Author: Makeda Silvera
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Apr 1995
Strong, Troubled, Optimistic by Hazelle Palmer For these three poets writing is an instrument to deconstruct and challenge the status quo - to accuse Canadian society of racism, sexism, and classism, and to substantiate those accusations with examples drawn from the core of their communities. Read more...
| May 2002
Drama Jamaican-Style by Irene D'Souza
Molly Galloway, the sleek heroine and narrator of this debut novel by the widely recognized editor and co-founder of Sister Vernon Press, is a horticulturist, living in Toronto, having arrived from Jamaica in 1971. Makeda Silvera's elegiac story about the disruption of emigrant families and the durability of childhood memories is sure to garner her attention as a writer first and foremost. Read more...
| JunJul 2002
| The Divine Economy of Salvation by Priscila Uppal Doubleday 405 pages $32.95 cloth ISBN: 0385658044
| | Heave by Christy Ann Conlin Doubleday Canada 322 pages $29.95 paper ISBN: 0385658079
| | Spelling Mississippi by Marnie Woodrow Knopf Canada 386 pages $34.95 paper ISBN: 0676974317
| | | Rush Home Road by Lori Lansens Knopf Canada 547 pages $34.95 paper ISBN: 0676974503
| | Crow Lake by Mary Lawson Knopf Canada 291 pages $34.95 cloth ISBN: 0676974791
| | The Heart Does Not Bend by Makeda Silvera Random House Canada 264 pages $32.95 cloth ISBN: 0679311343
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First Novels by W.P Kinsella
The first book I read for the 2002 season, Crow Lake, by Mary Lawson, (Knopf Canada, 294pages, ISBN: 0676974791), is a spellbinding story and likely to be collecting accolades at the end of the year. The bitter land and climate of Northern Ontario are like characters in this story of four orphaned children struggling to stay together as a family. Read more...
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