The Dusty Bookcase
A JOURNEY THROUGH CANADA'S FORGOTTEN, NEGLECTED AND SUPPRESSED WRITING
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19 September 2022
Martha Ostenso's Forgotten Masterpiece?
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And the Town Talked Martha Ostenso Toronto: News Stand Library, 1949 159 pages The town is Bloomhill; the talk is of Elsbeth Payson. A few d...
3 comments:
14 September 2022
Born Again Infidel
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The Right of Way Gilbert Parker New York: Grosset & Dunlap, [ c. 1907] 419 pages I don't like it when a novel opens with a line of d...
06 September 2022
The Dustiest Bookcase: Y is for Young
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The Dustiest Bookcase: Short pieces on books I've always meant to review (but haven't). Psyche Phyllis Brett Young Toronto: Longmans...
1 comment:
01 September 2022
H.C. Mason Votes Twice for September
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A celebration of September from Harold Campbell "Hal" Mason's Three Things Only... (Toronto: Thomas Nelson, 1953). Much cheer...
2 comments:
29 August 2022
The Dustiest Bookcase: X is for X X X
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The Dustiest Bookcase: Short pieces on books I've always meant to review (but haven't). This one's a cheat. I reviewed The Whip ...
1 comment:
17 August 2022
Dope. Danger. One Doll.
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Lost House Frances Shelley Wees Winnipeg: Harlequin, 1949 192 pages Frances Shelley Wees runs hot and cold with me. I liked The Keys of My P...
2 comments:
14 August 2022
Considering Frances Shelley Wees's
Lost House
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A photo taken on the sly by my wife. Review to come. Related posts: A Rival for Margaret Millar? The Return of Frances Shelley Wees Domestic...
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