#IMWAYR March 25th, 2024

 Welcome! It's #IMWAYR time again, when bloggers share what they have been reading and find out what others have been up to. Kathryn hosts the adult version of this meme at Book Date. Kellee and Ricki at Unleashing Readers host the kidlit rendition. These are fabulous places to start your search for what to read next.

The grandkids have come and gone. I did nothing for close to 24 hours after they left except relax and finish up some adult books. Then I started cleaning the house and doing laundry. It still isn't under control, but the main part of the house is almost presentable. 

As usual, we read a lot of books together! Today I'm only mentioning those that were new to us. 

Titles with a 🍁 indicate this is a Canadian or Indigenous Canadian Author and or Illustrator.
Clicking on the title will take you to the Goodreads page of the book.

BOARD BOOKS

5 stars

I'm Hungry!
by Elise Gravel 🍁 September 12, 2023

I've most likely written about this book before. It's part of Elise Gravel's Funny Little Books series. The patterned language in these books is hilariously brilliant. It's really fun to read aloud. Both of my three year old granddaughters loved this! Ellis carried it around 'reading' it by herself. 

This book is a celebration of community - of coming together and creating beauty with other people. After a cold winter has kept children inside, they emerge into the street. Amanda brings a container of sidewalk chalk with her.  Each child creates something unique to them. In the end they create a collective masterpiece. 


This book is pure joy to read. Both the illustrations and the words are absolutely drop dead gorgeous. 
A mother tells her bicultural son stories of dragons that comprise his different backgrounds. On the one hand are the dangerous Western dragons who hoard gold. On the other are the benevolent Eastern creatures who are related to water and agriculture. 
I read this with my two half Korean granddaughters. This book could have been written for them. I wish we had had time to read it more than once. I might renew it and take it to Vancouver at the end of April when we go for the younger one's birthday. I'm now on the look out for good books about Korean dragons. Do you have recommendations?

NON FICTION PICTURE BOOKS

When just the two girls were with us, we made a trip to the library and returned home with all kinds of titles. I'm not going to write about these books individually. The following dinosaur books were mostly for Ellis, but it turned out that all four of them enjoyed them. 
My grandson actually sat down and read the book about rocks and minerals all by himself. (He did occasionally come and ask me for help with a big word.)


CHAPTER BOOKS


My grandkids and I are thankful to Earl Dizon for introducing us to this series. I started reading it to two granddaughters, and then put it aside since the three year old wasn't really interested. (Alas there are no dinosaurs or monsters.) Her six year old sister took it and finished it on her own. 
It turns out that my grandson, who I gave the first in the series to as a Christmas gift, also loves these books. The glint in his eye when he spied it was a delight to see. 
The Ratsos and their friends clean up an empty lot and set up an arcade in the transformed space. In this book Louie has to overcome his fear of whatever/whoever lives in the adjacent house when they accidentally break a window. Ralphie has his own challenges. After being nice to a bullied girl at school, rumours abound that he likes her. When he finds out who started the rumours, he ends up having to take responsibility for something he did to that person first. In the end, both boys go out of their way to make the other person's life better. 
I really love this series. It's full of humour. The illustrations by Matt Myers are delightful. Mostly though, I love that it is full of heartfelt lessons about how to live a good life. 


I read this one with my granddaughter, Ada. We started the first chapter and then I downloaded Salma the Syrian Chef so she could have some background on Salma's life. 
Salma and her mother have been in Canada for a couple of years without her father. When word arrives that he is finally arriving, Salma is filled with big, complicated emotions. She is happy that he is coming, but worried that he will not like it in Vancouver and will want to return to Damascus without them. Then she will have to experience missing him all over again.
This book packs an emotional wallop. Ada and I had some good conversations about what life is like for her mother who left her home in Korea to marry their dad. 
Finding readable chapter books that deal with complicated issues isn't easy. If I was still working, I would purchase a set of these for literature circles for younger students.
I'm looking forward to reading the next in this series, Salma Writes a Book. Hopefully it will arrive for me to take with me on my visit to see the grandkids at the end of April.

MG FICTION


Grace has magical power and needs to find someone to help her learn to use it. She ran away from the orphanage in search of a witch who is purported to live in the nearby woods. After narrowly escaping being cooked in a witches oven, the two make a deal. If Grace can complete all the spells in the witches grimoire before the cherries blossom in the spring, she will take Grace on as her apprentice. If she can't, the witch will take her magic.
I appreciate that this book is inspired by Anne of Green Gables. Grace has all the heart and energy of Anne. I love that her friendships and the plot follow so delightfully the story line of the original novels.

