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ExUrbanis

Urban Leaving to Country Living

Exurbanis on TRIPLE CHOICE TUESDAY

April17

Triple Choice TuesdayKimbofo over at the great blog Reading Matters, runs a weekly series called Triple Choice Tuesdays, wherein she asks “some of (her) favourite bloggers, writers and readers to share the names of three books that mean a lot to them. The idea is that it might raise the profile of certain books and introduce you to new titles, new authors and new bloggers.”

I love this series and I’m honoured to be featured today on Kim’s blog. Go on over and have a look at my favourites.

What do you think of them? How would you have answered?

P.S. Today I’m using the ‘ou’ spellings I was taught in school as a ‘tip of the hat’ to Kim who is an ex-pat Australian living in London, UK. Enjoy – tomorrow I’ll get back to American spellings.


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What Better Way to Celebrate National Library Week?

April13

National Library WeekSince the old library in the village closed on March 17th, we have been without library services, eagerly anticipating the opening of our new branch. What better way to celebrate National Library Week (April 8 – 14th) than with its official opening on Wednesday?

I was blown away. From one cramped room with barely room to walk, we have a two story light & airy open space complete with kids area, teens area, a community activity room, a half-dozen big screen computers with Wi-Fi, washrooms, staff offices, and two beautiful reading areas. One of those is in the second floor loft and looks out over Tatamagouche Bay and the Northumberland Strait.

Ocean View

I know that ultimately taxpayers funded this project, but I’m ever so grateful to the powers-that-be who allocated monies to this project. Thank you, thank you, thank you!

new Tatamagouche library

How are you celebrating your community library?


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Moving a Library – Village Style!

April4

Some of you may remember my post last year about the building of the new library in Tatamagouche.

I thought I’d show you a little bit behind the scenes of moving a village library to its new premises.

Library,Tatamagouche

That old branch closed for good on March 17th.

The new premises are now complete and the official grand opening is next Wednesday. (April 11th). I can hardly wait to see inside!

Tata library - moving crew

No moving vans or professional crews – or even U-Hauls for us.

These are all volunteers.

For more photos of the move, click here.

I wasn’t able to help, but I love that community volunteers made this possible. It’s part of what makes rural living so great.

What do you think of our moving methods?


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KEEP CALM & CARRY ON: The Rest of the Story

March31

KeepCalm200

The catchphrase Keep Calm & Carry On has been appearing everywhere for the last couple of years.

I knew that it had been devised as a propaganda slogan in WWII Britain, but I did sometimes wonder how I had missed it for most of my life.

Well, now I know.

WATCH THIS SHORT VIDEO AND YOU WILL TOO

I have put Northumberland (in “the northeast corner of England”) and this bookshop very near the top of my “Most Want to Travel To” list. (You have one of those, right?)

I think Keep Calm and Carry On has become a mantra for today’s society because it applies in just about every situation. As Rudyard Kipling said: “If you can keep your head when all about you Are losing theirs (…) you’ll be a man, my son.” What do you think?


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THE BEST & THE WORST of RICHARD B. WRIGHT

March28

best&worstI’m guest-posting today over on Alyce’s blog At Home With Books. I hope you’ll visit me there and see what I consider the best and worst of Canadian author Richard B. Wright.


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SPRING READING THING: Still Working on my TBR Mountain

March20

Spring Reading Thing

Katrina over at Callapidder Days is hosting her sixth annual Spring Reading Thing. It’s a fun, low-pressure reading challenge open to anyone and everyone. It will take place March 20th-June 20th (which is, not-so-coincidentally, the spring of 2012).

To participate, I need to create a list of some books I’d like to read or finish this spring. I have to list specific books. I can feel free to set some additional reading, but that’s optional.

Until March 31st, I’m still participating in C.B.’s Double Dare where the rule is that from Jan 1 to April 1, 2012, I can read only books that were in my TBR pile on December 31st. (Library books were allowed only if they were in my possession or on my holds list at 12:00 A.M. on Jan. 1.)

But it’s that “Library Holds List Loophole” that’s kept this challenge from being as effective as I had hoped. I thought I thinned that list in December, but it seems that there’s always something (completely within the rules) from the library demanding my attention and keeping me from making any real headway on Mount TBR.

So for the Spring Reading Thing, I’m committing to read a number of books from my December 31st TBR pile. Two are chunksters; and since there are still a couple of books coming from the library, I’ve included those. AND I’m including some books that were wins since January and that I’ve been anxiously waiting to start.

