#IMWAYR November 4th, 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!

Even here in Canada we wait anxiously for the outcome of the election in the United States on Tuesday. Good Luck you all! 

Our recent election here was a tight race between the Conservative Party: very right wing, and the New Democratic Party (NDP): middle of the road, but more to the left than the Democrats in the USA. After waiting for all the ballots to be counted and a number of recounts, the NDP squeaked in with a bare minority.

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.

I liked this. I wasn't sure at first, but it didn't take long to get into it. It's based on Misty Wilson's experience playing football in grade seven. There is the usual misogyny from some of the players at first, but then almost all of them come to accept and support her. I appreciated that I learned a lot about football as I read this. (I'm  not ready to watch it on TV with my partner yet though.) 
I especially liked that there is so much more going on than just football. It addresses the usual friend meltdowns all too common in middle grade. Life at home is chaotic because her mother is coping with young twins. In the end Misty comes to understand that she needs to be herself and contribute to her family.
I enjoyed reading Misty Wilson's notes at the end of the book. 

MG NOVELS IN VERSE

4 stars

Red Bird Danced
by Dawn Quigley June 4, 2024

Two urban indigenous youth, Ariel and Tomah, end up going through some intense changes in their lives and connect with their roots in their own way.
They live in an intertribal housing complex in the city. Ariel has to give up ballet because her family can't afford the fees. When she starts fancy dancing she finds a more profound joy and connection to her history and the world around her than she ever did with ballet. Tomah is a comedian and story teller. He's mostly a good student, but has some kind of reading problems. After his teacher starts working with him one on one, he begins to make sense of text and is able to write one of his one stories.
All this takes place against the backdrop of Ariel's Auntie Bineshiinh going missing. 
I listened to this, but I suspect that while I was engaged with the story of these two children, I would have gotten more out of it had I read it with my eyes. Poetry is like that. 
 
Ent
ADULT/YA FICTION


I had no idea what I was getting into with this book. It ended up being a magnificently delightful concoction of genres. I adored it.
We never learn the narrators name, but she is, like the author herself, half British and half Cambodian. At the start, she finishes her last interview and lands a civil service job working as a 'bridge': a live in companion to an expat. She ends up with Commander Graham Gore, who supposedly died on the Franklin Expedition in 1840. He and other similar individuals have been kidnapped from their own times and brought unwilling into a time somewhere in our not too distant future. 
The romance part of this seems pretty inevitable. Eventually there are some pretty steamy lovemaking scenes. But before we get to that, a whole lot more is going on that involves, humour, murder, more time travel, spies, and even a historical narrative by a separate character. It addresses issues of morality, colonialism, racism, misogyny, climate disaster, and PTSD. 
I was very surprised at the ending, but it was all pure pleasure to read. 

ADULT/YA NON FICTION


I will read anything Ross Gay writes. This one required more focus than I needed with his Delight books. These essays are deeper and more intricate. They are filled with an intimacy that's complicatedly human. Some parts, like when he talks about the culture of basketball and what a toxic prison it was, were hard to take in. My main take away from this collection is that sorrow and joy can be two sides of the same coin, especially when sorrow becomes a vehicle that brings us together. Joy is incited in our connectedness with the humanity in others, with ourselves, and with nature. 
"Joy is an act of resistance."
I didn't want this book to end - and yet it did. I tried savouring it, but I still wanted to start all over  again after I finished. I think I would have taken much more from it. Unfortunately, the library took it back.

CURRENTLY 

A Poetry Handbook by Mary Oliver January 1, 1994

Cougar Annie's Garden by Margaret Horsfield August 1, 1999 🍁

The Sherlock Society by James Ponti September 3, 2024

UP NEXT (MAYBE)

What Time the Sexton's Spade Doth Rust by Alan Bradley September 3, 2024 🍁

real ones by Katherena Vermette September 3, 2024 🍁

Besties: Work It Out by Kayla Miller

READING GOALS 

#MustRead2024 17/25 one on the go

NonFiction 31/24 one on the go

Canadian Authors 62/50 one on the go

Indigenous Authors 28/25 

Goodreads Reading Challenge: 184/200    

FIRST FRIDAY POETRY NOVEMBER 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.

Smooth sumac is a local plant I've loved since I was a youngster here. If you plant it in your garden be careful not to water it much, or it can become invasive. In the wild it thrives in our hot, dry climate. Most of the year it is overlooked, but at the first hint of fall, when all the other plants are still green, it produces magnificent red foliage. 

Sumac past it's prime these days so I begged my parter to let me use one of his photographs.

Photograph by Randy Rotheisler

sumac

all spring and summer
i blend in,
agreeably
green

my time to shine
arrives
when i launch 
the local autumnal display
in a spectacle
of scarlet