by prfire | Jan 2, 2018 | All Reviews, Book Reviews, Non-Fiction
The Burgess Shale is not a typical scholarly work, but instead a transcription of Margaret Atwood’s lecture to the University of Alberta as part of the CLC Kreisel Lecture Series in 2016. In her lecture, Atwood provided insight into the influences and impacts of the...
by prfire | Dec 15, 2017 | All Reviews, Book Reviews, Poetry
#IndianLovePoems, a poetry collection by Tenille K. Campbell, provides evocative, truthful words about love without silencing her Indigenous perspective. The honesty throughout #IndianLovePoems is fresh and without hesitation. Her words flow like spoken word poetry,...
by prfire | Nov 27, 2017 | All Reviews, Book Reviews, Fiction
As Andy Williams once sang in his holiday standard, “It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year”: There’ll be scary ghost stories and tales of the glories of Christmases long, long ago. So what ever happened to the ghost stories? When did the telling of spine-tingling...
by prfire | Nov 17, 2017 | All Reviews, Book Reviews, Poetry
Common Place, Sarah Pinder’s second book of poetry, is a challenging read. This is partially due to the subject matter at hand—Common Place is concerned with structures and discourses of power at a human level, and necessarily presents the violence inherent in these...
by prfire | Nov 1, 2017 | All Reviews, Book Reviews, Fiction
Lesley Krueger—A distant relative of the Victorian era painter Richard Dadd— creates a generous and thoughtful portrait of the once-promising artist’s descent into madness, murder, and imprisonment in London’s Bethlem Royal Hospital’s psychiatric facility,...
by prfire | Oct 23, 2017 | All Reviews, Book Reviews, Non-Fiction
“To be frank, I have to say that the mission school, even if it was tough and I hated it sometimes, it was also like a second family for me.” (59) These words belong to Eddy Weetaltuk. His memoir, From the Tundra to the Trenches, resonates with an honesty and humour...