It’s almost a given in any discussion of Middlemarch that it begins by citing Virginia Woolf’s opinion that it’s one of the few books written for grown-up people. Here I am, fully grown-up, the same age as Virginia Woolf when she stuffed her pockets with rocks and stepped into the River Ouse, only now getting around to…
Tag: Books
Book Review: The Last Days of Roger Federer, by Geoff Dyer
1. As far as I’m aware, Mary Shelley is the first person ever to give serious attention to the idea that the human race might be headed toward extinction without prospect of redemption. She gave this idea imaginative force with a lesser known novel, The Last Man, published in 1826 while she was still in her…
The Last Man, by Mary Shelley
I’m not sure how to react to this novel. Part of me balks at the saccharine sentimentality that drips from some of the passages. At the same time, part of me stands in utter awe of Mary Shelley. She was, perhaps, the first person to offer up a full articulation of the idea that human…
William Gibson’s Jackpot Trilogy: The Peripheral
Etiology This book entered my life when I was at the gym riding a stationary bicycle (technically a unicycle), pretending I was being pursued by a horde of hungry zombies, and listening to a CBC Ideas podcast in which Nahlah Ayed interviews Andrew Potter for an update on his book, On Decline. In the interview, Potter…
Review: The Annual Migration of Clouds, by Premee Mohamed
I bought Premee Mohamed’s second novel at the ECW Press booth at Word On The Street. A girl was holding a copy of Waubgeshig Rice’s Moon of the Crusted Snow and I told her that I’d enjoyed it. The ECW girl standing on the other side of the table said: well, if you like that,…
Book Review: On Decline, by Andrew Potter
As an intrepid street photographer, I make a point of documenting urban life in my little corner of this pale blue dot we call home. I make an annual habit of culling my observations to the best 100 or so photographs and printing them in a large hard-cover glossy format so that I have a…
Caught, Lisa Moore’s third novel
Caught is a bit of a departure for Lisa Moore insofar as it is more plot driven, less concerned with the investigation of interior experience. One might go so far as to say it is more commercial, and this is confirmed by the fact that the cover of my edition declares that Caught is now…
February, Lisa Moore’s second novel
The Ocean Ranger sank off the coast of Newfoundland during a storm in February of 1982 and all 84 members of the crew went down with it. Under the subheading “Aftermath” in the Wikipedia entry for the Ocean Ranger, Lisa Moore’s novel, February, gets a mention. I misread the note about Lisa Moore’s novel and took…
Alligator, a novel by Lisa Moore
I noted that last month House of Anansi published Lisa Moore’s fourth novel (fifth if you include her young adult novel, Flannery). It’s titled This Is How We Love and I have every intention of reading it. However, I am embarrassed to report that I said the same thing in 2005 when I bought her…
Positioning Zadie Smith’s NW in Space and Time
I showed up late to the Zadie Smith party. I don’t know why that is. Given my reading habit and the way I indulge my bookish pursuits, you’d think I’d notice when an amazing new voice appears on the horizon (I authorize you to sort out that mixed metaphor any way you please). Maybe it…
Book Review: Companion Piece, by Ali Smith
I’m not one to jump on bandwagons but, in the case of Ali Smith, I’m willing to make an exception and declare myself a fan. In the past few years she has produced some extraordinary work and Companion Piece offers us one more in a growing succession of extraordinary works. Ali Smith distinguishes herself in…
Zadie Smith’s Reliance on Negative Capability in Feel Free
Although I’ve intended to read this collection of reviews, occasional pieces, and cultural criticism since its publication 4 years ago, I have been overwhelmed by the torrent of new material that publishers daily crank out. I feel like I have my face under a spigot opened full bore. So I play catchup as best I…
Add Thomas Mann’s Death In Venice to your Covid Reading List
Historically, Thomas Mann’s 1912 novella has been read either as a quasi confessional reflection on male (homo)sexuality, or as a reflection on beauty and the author’s responsibilities. Gustav von Aschenbach, an established writer of some renown, widowed with an adult daughter, decides that he would benefit from an extended holiday. After a false start, he…
Dream Sequence, by Adam Foulds
Dream Sequence is ostensibly a straight-forward story of a lonely woman, recently divorced, who stalks a B-list movie star whose career is on the ascendancy. When she contrives to meet this man of her dreams, her fantasy world undergoes an abrupt collision with reality. The collision produces no insight, not at least for the characters….
Reading the Poetry of Catullus with One Eye on Leonard Cohen
Reading A Mouthful of Air, by Anthony Burgess, I finally reached the chapter titled “Should we learn foreign languages?” By “we” he means unilingual people who speak English. And by “foreign” he means anyone who wasn’t born into an English-speaking household. Although the question could be read as contentious, I think Burgess means something more benign. In a…