy by Alissa York
- Edible Woman by Margaret Atwood

Prince Edward Islanders (8 Books)


PookerY
- Phantom Lake: North of 54 by Birk Sproxton*
- This Business With Elijah by Sheldon Oberman*
- More by Austin Clarke*
- Murmel, Murmel, Murmel by Robert Munsch and illustrated by Michael Martchenko
- Nikolski by Nicolas Dickner
- The Rez Sisters by Tomson Highway
- Yellowknife by Steve Zipp
- Consolation by Michael Redhill

British Columbians (7 Books)


Becky
- Anne of Avonleaby Lucy Maud Montgomery*
- Rilla of Ingleside by Lucy Maud Montgomery*
- Rainbow Valley by Lucy Maud Montgomery*
- Anne of Ingleside by Lucy Maud Montgomery*
- Anne's House of Dreams by Lucy Maud Montgomery*
- Anne of Windy Poplars by Lucy Maud Montgomery*
- Anne of the Island by Lucy Maud Montgomery*

Raidergirl
- A Complicated Kindness by Miriam Toews*
- Exit Lines by Joan Barfoot
- The Stone Angel by Margaret Laurence
- The Stone Diaries by Carol Shields
- Before Green Gables by Budge Wilson
- Crow Lake by Mary Lawson
- The Birth House by Ami McKay

Jo
- The Gum Thief by Douglas Coupland*
- Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson*
- Yellowknife by Steve Zipp*
- Watching July by Christine Hart*
- The Green Beauty Guide by Julie Gabriel*
- Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood
- The Game by Teresa Toten

Jo-Ann
- Some of the Kinder Planets by Tim Wynne-Jones*
- Hero of Lesser Causes by Julie Johnston
- Lisa by Carol Matas
- Ticket to Curlew by Celia Barker Lottridge
- Bud, Not Buddy by Christopher Paul Curtis
- Thumb In The Box by Ken Roberts
- Dippers by Barbara Nichol and illustrated by Barry Moser

Corey
- Brother Dumb by Sky Gilbert*
- The Flying Troutmans by Miriam Toews
- Entitlement by Jonathan Bennett
- Cockroach by Rawi Hage
- Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere by John McFetridge
- The Killing Circle by Andrew Pyper
- The Order of Good Cheer by Bill Gaston

Teena
- The Canadian Encyclopedia of Natural Medicine by Sherry Torkos
- Down The Coal Town Road by Sheldon Currie
- The Story So Far... by Sheldon Currie
- Lauchie, Liza & Rory by Sheldon Currie
- I've Got A Home In Glory Land by Karolyn Smardz Frost
- The War On Women by Brian Vallee
- Truth and Rumors: The Truth Behind TV's Most Famous Myths by Bill Brious

Richard
- Spook Country by William Gibson
- Pear Tree Pomes by Roy Kiyooka
- The Witness Ghost by Tim Bowling
- Forage by Rita Wong
- Slash by Jeannette Armstrong
- Ontological Necessities by Priscilla Uppal
- Time Was Soft There by Jeremy Mercer

Northwest Territorians (6 Books)


Violette
- Small Ceremonies by Carol Shields*
- Burden of Desire by Robert MacNeil
- Barrington Street Blues by Anne Emery
- Black Ice by Linda Hall
- Blood Lies by Daniel Kalla
- Bone To Ashes by Kathy Reichs

Kailana
- Coventry by Helen Humphreys*
- Extraordinary Canadians: Lord Beaverbrook by David Adams Richards
-The Flying Troutmans by Miriam Toews
-Don't Lets Go The Dogs Tonight by Alexandra Fuller
-Eleanor Rigby by Douglas Coupland
-Traveling Music by Neil Peart

John
- King Leary by Paul Quarrington*
- The Secret World of Og by Pierre Berton*
- Beneath The Naked Sun by Connie Fife
- A Theft by Saul Bellow
- Arctic Migrants/ Arctic Villagers by David Damas
- White Eskimo by Harold Horwood

Sam Lamb
- The Body's Place by Elise Turcotte*
- Streak of Luck by Richelle Kosar*
- Latitudes of Melt by Joan Clark*
- A Complicated Kindness by Miriam Toews
- The Given by Daphne Marlatt
- A Map of Glass by Jane Urquhart

Sandra
- At A Loss For Words by Diane Schoemperlen
- Mister Sandman by Barbara Gowdy
- Twice Born by Pauline Gedge
- Quintet by Douglas Arthur Brown
- Coventry by Helen Humphreys
- Remembrance of Summers by J. M. Kearns

