Books Read in July 2015
Well, this is the month that I was supposed to go to Read-by-the-Sea in River John, Nova Scotia and hear readings by Maureen Jennings, Isabel Huggan and Linden MacIntyre, among other authors. As I’ve mentioned, I missed it.
All but one of the eight books I read this month were by Canadian authors; I’ve included the two mysteries at the end of this post.
1. ALL MY PUNY SORROWS by Miriam Toews (Fiction, Literary, Canadian) 
Elfrieda (Elf) is a world-renowned pianist, beautiful, wealthy, in a happy marriage – and she wants to die. Her younger sister Yolandi (Yoli) who tells this story is broke, divorced and struggling as a single mother, and she desperately wants to save her sister from committing suicide, while she tries to keep her own life together.
This book, shortlisted for Canada’s prestigious Giller Prize in 2014, looks at a serious subject in a compassionate & profound way – and along the way provides some humour from Yoli.
An outstanding effort. One of those books that sneaks up on you.
5 stars
2. STATION ELEVEN by Emily St. John Mandel (Fiction, Dystopian, Canadian) ![]()

After a flu pandemic wipes out 99% of the world’s population, and civilization as we know it, Kirsten Raymonde leaves Toronto and heads south. The story picks up twenty years later. Kirsten has joined a troupe of travelling actors and musicians, who have dedicated themselves to keeping classical music and theatre alive.
The story jumps back and forth between the time before and after “the collapse,” and the narration rotates through various characters’ points of view.
The tags ‘post-apocalyptic’ and ‘dystopian’ are usually enough to make me drop a book like a hot potato but this one got SO much buzz, I just had to try it. And I’m so glad I did. It’s a reflection on what makes us human.
4½ stars
3. THE PUP FROM AWAY by Shaun Patterson, art by Christina Patterson (Picture Book, Canadian) ![]()
Look closely at the picture on the cover of the book – and then imagine the entire book illustrated by these charming clay sculptures augmented by other materials. They fairly leap off the page.
The owner of the pup Dukes has to go away for a year and takes Dukes to a friend in rural Prince Edward Island. It’s a big change from his big, busy Ontario city and Dukes doesn’t like it at first. Christina has asked him to stay though so he decides to obey her – and slowly becomes familiar with the delights of country life. When Christina returns, he wants to convince her to stay.
The title is apropos because on PEI, you are either an “Islander” or you are “From Away”. Even if both your parents were Islanders and brought you “home” when you were two, if you were born “away”, you’ll always be ‘from away’. It’s a point of pride and principle for Islanders.
This book was created by husband and wife team Shaun & Christina Patterson, although from Shaun’s bio one might assume that he did the lion’s share. The Patterson themselves are ‘from away’ having moved from Barrie, Ontario to PEI over five years ago.
This book is a delight – to read, look at, and discuss with your child.
4½ stars
4. COOP – A Year of Poultry, Pigs and Parenting by Michael Perry (Nonfiction, Country Living) ![]()
Coop was the only non-Canadian book I read this month, but it arrived at the library for me so it went on the reading pile. I had ordered it because I’m always on the lookout for books about country living by people who have an empathy for city sensibilities, and I have a couple of other books by Michael Perry that have intrigued me in the past on my own bookshelves (unread yet).
One of my favourite excerpts (describing the house he grew up in New Auburn Wisconsin):
“Moving from the kitchen to the living room, you step up a four-inch riser; keep moving on the same plane around a central wall, and you will circle right back to the riser, having never stepped down.”
This tickles me because we have the same sort of situation in the oldest part of our (“renovated”) farmhouse – around that “central wall”.
Perry infuses much humour while imparting great country living (and parenting) experiences in an easy-to-read narrative. Recommended.
4 stars
5. THE BISHOP’S MAN by Linden MacIntyre (Fiction, Literary, Canadian) ![]()
The Bishop’s Man won the prestigious Giller Prize in 2009. In the story, Duncan MacAskill, a Catholic priest who has a genius touch for ‘resolving’ church scandals quickly and quietly is now assigned to an insignificant parish in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia. The effects of the cover-ups which MacAskill orchestrated are starting to haunt him, causing overdrinking and the decision to give his past journals to a reporter.
The book was published in the midst of the ongoing sexual abuse scandal case in the Antigonish Nova Scotia diocese, which eventually resulted in a $15 million settlement by the Catholic Church.
I found the back-and-forth-in-time format a little distracting but this is a sickening and powerful story.
4 stars
6. JACOB’S LANDING by Daphne Greer (Fiction, Middle-grade, Atlantic Canadian) ![]()
Twelve-year-old Jacob Mosher, son of an alcoholic mother and a recently deceased father, is sent from big city Ontario to rural Nova Scotia to spend the summer with aging grand-parents he just learned he had.
His grandparents are odd (to say the least), there are family secrets, and Jacob is suffering culture shock, in addition to navigating this last pre-teen year.
It’s an eventful summer and a touching story of family affection.
4 stars
* * * * *

