View from the quay outside Granville Island Market. |
I never would have picked up Lovelace's Is Just a Movie otherwise, but now I'm eager to read the rest of his story of a Trinidadian singer hoping to make a name for himself through a part in a foreign movie being shot on the island. I'm currently listening to an audiobook edition of Kushner's debut novel, Telex from Cuba, and loving it. Her new book, The Flamethrowers, is most definitely on my TBR.
Viola Di Grada also chose to read from a funny - yet disturbing - part of her novel, 70% Acrylic 30% Wool. The first-person narrator feels assaulted by beauty (like a slap in the face) and feels obliged to murder flowers.
Other highlights from last night include a flawless reading by Eleanor Catton from her Booker-winning The Luminaries. She explained that the luminaries are celestial bodies and they are represented in her characters. Catton read from a part where the two that represent the sun and moon first met. They are a young man and woman watching an albatross from the deck of a steamer off New Zealand's Otago peninsula. I'm going to have to choose a particular block of time to read this book because it's 832 pages long and will require focus to appreciate its complexity. E-book is probably the format I'll choose, just because it's so heavy.
Bill Reid canoe at Vandusen Garden |
2 comments:
So cool you've got Eleanor Catton right after her Booker win! (You do appreciate, I hope, that she is ours - NZ'S - not yours?) I've bought the ebook, the first for my new kobo tablet, but also the doorstopper hardcopy.Just because.
She is CANADIAN! Even if she denies this. (And she does.) She was born in Canada and therefore she is OURS. (mwha ha ha).
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