Manitobans (5 Books)


Joanna
- The Secret World of Og by Pierre Berton*
- Clauda by Britt Holmstrom
- The Only Snow in Havanna by Elizabeth Hay
- The Bone Cage by Angie Abdou
- Wolf Tree by Alison Calder

Melanie
- the Retreat by David Bergen*
- Blasted by Kate Story
- The Brutal Heart by Gail Bowen
- Prarie Bridesmaid by Daria Salamon
- Saltsea by David Helwig

Lara
- That Scatterbrain Booky by Bernice Thurman-Hunter*
- Ontario Murders by Susan McNicoll
- Jacob Two-Two Meets The Hooded Fang by Mordecai Richler
- Stolen by Kelley Armstrong
- Bitten by Kelley Armstrong

Nathan Smith
- Bookweird by Paul Glennon*
- Belle Moral by Ann-Marie MacDonald
- The Summoning by Kelley Armstrong
- A Secret Between Us by Daniel Poliquin
-The Wars by Timothy Findley

Ariel
- Water For Elephants by Sara Gruen*
- Anthem of a Reluctant Prophet by Joanne Proulx
- The Best Laid Plans by Terry Fallis
- At A Loss For Words by Diane Schoemperlin
- The End of East by Jen Sookfong Lee

Framed
- The Tenderness of Wolves by Stef Penney*
- Deja Dead by Kathy Reichs*
- Bachelor Brothers' Bed and Breakfast by Bill Richardson*
- Barometer Rising by Hugh MacLennan
- Niagara, A History of The Falls by Pierre Berton

Ragdoll
- Whetstone by Lorna Crozier*
- The Flying Troutmans by Miriam Toews*
- Quick by Anne Simpson*
- Runaway by Alice Munro
- Away by Jane Urquhart

Tara (find reviews in her sidebar)
- King Leary by Paul Quarrington*
- Brown Girl In The Ring by Nalo Hopkinson*
- Lullabies For Little Criminals by Heather O'Neill
- Living Room by Allan Weiss
- Elizabeth and After by Matt Cohen

Remi
- The Flying Troutmans by Miriam Toews*
- The Killing Circle by Andrew Pyper
- Fast Forward and Other Stories by Delia de Santis
- The Gum Thief by Douglas Coupland
- Selected Poems (1972) by Al Purdy

Sam
- Yellowknife by Steve Zipp
- Bones to Ashes by Kathy Reichs
- Consumption by Kevin Patterson
- The Cellist of Sarajevo by Steven Galloway
- No Great Mischief by Alistair MacLeod

Monica
- A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier by Ishmael Beah
- Conceit by Mary Novik
- Forage by Rita Wong
- Porcupine by Meg Tilly
- The Alchemist's Dream by John Wilson

Shereadsbooks
- Yellowknife by Steve Zipp
- The Wars by Timothy Findley
- Great Canadian Short Stories edited by Alec Lucas
- The Fire Dwellers by Margaret Laurence
- The Lives of Girls and Women by Alice Munro

New Brunswickers (4 Books)


3M
- Atmospheric Disturbances by Rivka Galchen*
- Anne of Avonlea by Lucy Maud Montgomery*
- Goodnight Desdemona (Good Morning Juliet) by Ann-Marie MacDonald
- Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood

Mary Ellen
- Still Life by Louise Penny*
- The Impact of a Single Event by R. L. Prendergast
- The Whirlpool by Jane Urquhart
- Margarita Nights by Phyliss Smallman

Bybee
- JPod by Douglas Coupland*
- Anne of The Island by Lucy Maud Montgomery
- Unless by Carol Shields
- Fifth Business by Robertson Davies

Gypsysmom
- Murther and Walking Spirits by Robertson Davies*
- Itsuka by Joy Kogowa
- Since Daisy Creek by W. O. Mitchell
- Prospero's Daughter by Constance Beresford-Howe

Callista
- Dear Toni by Cyndi Sand-Eveland*
- Leslie's Journal by Allan Stratton*
- The Reading Solution by Paul Kropp*
- Pact of the Wolves by Nina Blazon and translated by Sue Innes*

Ripley
- Inside Out Girl by Tish Cohen
- The Killing Circle by Andrew Pyper
- The Line Painter by Claire Cameron
- Indigenous Beasts by Nathan Sellyn

L.Hill
- Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson
- Surfacing by Margaret Atwood
- As For Me and My House by Sinclair Ross
- A Bird In The House by Margaret Laurence