GRAPHIC NOVELS


When 'The Scientist' discovered that all sadness, anxiety, and anger disappeared when you removed your heart, people rushed to get their hearts removed. Without the distractions of these negative emotions, or even those of love, students are able to focus on their studies and do better in school. It seems immaterial that giving up your heart means that you lose a capacity for empathy and all interest in the arts.
June is one of the few remaining holdouts. She can't bear to lose her passion for art. She still has her heart but is under a lot of pressure from her parents to have it removed. Then she finds an abandoned heart in a bottle outside of the Tabularium, a facility that houses all the removed hearts. Shortly after this June befriends Max. The two of them set out to discover if hearts can be replaced.
June and her sister, Maya, had a close relationship until Maya had her heart removed. After that, June became an outsider at home and school. Her loneliness is so palpable, my heart ached for her. 
I really appreciated that there are all kinds of moral and ethical issues being addressed here. Should we be expected to give up parts of ourselves in order to fit in? What is the role of art in living a full life? I loved Kerilynn Wilson's artwork. 
The only part of this book that didn't really work was the ending. It didn't seem plausible enough. I know this is absurd given the the whole premise of surviving heart removal, but still, it felt too simple for me.

4 stars

Look on the Bright Side
by Lily Williams & Karen Schneemann

I loved this duo's Go With the Flow, so when I saw they had another graphic novel with the same characters, I was excited. It didn't let me down. I enjoyed my visit with Brit, Christine, Abby and Sasha. I appreciated that we are shown Brit recovering from endometriosis surgery when the book begins. The school is stocked with tampons and pads as a direct result of the girl's activism in the first book. In this one, the focus is more on their romantic entanglements. Through it all, first and foremost, they remain friends.  

ADULT/YA FICTION

4 stars

A World of Curiosities
(Chief Inspector Armand Gamache, #18) by Louise Penny & Robert Bathurst (Narrator) November 29, 2022 🍁

All is not well in the small town of Three Pines. A brother and a sister from Armand Gamache and Jean-Guy Beauvoir's past are visiting the village for a graduation celebration. A boarded off room in Myrna's loft reveals strange messages that send the Sûreté du Québec investigators down some very dark alleys into the heart of a psychopathic serial killer who is hunting them. 
I appreciate that this book honours the victims of the École Polytechnique massacre without naming their murderer. I appreciated learning more about how Armand got his start as a policeman. I also appreciated reading more about how Jen-Guy became a member of Armand's team. 

My problem with this book is that it is a thriller, not just a complicated cosy mystery. A couple of times I had to pull my ear buds out and do something else for a while. In the end, I just downloaded the print version of the book and finished it that way.  Even that was so terrifying I mostly skimmed the pages until I got to where the worst of it was over. 

4 stars

The Secret Hours
by Mick Herron & Gerard Doyle (Narrator) September 14, 2023

Two years prior to the events in this book, the government of the day created the Monochrome Inquiry, a special task force directed to look for misconduct in MI5. Of course the head of MI5 ensured that nothing important would ever be released. 
Just when it looks like the inquiry has reached the end of its life, a confidential MI5 file is slipped to one of the leaders. This file takes us back in time to 1994 Germany, just after the Berlin wall came down. If you have read the other books in the Slough House series, you can't help but realize that this file tells us the back story of some of its important characters. 
The individual responsible for the release of the files has a very good reason for having them come to light. She's got her eye trained on a former KGB agent now masquerading as a London businessman.  
I am a hardcore fan of these Mick Herron's spy novels. I love his humour and how he incorporates the malfeasance of politicians and other high level public sector employees into each book. Now that I have finished all these (until the next one is published) I might have to give his oxford mysteries a try. 

ADULT/YA NONFICTION


This is book that focuses on the history of Cobalt, a mining town in Northern Ontario, Canada. I agree with Charlotte Gray that, “Cobalt is the best kind of popular history: carefully researched, vigorously narrated, respectful of the period it describes, but also informed by today’s concerns.” 
Often these kinds of historical narratives are told from the perspective of the white miners and settlers. Angus integrates the impact the discovery of silver had on the Indigenous population in the area and describes how these original people ended up displaced and slaughtered. 
I appreciate how thorough this book is. Global patterns in resource management, business and industry policies, union building and busting, government regulation and taxation have their roots in the history of this small community. 
Cobalt is a companion metal to silver - and historically was discarded. With demand for it on the rise globally, Angus ponders if it will be mined in his area again, and if it is, can we do better for workers and the environment? 