MYSTERIES
It seems the only reading disappointments I had this month were my mystery reads.
1. DOES YOUR MOTHER KNOW? By Maureen Jennings (Fiction, Mystery, Series, Canadian) ![]()
#1 Christine Morris
As I’ve mentioned before, Jennings, now a Canadian citizen, is the author of the Detective Murdoch mystery series on which the popular CBC television series is based.
Does Your Mother Know is the first in a series featuring Christine Morris, a forensic profiler with the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) in Toronto, Canada. In this debut, Christine is on leave in Scotland, investigating the disappearance of her estranged mother, who has been involved in a “vehicular homicide”.
Decent, but not outstanding or particularly memorable.
3½ stars
2. AS CHIMNEY SWEEPERS COME TO DUST by Alan Bradley (Fiction, Mystery, Series, Canadian) 
I do so love thirteen-year-old Flavia deLuce, chemistry genius and amateur detective. But the quality of the mysteries in this series is unpredictable.
It’s always been more about Flavia and her quirky family than the mysteries, but this instalment disturbingly convolutes that family story. It seemed to be as if the plot was being made up as the author went along, rather than being planned and knowing where it’s going in the future.
I had great hopes for this book since Flavia was temporarily sent from her home in England to boarding school in Toronto, Canada, the author’s (and my) home country. (Note: Bradley lives now in Malta.)
Sadly, I think this is the weakest of the series. It doesn’t put me off Flavia, but if the next book is as weak I think we’ll part ways. There’s time in life for only so many mystery series – and so many, many out there to choose from.
3 stars
* * * * *
Did you know that the name Toews is generally pronounced taves? (Although I worked once with a young man whose family pronounced their name as toes. His name was Harry. True story.) Have you come across author names you were surprised to hear pronounced differently than you had thought they were?
P.S. The links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

Part of what I love about this series is the atmosphere – the life and ways of modern French villages, being bought out by wealthy foreigners (chiefly British), but valuing their heritage, including their cooking.
This is the debut novel of the ultra-popular series featuring Chief Inspector Armand Gamache of the Sûreté du Québec, assigned to a murder in the rural village of Three Pines, south of Montreal. In it, we are introduced to those who, I’ve gathered, are continuing characters in the series. 
I think I found this free on Kindle and downloaded it, thinking it was the first in the series. It’s actually second, and I think I would have gotten just that much more out of it if I’d read the first.
As drinking water runs out and people start to die, Hector finds a number on Cesar’s phone for Annie Mac and leaves messages for her on her voice mail, hoping that they will transmit when there “are bars”.
This cool and still story of the fictional prairie hamlet of Juliet, Saskatchewan for a 24-hour period one August won the 

It seems that armed conflicts are happening in every corner of the globe and, sadly, they affect civilians by the millions. This book focuses on a specific segment of that civilian population: the children, who may have been injured or maimed, left without parents, whose homes have been destroyed, whose schooling has been interrupted, and who go to sleep scared and hungry. 

This second installment in the Jack Reacher series was a great disappointment.
William Styron is one of those mid-twentieth century authors of literary fiction whom I’ve always meant to read. Tidewater Morning is a novella that I happened to have on Kindle which I had taken with on vacation.

A project in 2060 Oxford sends several students to various places in the Second World War. They do know a lot of history, but who can know every detail? In London during the Blitz, they face air raids, blackouts, and missed assignations with their controls.
From Amazon: “Small-town gossip never much bothered Olivia Westerly. As a single career woman, she’s weathered her share. It’s easy to ignore the raised eyebrows over her late-in-life marriage to Charlie Doyle. But after he drops dead on their honeymoon, the whispers are salt on her raw grief. Especially when an orphaned, eleven-year-old-boy shows up on her doorstep, looking for the grandfather he never met.”
When I was first becoming aware of government in the 1960s, Lester Pearson (after whom Toronto’s international airport is named) was Prime Minister of Canada.

Many of these are set in the near-future or in dystopian worlds. In the title story, after “the fever” has turned all flora & fauna into human-attackers, Jennifer is conscripted by the government for ‘fear’ testing. Put into a room or a pool with such animals as pythons and sharks, her reactions are monitored for use in the military. 

What to make of the woman who inspired Something, Wonderful Tonight, and Layla by rock greats George Harrison and Eric Clapton?