Teddy
- Divisadero by Michael Ondaatje
- Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson
- Look for Me by Edeet Ravel
- Horseman's Grave by Jacqueline Baker

Elizabeth
- Kit's Law by Donna Morrissey
- Latitudes of Melt by Joan Clark
- A Student of Weather by Elizabeth Hay
- The Calling by Inger Ash Wolfe

Nova Scotians (3 Books)


Lesley
- The Tenderness of Wolves by Stef Penney*
- The End of the Alphabet by CS Richardson
- Open Secrets by Alice Munro

Gautami
- Sir Cook, The Knight? by Erik Mortensen*
- Shelf Monkey by Corey Redekop
- The Time In Between by David Bergen

Laurie
- All Families Are Psychotic by Douglas Coupland*
- Sailor Girl by Sheree-Lee Olson
- What We All Long For by Dionne Brand

Tanabata
- Griffin & Sabine: An Extraordinary Correspondence by Nick Bantock*
- Dingo by Charles de Lint*
- How To Be a Canadian by Will Ferguson and Ian Ferguson

Scribacchina
- By Grand Central Station I Sat Down And Wept by Elizabeth Smart*
- The Actual by Saul Bellow
- The Song of Kahunsha by Anosh Irani

Lizzy
- Helpless by Barbara Gowdy*
- Catholics by Brian Moore*
- Late Nights On Air by Elizabeth Hay

Bookfool
- Eleanor Rigby by Douglas Coupland
- The Best of Robert Service by Robert Service
- Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery

Chris
- Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson
- Yellowknife by Steve Zipp
- Loyalists and Layabouts by Stephen Kimber

Tracy
- A Complicated Kindness by Miriam Toews
- Rollbackby Robert J. Sawyer
- The Birth House by Ami McKay

Scott
- Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson
- A Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood
- Icefields by Thomas Wharton

Nan
- Nova Scotia by Tanya Lloyd Kyi
- Tottering in My Garden by Midge Ellis Keeble
- The Pioneers of Inverness Township by Gwen Rawlings

Quebecois (2 Books)


Cheryl
- Six Seconds by Rick Mofina*
- Honour Among Men by Barbara Fradkin

Linda/CT
- Map of Glass by Jane Urquhart
- Caedman's Song by Peter Robinson

April
- The Birth House by Ami McKay
- The Stone Carvers by Jane Urquhart

Stacy
- My One Hundred Adventures by Polly Horvath
- All-Season Edie by Annabel Lyon

Orchidus
- The Penelopiad by Margaret Atwood
- Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery

Lee
- Sweetness in the Belly by Camilla Gibb
- The Droughtlanders by Carrie Mac

Joanna
- Claudia by Britt Holmstrom
- The Bone Cage by Angie Abdou

Claire
- The Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson
- Song of the Paddle by Bill Mason

Monodon
- Life of Pi by Yann Martel
- The Cure For Death by Lightning

Lillian
- Memories Are Murder by Lou Allin
- Pandemic by Daniel Kalla

Ontarians (1 Book)



Susan
- Wolf Moon by Charles de Lint*

Heather
- Kiss of the Fur Queen by Tomson Highway*

Paul R
- Fifth Business by Robertson Davies*

Jules
- The Moons of Jupiter by Alice Munro*

Carla
-Coventry by Helen Humphreys*

Wayne
-Beaverbrook: A Failed Legacy by Jacques Poitras*

Lisa
- Water For Elephants by Sara Gruen

Kayleigh
- Alice, I Think by Susan Juby

DebbieS
- An Imperfect Offering by James Orbinsky

Literary Mom
- Late Nights On Air by Elizabeth Hay

Jake
- Barney's Version by Mordecai Richler

Stephanie
- Crow Lake by Mary Lawson

Mrs. Peachtree
- Stella Fairy of the Forest by Marie-Louise Gay

(If these standings are not correct, please let me know. As well, if you've missed the explanation of the provincial/territorial headings and can't figure out why you're listed under a particular province, please refer to this post.)

And once again, it's prize time. This month prize comes from Jen of ECW Press along with an announcement of even more prizes to come. First off, it's Brad Kelln's In Tongues of the Dead.



"In the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library of Yale University there lies a 400-year-old document that no one has been able to decipher. Twenty years ago the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) secretly placed a guard to watch over the document.

The guard, Father Ronald McCallum, is overwhelmed when an autistic child visiting the library appears to read from the manuscript’s pages. Finally its secrets will be revealed! Father Benicio Valori, priest and clinical psychologist, is sent halfway around the world to verify the boy’s ability to read the manuscript.

