Book Review: Adventures of a Waterboy by Mike Scott
I’m going to admit for the first time that I had a big crush on Mike Scott when I was a teenager. It probably had as much to do with his rich, soul-searching music, coming as it did at the apex of my...
View ArticleBook Review: Earth Masters: Playing God with the Climate by Clive Hamilton
Despite all the best efforts of those that have taken a political stance as “climate deniers,” it has been generally recognized by scientific communities around the world that the climate system is...
View ArticleBook Review: By the Book: A Reader’s Guide to Life by Ramona Koval
There’s something so engaging about Ramona Koval. It’s not entirely down to her extraordinary intelligence, her warmth, or even her absolute love of books: a perception of the world through words that...
View ArticleBook Review: Elemental by Amanda Curtin
Margaret Duthie Tulloch is a storyteller whose bedtime tales of Fish Meggie, the Gutting Girl from the Top of the World, delight her granddaughter Laura, her “lambsie”. She promises to write those...
View ArticleBook Review: Bread of the Lost by Philomena van Rijswijk
Philomena van Rijswijk’s poetry is a sensual treat. As with her fiction, there seems to be no topic off-limits in Bread of the Lost; no intimacy she isn’t willing to explore. The poetry moves across...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘Hotel Hyperion’ by Lisa Gorton
A room can be any distinguishable space within a structure, but Lisa Gorton’s Hotel Hyperion takes the notion of a room to the grandest of metaphorical extensions, turning rooms into universes, into...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘The Bookman’s Tale’ by Charlie Lovett
Charlie Lovett’s novel The Bookman’s Tale is fiction that will appeal greatly to book lovers. The engaging plotline is a kind of ghostly love story enriched not only by the painful neuroses of its...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘Finding Your Element’ by Ken Robinson
Ken Robinson’s The Element created something of a paradigm shift. The book focused heavily on the one-size-fits-all educational system that teaches children notions of success that aren’t right for...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘Maddaddam’ by Margaret Atwood
Maddaddam is the third and final book in Margaret Atwood’s phenomenal Maddaddam Trilogy that also includes Oryx and Crake and The Year of the Flood. Although each book stands alone reasonably well,...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘Street to Street’ by Brian Castro
It takes a little while to orient oneself in Street to Street. There are layers of meaning, narration and irony that move in and between the tenderness and ennui in a way that iscan be dizzying. The...
View ArticleBook Review: Adventures of a Waterboy by Mike Scott
I’m going to admit for the first time that I had a big crush on Mike Scott when I was a teenager. It probably had as much to do with his rich, soul-searching music, coming as it did at the apex of my...
View ArticleBook Review: Earth Masters: Playing God with the Climate by Clive Hamilton
Despite all the best efforts of those that have taken a political stance as “climate deniers,” it has been generally recognized by scientific communities around the world that the climate system is...
View ArticleBook Review: By the Book: A Reader’s Guide to Life by Ramona Koval
There’s something so engaging about Ramona Koval. It’s not entirely down to her extraordinary intelligence, her warmth, or even her absolute love of books: a perception of the world through words that...
View ArticleBook Review: Elemental by Amanda Curtin
Margaret Duthie Tulloch is a storyteller whose bedtime tales of Fish Meggie, the Gutting Girl from the Top of the World, delight her granddaughter Laura, her “lambsie”. She promises to write those...
View ArticleBook Review: Bread of the Lost by Philomena van Rijswijk
Philomena van Rijswijk’s poetry is a sensual treat. As with her fiction, there seems to be no topic off-limits in Bread of the Lost; no intimacy she isn’t willing to explore. The poetry moves across...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘Hotel Hyperion’ by Lisa Gorton
A room can be any distinguishable space within a structure, but Lisa Gorton’s Hotel Hyperion takes the notion of a room to the grandest of metaphorical extensions, turning rooms into universes, into...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘The Bookman’s Tale’ by Charlie Lovett
Charlie Lovett’s novel The Bookman’s Tale is fiction that will appeal greatly to book lovers. The engaging plotline is a kind of ghostly love story enriched not only by the painful neuroses of its...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘Finding Your Element’ by Ken Robinson
Ken Robinson’s The Element created something of a paradigm shift. The book focused heavily on the one-size-fits-all educational system that teaches children notions of success that aren’t right for...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘Maddaddam’ by Margaret Atwood
Maddaddam is the third and final book in Margaret Atwood’s phenomenal Maddaddam Trilogy that also includes Oryx and Crake and The Year of the Flood. Although each book stands alone reasonably well,...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘Street to Street’ by Brian Castro
It takes a little while to orient oneself in Street to Street. There are layers of meaning, narration and irony that move in and between the tenderness and ennui in a way that iscan be dizzying. The...
View Article