This is the fourth in the Hermes Diaktoros series which opened with such a bang for me in January 2015.
Although she is the author of two other mystery series, Jennings is probably best known as the author of this series featuring Detective Murdoch, set in nineteenth-century Toronto, Ontario. The books are the basis for the popular television series

Huggan explores the concept of ‘belonging” not only in relation to fitting in and becoming a part of the French community, but also in relation to no longer ‘belonging’ in Canada when they visit.
Roost was chosen as the One Book Nova Scotia selection for 2015.
Set in Mao’s China in 1957, the title of this book refers to the program—“Let a hundred flowers bloom; let a hundred schools of thought contend”—that saw intellectuals and artists feel free to express dissident ideas, only to find that it led to arrest and ‘re-education’ in labour camps, or even death.
Each story in this collection is rich – in language, and in relationships. For the most part, these are everyday situations: a family returning to the family cottage for their annual vacation, an elderly woman faced with having to enter a nursing home, a young girl grieving her mother who has died of breast cancer, but in each Fish plumbs the depth of the complex human heart. 





I always enjoy reading Nova Scotia author Linda Little’s books, not least because the settings are very local to me and familiar.
I haven’t seen much about this fifth (?) novel by Canadian author Gruen, perhaps because it’s so different from her big hit
Owen and Duncan are childhood friends who’ve grown up in Niagara Falls. As adults, the two men end up at opposite ends of the law: Dunc gets in involved in cross-border cigarette smuggling and Owen is a police officer.
Blurb from Amazon: “Roger Ackroyd knew too much. He knew that the woman he loved had poisoned her brutal first husband. He suspected also that someone had been blackmailing her. Then, tragically, came the news that she had taken her own life with a drug overdose.
I’m always overly dramatic in my readings of picture books to kids. So the idea of a ‘picture’ book with no pictures, that allowed kids to imagine, and adults to dramatize, appealed to me.
From Amazon:”The Victorian language of flowers was used to convey romantic expressions . . . But for Victoria Jones, it’s been more useful in communicating mistrust and solitude. After a childhood spent in the foster-care system, she is unable to get close to anybody . . . Now eighteen and emancipated from the system with nowhere to go, Victoria realizes she has a gift for helping others through the flowers she chooses for them. But an unexpected encounter with a mysterious stranger has her questioning what’s been missing in her life. And when she’s forced to confront a painful secret from her past, she must decide whether it’s worth risking everything for a second chance at happiness.”

Set in Vermont and in a Florida primate research facility, this story is told alternately from the point of view of humans, and chimpanzees. 

“Bookish, [Japanese-Canadian] eight-year-old Egg Murakami lives on her family’s ostrich farm in rural, southern Alberta. It is the end of the summer, 1974. Since her brother’s death, her Mama curls inside a whiskey bottle and her Papa shuts himself in the barn. Big sister Kathy — in love with her best friend, Stacey — reinvents the bedtime stories she reads to Egg so that they end in a happily ever after.



To further confuse things, Hermes’ methods are very old-fashioned and a little bit unorthodox, and there is the tiniest bit of magical realism.
This second outing of 
In 
In the small coastal town of Oyster Bay, North Carolina, “Olivia Limoges is the subject of constant gossip. Ever since she came back to town-a return as mysterious as her departure-Olivia has kept to herself, her dog, and her unfinished novel.”
Nora Hamilton wakes one winter morning to find that her husband has hanged himself, leaving no note or explanation. When Nora starts asking questions, she is stonewalled at every turn.
In this, the second in the
I’ve noticed in the last few years and especially in the spring and summer of last year that there are fewer songbirds trilling their calls around our country property.

I buy a lot of books but most are clearance items or used. But remembering how much I had enjoyed



2. Do you have a list of to-dos that need accomplishing in order to prepare your home and/or property for the winter season? What are some of the jobs on your list? Are you a do-it-yourself or do you hire someone to accomplish these tasks?
4.
5. Favorite book you read this year?
The warm and wonderful book
This
It’s impossible to say anything about this book and keep it to a paragraph or two. So I am going to have to write a separate post so that, if you are Canadian, you will know that you must be familiar with this story and treasure this part of your heritage (despite our Prime Minister’s opinion that there is no Canadian identity) and if you are not Canadian, you will understand a little about what makes this country tick.
This is subtitled a “love story” but this is no romance novel. An American (or was she a Brit? It doesn’t matter really) falls in love with a native Swahili man while in Kenya. When an epidemic breaks out, they attempt to flee to the first world.
This 2014 winner of the Man Booker Prize is a look into the construction of the Thai-Burma Railway (“The Death Railway”) during World War II by Australians in Japanese POW camps. They worked in horrendous conditions in the Burmese jungle.
This chapter book for older children and adults, that tells the tale of a homeless border collie (his sheep farm burned) looking for a home, and an orphan, will pull your heart-strings. 
This is a book that I requested from NetGalley because I was intrigued by the cover and title. I had hoped, I think, to peek in many apartments and many lives.
Judge Fiona Maye is dealing with an impending split in her marriage while she is reviewing a difficult case in her court. The case involves a blood transfusion for a seventeen-year-old minor who is one of Jehovah’s Witnesses.
Another portrayal by an outsider to a faith – in this case, I believe it was based on the author’s youth in the Christadelphian ecclesia.
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