When the manuscript is stolen, things begin to unravel. It becomes apparent the Vatican has sent others to investigate with orders to stop at nothing from keeping the document’s secrets from being exposed. Fearing for the child’s life, Benicio flees the country to Canada and trusted friend and psychologist, Dr. Jake Tunnel."


To win In Tongues of the Dead you can enter as many times as you're able to increase your chances. Look at the new reviews above (i.e., those marked with an *) and tell me how a specific book could be used in another book challenge (past or present). I know some people prefer to keep their challenges separate, but I encourage people to multitask. For instance: This month I read King Leary which also could have been used towards the Book Awards Reading Challenge as it won the Stephen Leacock Medal for Humour and the Canada Reads 2008 competition. (Some lists of great reading challenges are posted here and here, though you may know of some that are not listed there. Joy also hosts a lot, if you want to check out her site.) Email your answers to jmutford [at] hotmail [dot] com. I'll draw a winner on November the 14th.

But, not to worry if you don't win this particular ECW title. They've also added a prize pack for the challenge finale in July. Head back to the main post to see what titles are being offered up.

In other news, if you haven't already seen it, the local paper did a story on the Book Mine Set, focusing in particular on the 2nd Canadian Book Challenge. Oddly, this paper was read by someone all the way back in Gander, Newfoundland who then interviewed me about the challenge for their local CBC Radio morning show. Despite my getting up at 5:30 to do a phone interview, I think it pretty well but I don't even know if it's aired yet! It would be nice to add a few Newfoundlanders to the Challenge other than myself!

Until next month, have fun celebrating, promoting and exploring Canadian Books.

Labels: ,

Anonymous gautami tripathy said...

I did read a 3rd book in October. I forgot to mention it to you.

It is a fable written by a Canadian author, which I received from minibook expo.

Sir Cook, The Knight?

Saturday, 01 November, 2008  
Blogger Wanda said...

A phone interview too! So, how many minutes fame are you up to now? More than the average 15 that's for sure. ;)

Soak it up John, we are all proud of you and grateful for the awesome amount of work you put into this challenge! :)

Saturday, 01 November, 2008  
Blogger Barbara Bruederlin said...

You are bi-coastally famous now! Well done, you. And you even got to do the last interview in your pyjamas.

I did finally finish a Canadian book, but I am so far behind on my reviews. It's coming!

Saturday, 01 November, 2008  
Blogger Violette Severin said...

I tried to leave a comment earlier today but don't see it so I will try again. I have read 6 books for the challenge. I reviewed Small Ceremonies by Carol Shields at http://themysterybookshelf.blogspot.com/2008/10/small-ceremonies-book-review.html. The link to my blog is inaccurate. Its not your fault. When I signed up for the challenge I used my quilting blog address. I later started a book blog which is at http://themysterybookshelf.blogspot.com. All of my reviews are posted on this blog.

Saturday, 01 November, 2008  
Blogger GeraniumCat said...

Rats, too late again! I've actually read 2, John, but I haven't written about them yet: Stll Life by Louise Penny and Anne of the Island (another LM Montgomery). I'll do my best to catch up this month, promise.

Saturday, 01 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

Gautami and Violette: Thanks for letting me know. It should all be fixed now.

Wanda: I think I'm up to 15.3 (And thank-you!)

Barbara: Can't waiyt to see which one it was.

Geranium Cat: I did see that you'd read those titles. As soon as you post the reviews I'll change the number in the sidebar and add the links to the December update.

Saturday, 01 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

I just spoke to my parents back in Newfoundland and apparently the radio broadcast has already aired.

Sunday, 02 November, 2008  
Blogger Framed said...

I just finished no. 6,"Mrs. Mike".
http://framedandbooked.blogspot.com/2008/11/mrs-mike-by-benedict-and-nancy-freedman.html
Just read over some of the titles that others have read and I'm already making plans for next year.

Sunday, 02 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

Framed: I can't believe how many books I've added to my wish list because of this challenge-- often with books and authors I'd never even heard of.

Sunday, 02 November, 2008  
Blogger Book Zombie (Joanne) said...

Hi John, I have 5 more reviews to add to my total. Bringing me up to 7 Beautiful BC :)

The Gum Thief- Douglas Coupland
Gargoyle - Andrew Davidson
Yellowknife – Steve Zipp
Watching July – Christine Hart
Green Beauty Guide – Julie Gabriel

Sunday, 02 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

Joanne: I don't know how I missed so many! My apologies. I've editted the post above to link these reviews as well.