Currently reading:
Half-Blood Blues by Esi Edugyan

From Mount TBR
White River Junctions by Dave Norman
The Saturdays by Elizabeth Enright
A Suitable Boy by Vikram Seth
The Canadian Food Guide by Pierre and Janet Berton
Stephen Leacock: His Remarkable Life by Albert Moritz and Theresa Moritz
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte
The Mapping of Love and Death (Maisie Dobbs, Book 7) by Jacqueline Winspear
One Lonely Night by Mickey Spillane

Library Books:
Broken Music: A Mystery by Marjorie Eccles
The Art of Fielding by Chad Harbach
A History of the World in 100 Objects by Neil MacGregor
Th1rteen r3asons why by Jay Asher

New arrivals (wins, gifts & ARCs)
The Colony of Unrequited Dreams by Wayne Johnston
African Love Stories: An Anthology edited by Ama Ata Aidoo
Oxford Messed Up by Andrea Kayne Kaufman
Manners for Women by Mrs. Humphrey
Murder: A Crafty Business by Lila Phillips

I’m doing my level best to have these all read by June 20th. I’m also committing to keeping up with my personal Bible reading schedule. Let’s see how I do!

What about you? What are your spring reading plans?


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Fun with Better Bookshelves

March16

If I had any wall space to hang a poster, I’d be sending hints about this out to all my friends and loved ones. As it is, I have to make do with recording it here on my blog and Pinterest. [sigh]

Better Bookshelves

By Grant Snider, available as a poster. Via Bookshelf.

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WALDEN: A Short Consideration of Location, Location, Location

March6

The Classics Reading Challenge hosted by November’s Autumn is the one I’m calling “Classics with a Twist” – the twist being that on the fourth of each month, Katherine posts a prompt to act as a basis for my discussion of the classic I’m currently reading.

This month, the prompt is LOCATION – and the classic I’ve most recently finished is Walden by Henry David Thoreau.

In 1845, Thoreau spent two years living in a small cabin in the woods near Walden Pond, Connecticut Massachusetts. (oops! See comments.) In his classic discourse, Walden, the author discusses in some depth the economic theory behind his experiment in living, as well as minute observations about nature, including the pond itself.

After the introductory essays, Thoreau doesn’t so much introduce the location, as he does analyze it throughout the book. In fact, location seems inseparable to the book. It is, after all, called Walden.

Walden Pond

This is how Walden Pond looked about the time Thoreau lived there. It would have been nicer to see this in summer when there were leaves on the trees – that is how I imagined it even though Thoreau talks in depth about winter and spring at the pond.

Would the book have worked as well if Walden had been located somewhere else? The southern US? Above the Arctic Circle? The Australian outback? Surprisingly (to me, once I started considering this), I think the basic premise of the book – which was Thoreau’s experiment in opting out of established society – would be as strong no matter where it was set. Certainly, the description of the changing seasons would have been replaced by other observations of the natural cycles.

What do you think? Is Walden Pond inseparable from the book Walden?


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In Which I Compare Copies of Jane Eyre

February26

Jane Eyre

Yesterday afternoon we took a run into the city and, of course, had to stop at Starbucks for our ‘city coffee’ fix. While the others sipped their mocha white hot chocolate, I stepped over into the Chapters store (which had been my intended destination all along) and checked out the $5 and under table.

I found this beautiful copy of Jane Eyre.

This book is on my 2012 reading list and I already had a paperback copy of it in my TBR stack. But when I walked away from that copy with the leather-like cover, color spreads of Bronte Country, the Bronte family tree, Bronte timelines, principal characters and so on, I knew I would regret not spending the $5. So, of course, I had to go back and get the book.

And so now I have two Jane Eyres, although one is going in the garage sale in July. I love the way the black copy feels in my hand – it’s 100 pages shorter than the paperback which is chunky and feels awkward. Plus, there’s a built-on elastic to mark my spot while I’m reading.

compare Jane Eyre copies

I had been dreading tackling this classic despite everyone’s raves about it, but now I’m looking forward to it.

Which one would you prefer to read?


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Odds & Ends & Gingerbread

December24

As a break from posting up my reading challenges, I want to share a few book-related items with you. Some you may have already seen around the web, but I hope you enjoy them anyway.

Since I’m a terrible procrastinator at reading the books I think I want to have read over the year, I was intrigued by AbeBooks’ Top Ten Reasons Why We Don’t Get to Certain Books. With me, it’s often a combination of these factors. Maybe it’s the same with you.

I just discovered a new blog (well, it’s new-to-me) called Isak. As Anna Clark, the voice behind the blog says: “Isak is a space to celebrate tales and truth in the curious, joyful way embodied by the writer for which it is named. The name ‘Isak,’ after all, means ‘laughter’.” Anna has just released her third annual Choose Books: A Gift Guide for People Who Care About Stories. It’s a free PDF file that goes beyond run-of-the-mill recommendations and profiles a delightful range of books with intelligent insights into the people for whom she proposes they be bought. Which is a fancy way to say: She’s fun, she’s bright, she’s surprising. You’ll like it! (Oh! And did I say it’s free?)

gingerbread typewriter

And, last but not least, I was charmed by this gingerbread typewriter, made by Patti of Baked Ideas and featured at BoingBoing. It’s edible, right down to the rice-paper ribbon. Don’t you just love details like that?


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