CURRENTLY

Bad Cree by Jessica Jones 

Double Eagle: A DreadfulWater Mystery by Thomas King

UP NEXT (MAYBE)

Mexikid by Pedro Martín

Doppelganger by Naoimi Klein (for bookclub)

READING GOALS 

#MustRead2024 5/25 one on the go

NonFiction 8/24 

Canadian Authors 12/50 two on the go

Indigenous Authors 4/25 two on the go

Goodreads Reading Challenge: 56/200 

#IMWAYR MARCH 11, 2024

 Welcome! It's #IMWAYR time again, when bloggers share what they have been reading and find out what others have been up to. Kathryn hosts the adult version of this meme at Book Date. Kellee and Ricki at Unleashing Readers host the kidlit rendition. These are fabulous places to start your search for what to read next.


My sister returned from galavanting around the world, so we started working on a quilt for one of our friends. Each May we go away for 4 days with a group of the same women. We have almost finished a quilt for each of them. This friend loves birds so we asked everyone what bird they most resonated with. This quilt is really pushing us way past our comfort zones since we are making our own paper pieced bird blocks. To make matters worse, I started working on these blocks last fall, and can't remember what I was doing. I think I am spending as much time picking out seams as I am sewing. 

The great Canada Reads Debate was last week, so I tried to keep on top of that even though I haven't read all the books. 

Aside from that, I worked two days and spent one day travelling for an appointment a couple of hours away. 

All this means that I didn't finish a whole lot last week. I was almost finished What Comes Echoing Back by Leo McKay Jr. but my book expired and the library took it back. Now I will have to wait to get it again. After than I started a number of books, but abandoned them when I couldn't get into them. I ended up listening to Emily Wilde's Map of the Otherlands again after just finishing it. I also read, with my eyes, the scary bits of A Good Girl's Guide to Murder that I had skipped over in the audiobook. 

I contemplated just leaving off posting this week, but two of our grandkids will be arriving to stay with us for the next 10 days, and next Sunday, another two will be joining in the fray. I don't expect to find much time for reading, never mind posting about what I am reading, till they have returned home.  

Titles with a 🍁 indicate this is a Canadian or Indigenous Canadian Author and or Illustrator.
Clicking on the title will take you to the Goodreads page of the book.

PICTURE BOOKS

4 stars

What You Need to Be Warm
by Neil Gaiman and illustrators: Yuliya Gwilym, Nadine Kaadan , Pam Smy, Daniel Egnéus, Beth Suzanna, Marie-Alice Harel, Petr Horáček, Chris Riddell, Bagram Ibatouilline, Benji Davies, Majid Adin, Richard Jones, & Oliver Jeffers October 31, 2023

Thanks to Myra @ Gathering books for the introduction to this one. 
Neil Gaiman crowd sourced memories of what it means to be warm. He took these ideas and transformed them into a poem. Each page is illustrated by a different artist. Gaiman donated the poem to the UN refugee agency. Funds from the sale of the book go towards keeping people warm. 
It's a beautiful poem full of gorgeous black and white  images with touches of reddish orange. 


All the Beating Hearts
by Julie Fogliano & Catia Chien (Illustrator) January 31, 2023

I've gone through this a number of times and with each reread, I find more beauty in both the poem and the images. 




Ice Bears at Ice Edge
by Robert Burleigh & Wendell Minor October 17, 2023

Thanks go to Linda Bai for introducing me to this absolutely stunning book!
This tale of a mother polar bear and her cub trapped on a disintegrating ice flow is riveting. Wendell Minor's illustrations are swoon worthy gorgeous. 
I appreciated that two pages in the back matter include additional polar bear facts and details how the climate crisis make their survival as a species precarious.

ADULT/YA FICTION


Slough House
 by Mick Herron & Gerard Doyle (Narrator) 
February 9, 2021

This is the seventh book in the Slough House series. I somehow missed it and read number 8, Bad Actors, first. This one filled in a number of gaps. Dianna Taverner, head of MI5 has got herself into a complicated mess. Because of it, a murder team from Russia is trying to kill off the Slough House agents - present and past. 

