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Blueberries and Apricots
Blueberries and Apricots | Natasha Kanapé Fontaine
3 posts | 1 read | 3 to read
Poetry. Native American Studies. Translated by Howard Scott. In this, her third volume of poetry, Natasha Kanapé Fontaine, the Aboriginal writer from Quebec again confronts the loss of her landscape and language.
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Blueberries and Apricots | Natasha Kanapé Fontaine
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In honour of Canada Day, here‘re my favourite Canadian reads of 2020 (so far). Lots of memoir, some poetry, a couple of comics, a smidgen of SFF, and a hockey romance.

I‘d love to see your favourite Canadian books of the year, too; stuff you‘ve read in 2020, not necessarily titles published this year. #canadaday2020

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Blueberries and Apricots | Natasha Kanapé Fontaine
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There‘s another month gone. I did a bunch more stress reading, as has become standard for me, and got craploads of stuff off La TBR thanks to said stress reading and some bails. Hurray!

I also found two new-to-me 5-star books: the tagged poetry collection and HER EVERY WISH by Courtney Milan.

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Blueberries and Apricots | Natasha Kanapé Fontaine
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When a poem hits me hard, I immediately reread it—unless it‘s longer than a page, because who‘s got time for that?

The moment I finished BLUEBERRIES AND APRICOTS, I reread it. Even though it‘s considerably longer than a page.

It was worth it.

This is a performance; a ceremony; a spell. It should be on your reading list.

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