by Sylvia McNicoll | Jun 22, 2011 | Sylvia McNicoll
This was intended as a Father’s Day read. Â Craig McNicoll read The Gaggle Sisters River Tour , by Chris Jackson, to his baby girl, Violet on the deck. Â But then his wife continued out loud while we were waiting for dessert. Eireann drew a crowd, all the grandchildren plus one adult squeezed around to hear the compelling story of two geese sisters, Dorothy and Sadie and their sail down Wriggle River.
These are computer kids, even two year old Jadzia knows how to operate a mouse and loves to watch a good YouTube still when Eireann read out loud, they all listened.
by Sylvia McNicoll | Jun 20, 2011 | Sylvia McNicoll
Karleen Bradford, author of A Desperate Road to Freedom, the Underground Railroad Diary of Julia May Jackson, Scholastic Canada is my guest reader/blogger today. I’ll have to read that one. The Dear Canada books come with
their own ribbon bookmark which is wonderful because no matter how many bookmarks I own, I never have one at the right time. My favourite story of Karleen’s’ is The Other Elizabeth which I’m desperately waiting to get on my ereader sometime this summer. Currently, Karleen is writing another Dear Canada. Well, ahem, ahem, currently she is reading.
WHAT I AM READING NOW
I’ve been on vacation, so have been indulging in my favourite holiday reading: mysteries. The one I’ve just finished is This Body of Death, by Elizabeth George. It’s a long book—873 pages—and densely plotted. The kind of book you can only really read when on vacation because there’s no way you can put it down to do mundane things like make dinner or do the laundry. When I finished it, I sat and thought for a long time about how Elizabeth George developed that dense and complex plot. How she kept the story moving and the reader’s interest high. At the end of the book there was a blurb for a non-fiction book of hers, Write Away: One Novelist’s Approach to Fiction and the Writing Life. I decided to order it and find out how she did it. That’s what I’m reading now and I’m finding it interesting and instructive. There’s always something new to learn about the art and craft of writing, there are always problems that we all share.
One thing that she brought out is how she works on the development of her characters before she begins to work on plot, then the characters show her the plot. Not the way I would have thought a mystery writer would work, but very intriguing. I have had the germ of an idea for a mystery running around in my head for a long time, but not ever having written one, I was at a loss as to how to tackle it. I think I will follow her advice and just do some work on the characters—their problems, their motivations, their fears—and see if they can show me the way into my story.
by Sylvia McNicoll | Jun 19, 2011 | Sylvia McNicoll
Let me just introduce my guest reader/blogger today. You have to run to the library and get King of the Class, Snake in the Toilet, or my personal favourite Grave Danger, Gisela Tobien Sherman wrote those.
One of the things you might not know about Gisela is that, besides being able to bring words to life, she can coax herbs, vegetables, flowers and trees into a much richer more colourful life. If you step into her lush green garden you will hear the water babbling, too. Ahhh! Here’s what she says about where and what she’s reading:
In my garden, with pond and flowers, reading The Lacuna. Barbara Kingsolver is one of my favourite authors. Her use of language is brilliant and beautiful. Loved her
Poisonwood Bible, and especially
Prodigal Summer. Lacuna’s first chapter was a work of art. The
book was a bit harder to get into than her others, but ended up fascinating me. It wove the lives of the fictitious writer Harrison Shepherd, with artists Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, the final days of Leon Trotsky in Mexico and his betrayal by Stalin, and showed how easily a life could be destroyed in the McCarthy Era. So many gems of wisdom and perception. “Don’t just listen to what someone says, pay attention to what is left out,” has stayed with me.
by Sylvia McNicoll | Jun 16, 2011 | Sylvia McNicoll
Lots of times I read my friends’ books and it’s a way of staying in touch with them or getting to know them better. My writing buddies are all Canadian so often
I enjoy a fairly local setting too. Here I’m reading That Summer in Franklin by Linda Hutsell-Manning. Franklin seems a shoe-in for Cobourg where Linda really lives (and so does my brother).
The two main characters are struggling with failing aging parents, one a father and one a mother. I can identify with that. They both share a history that involves a death in a hotel during their summer job.
Three-quarters of the way through…must read on to find out what happens or happened in the case of that murder.
by Sylvia McNicoll | Jun 15, 2011 | Sylvia McNicoll
Today I snagged a guest reader, 10 year-old Hunter McNicoll, who was enjoying The McGillicuddy Book of Personal Records (Red Deer Press)in a tree near the library. “I like that what happens is unexpected,” says Hunter. He also enjoys the interesting quotes from random famous people at the beginnings of chapters.
From Chapter Seven: Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn’t do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover. (Mark Twain)
I had the pleasure of driving author Colleen Sydor from a Mississauga school to Paris (yeah I wish the Eiffel tower one) Ontario. Immediately I asked the Canadian Children’s Book Centre which books she’d written and when I heard about the personal records story thought it might be for Hunter. Why? Because he likes the Guinness Book of Records.
Even during her tour for Children’s Book Week not one Chapters or Indigo had a copy on hand,
so I crossed my fingers that she had brought some and would autograph a copy in time for Hunter’s birthday the next day. Hurray! She had!
Now I was warned the book was perhaps for advanced 10 year old readers. Hunter is a lively enthusiastic sports a holic and I passed the warning along to him, not as a comment on his own reading habits, more in case he found it slow slugging.
My
honesty worked like some kind of reverse psychology and he snatched it up as a challenge, calling out to me during the good parts.
I can’t wait to read it myself. We’re lucky that nowadays we can just order books like these online, we don’t have to depend on the boxstores’ buyers’ decisions.
My email is sylvia.mcnicoll@cogeco.ca if you want to show/tell me what you’re reading, where and why.
The perfect passtime for summer, reading. Ahhh!!
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