CURRENTLY

The Faint of Heart by Kerilynn Wilson June 13, 2023
Cobalt: Cradle of the Demon Metals, Birth of a Mining Superpower by Charlie Angus February 1, 2022  🍁
The Grace of Things by Heather Fawcett February 14, 2023

UP NEXT (MAYBE)

Besties Work It Out by Kayla Miller

I will continue to deal with the picture books pile.

READING GOALS 

#MustRead2024 3/25 one on the go

NonFiction 7/24 

Canadian Authors 8/50 one on the go

Indigenous Authors 4/25 

Goodreads Reading Challenge: 40/200 

#IMWAYR March 4, 2024

Welcome! It's #IMWAYR time again, when bloggers share what they have been reading and find out what others have been up to. Kathryn hosts the adult version of this meme at Book Date. Kellee and Ricki at Unleashing Readers host the kidlit rendition. These are fabulous places to start your search for what to read next.


It's been a packed couple of weeks. Last Monday I attended a quilting workshop and worked half a day. I ended up working three days last week, but managed to get the flimsy finished. I think I will send it off to be quilted. I worked more on my unicorn paper pieced quilt, and made more shoes for mice. I also spent time learning how I might make cowboy boots.... 

I did not get much reading with my eyes accomplished in the last couple of weeks. 

I asked my partner to take some photographs of the two mice I created specifically for someone. The next thing I knew, we were having a photoshoot. I've posted some of those images onto the above page, Stuffed Mice. I hope you enjoy looking at them as much as I enjoy making them. I might consider taking orders for them.... 

PREVIOUS POST

MG FICTION


I plan to get a detailed review about these four magical friends published sometime this coming week.

ADULT/YA FICTION


It took me a while to get into this one. It's a ghost story, but it's also about loneliness, friendship, love, grief, and figuring out who you are. 
Winifred Blight and her father live in an apartment above a crematorium in a cemetery. Her Indigenous mother died when she was born, and is buried in the graveyard there. She and her best friend, Jack, grew up playing in and around the gravestones, even trying to photograph ghosts. As they entered their teen years, they remained connected, but he moved on to a wider group of friends. 
When they have a falling out, Winifred ends up being haunted by Phil, a real ghost. 
What I appreciated most about this book (and all of Dimaline's novels) is the richness of her characters. Each has a credible backstory. We are filled with empathy for all of them, especially Phil, who is one of the murdered and missing Indigenous women. 


In some ways I liked this book even more than the first in the series. Emily really comes into her own as a strong, independent, indomitable heroine. I wished there had been more of Wendell Bambleby, but then, he has been poisoned and isn't really up to much of anything. I liked that in the last book, Wendell has to save Emily. This time round, it's Emily who is doing the rescuing. The important thing about their relationship, is that Wendell loves Emily just the way she is, and she, in spite of the dangers inherent in loving one of the fae, returns his regard. 
This series is kind of like brain candy. It's a charming fantasy involving faerie worlds. There is enough adventure, terror, and just the right amount of romance to make for a satisfying read. It's a wonderful break from the complex nonfiction and more intense novels I've been reading. 
I hate that I now have to wait until 2025 for Emily Wilde's Compendium of Lost Tales

4 stars

Junie
by Chelene Knight & Nneka Elliott (Narrator) September 13, 2022  🍁

Hogan’s Alley was a thriving Black and immigrant community located in Vancouver’s East End. Junie is a girl growing up there in the 1930's. It's the story of her relationship with her mother. It's about enduring friendships and coming to terms with one's sexuality.
I confess that I did not finish this book. My failure to finish is all about me, and certainly not about the quality of the writing or the importance of the narrative.
I don't deal well with scary of any kind, especially when it can result in terrible things for a child protagonist. I find that listening to a book is worse than reading with my eyes. When I am reading with my eyes I can skim these sections. It's much more intimate and terrifying when the story feels like it's being streamed into your head through your ears.

ADULT/YA NONFICTION


This a profound book about "how and why the rest of us abide poverty and are complicit in it." While Desmond shows us how so many extremely wealthy people and organizations can get away with not paying their fair share of taxes, he also articulates how and why the rest of us, mostly middle class folk, benefit from keeping the poor in poverty. It's not for the faint of heart. Be prepared to take an honest and clear eyed look at where your money comes from, and where it goes.
This book is primarily about America, and while he mentions some of the positive aspects to the Canadian perspective, (our higher unionization rate has kept salary rates higher for all workers - and we have a single payer medical system) much of this applies equally to us.