Sunday, 02 November, 2008  
Blogger raidergirl3 said...

I forgot to email you that I finished a 7th book: http://raidergirl3-anadventureinreading.blogspot.com/2008/10/book-complicated-kindness-by-miriam.html

You can put it on next months total if you want, or add it here, no matter to me.
Great update, as usual. The Book Mine Set is getting famous. I can say I knew you when...

Sunday, 02 November, 2008  
Blogger Becky said...

You missed one of mine :) Anne of Avonlea by L.M. Montgomery

Wednesday, 05 November, 2008  
Anonymous Lesley said...

I did manage to move into the next province in October, reading The Tenderness of Wolves. Here's the link to my review: http://www.alifeinbooks.com/?p=202

Now to decide which to read next ...

Wednesday, 05 November, 2008  
OpenID kirbc said...

Hi John, can we still keep sharing our links when we've reached 13? I'll still be reading tons o' canadian books.

JK

Thursday, 06 November, 2008  
Blogger John Mutford said...

KIRBC: Of course! I love the enthusiasm.

Thursday, 06 November, 2008  
Anonymous Lesley said...

Another one under my belt, and a goodie, too: The Girls

Thursday, 13 November, 2008  
Blogger Kathleen Molloy said...

Thanks John, I've read another YA work (not a Quebec author but a Torontonian).

Mud City by Deborah is about a young girl and her dog making it through the day in a refugee camp. It’s a Y.A work, not gruesome but real. Ellis frequently writes about the lives of women in children in Middle Eastern war zones. And she does it with a tenderness that makes the reader feel as though her 14 year-old protagonist Shauzia could be your neighbour, that is, if you lived in a mud caked refugee camp and the only being you trusted to help you survive was a dog.

Ellis is a Toronto GG winner bringing the stories of young women to light under the Taliban. Mud City is book 3 in her The Breadwinner Trilogy.

Saturday, 15 November, 2008  
Blogger Violette Severin said...

I have just posted another review at http://themysterybookshelf.blogspot.com/2008/11/chinese-alchemist-book-review.html.

Sunday, 16 November, 2008  
OpenID kirbc said...

Well, in that case, here's two more:

The Wives of Bath, by Susan Swan
http://kirbc.wordpress.com/2008/11/12/the-wives-of-bath-by-susan-swan/

and
Silver Salts, by Mark Blagrave
http://kirbc.wordpress.com/2008/11/17/silver-salts-by-mark-blagrave/

JK

Monday, 17 November, 2008  
Blogger Framed said...

Yippee, I've read two more. Here's the links:
Mrs. Mike by Benedict and Nancy Freeman
http://framedandbooked.blogspot.com/2008/11/mrs-mike-by-benedict-and-nancy-freedman.html
The Colony of Unrequited Dreams by Wayne Johnston
http://framedandbooked.blogspot.com/2008/11/colony-of-unrequited-dreams-by-wayne.html
I talked with a Newfie at work the other day. Utah is a long way from Newfoundland. We discussed "Colony" a bit. Loved his accent.

Friday, 21 November, 2008  
OpenID kirbc said...

Another one:
Whylah Falls, by George Elliott Clarke
http://kirbc.wordpress.com/2008/11/23/whylah-falls-by-george-elliott-clarke/

Sunday, 23 November, 2008  
Blogger Cheryl Kaye Tardif, suspense author said...

I have finished John Ballem's "A Victim of Convenience" and a review appears on Amazon - HERE

Please vote it helpful if you think it is. :) Thanks.

Cheryl Kaye Tardif,
Canadian author of Whale Song, The River and Divine Intervention
www.cherylktardif.com

Wednesday, 26 November, 2008  
Blogger Steve Zipp said...

Richard's blog tipped me to a great book that everyone here will enjoy reading. Written by a Canadian journalist on the lam, Time Was Soft There is an account of life at the famous Paris bookstore, Shakespeare & Co. The owner offers free accommodation and expects in return that you read one book a day and help out a bit at the bookstore. Sounds idyllic, doesn't it?

http://stevezipp.blogspot.com/2008/11/time-was-soft-there.html

Steve

Wednesday, 26 November, 2008  
Blogger Kathleen Molloy said...

I have gone gaga for Canadian YA novels this year. Here is another new favourite:
Kenneth Oppel's Firewing. I intend to read the trilogy. But I think I'll finish the Bread winner trilogy first. That's the problem when you get hooked into a series and have too many on the go!

Kathleen Molloy

Wednesday, 26 November, 2008