5 stars

Truth Telling: Seven Conversations about Indigenous Life in Canada
 by Michelle Good & Megan Tooley (Narrator)  🍁

In this collection of essays, Good introduces readers to historical and modern aspects of Indigenous life. She examines racism, broken treaties, cultural pillaging, the disregard for Indigenous lives, and the importance of Indigenous literature. She shows how colonialism underpins modern social systems that continue to have devastating effects for Indigenous people today. 
If readers want to really understand the full history of what it means to be Indigenous here in Canada, I encourage them to read this one and Valley of the Birdtail: An Indian Reserve, a White Town, and the Road to Reconciliation by Andrew Stobo Sniderman & Douglas Sanderson.

5 stars

Unearthing: A Story of Tangled Love and Family Secrets
by Kyo Maclear  🍁

After her father died, a DNA test revealed that Kyo Maclear's father, was not her biological parent. As her world unravelled, she learned that both her parents were keeping all kinds of secrets. 
While this memoir is about the unveiling of those secrets, it's also about being the child of immigrant parents, of being a biracial child and a member of the Japanese diaspora, and about caring for aging parents. It's also about gardening.
I suspect that as we age, we all learn to know our parents in new ways on an ongoing process. This is partly what this book shows, but it specifically addresses the last years when life for them begins to unravel. 
Her attempts to discover more about her biological father are hampered by her mother's reticence to talk about her life, and by her increasing dementia. 
What took me unawares, was is how deeply I connected to Maclear's experiences. There are pieces of it that are windows into a reality I've never encountered. Other parts are mirrors that reminded me of discovering my own parents secrets. I most profoundly related to the reality of looking after a brain addled and aging parent in the last years of her life. 
Did I mention yet how exquisite the writing is? Seriously, huge chunks, if not all of this, are like listening to poetry read out loud. No wonder it won the 2023 Governor General's Literary Award for nonfiction! It's just stunning! 
If you want to know more about this book, you can listen to Shelagh Rogers interview Kyo Maclear here.

CURRENTLY

Sunshine Nails by Mai Nguyen July 4, 2023  🍁
The Faint of Heart by Kerilynn Wilson June 13, 2023

UP NEXT (MAYBE)

Besties Work It Out by Kayla Miller
Slough House by Mick Herron

I will deal with the picture books pile this week or else!

FEBRUARY READING UPDATE:

books read: 19
graphic novels: 3
nonfiction: 3
nonfiction picture books: 2
adult/ya novels: 7
MG novels: 0
Chapter books: 1
Picture books: 1
Indigenous Authors: 3
Black Authors: 1
Canadian Authors: 4

READING GOALS 

#MustRead2024 3/25 one on the go

NonFiction 7/24 

Canadian Authors 8/50 one on the go

Indigenous Authors 4/25 

Goodreads Reading Challenge: 36/200 

FIRST FRIDAY POETRY MARCH 2024

I'm joining Beverly A Baird & Linda Schueler in a "year long poetry practice – on the first Friday of each Month," when we, and anyone else who joins, writes a poem and pairs it up with a photo relating to it.

I keep a Mary Oliver collection of poetry beside my recliner. Her work inspires me to find the sacred magic in the ordinary trappings of my life. My goal for this year is to write poems that celebrate this. 

Occasionally I wake up early enough to watch the sunrise. No matter how it shows up, I am always filled with awe.  Today's poem is about that. 

My partner doesn't get up early enough to take photographs of the dawn so I sent out a request for images. I was inundated with beauty. Unfortunately, no one takes pictures of those ordinary mornings when nothing flashy really happens. Yet ultimately, these are my favourite kind, reminding me that all of us are good enough just as we are. 

Photo by Sheri Stelkia


daybreak benediction


some mornings

the deep indigo of night

transforms,

fluorescing the horizon


a spectacle of 

amethyst, coral and crimson

crowns the sky


some mornings

the dark firmament

cleaves from the earth


crepuscular rays

gild the clouds and hills

in a glory hallelujah


some mornings

there is no fanfare

the stygian sky

just disintegrates

delivering us 

into the faded slate

of a new day



Photo by Trevor Reeves

Photo by Ron Peace

Photo by Trevor Reeves


In case you are interested, the above photographs can be purchased from the photographers. Let me know if you want their contact information.