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#manitoba
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Deblovestoread
Complicated Kindness | Miriam Toews
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#MondayMood

I have been pondering kindness lately. We‘ve all seen the quotes reminding us of the importance of kindness but I find most kindness to be superficial, at best. True kindness promotes inclusivity and diversity. Here‘s some info I found regarding the different types of kindness.

lil1inblue 🙌 🙌 🙌 🙌 🙌 You're reading my mind. 1mo
Jari-chan 💯💯💯 1mo
Susanita 🎯 1mo
See All 18 Comments
Librarybelle Yes! Completely agree! 1mo
AmyG Very true. Ah, selective kindness. I see that alot. 1mo
dabbe That selective kindness really says a lot, doesn't it? I'd even add to that one I'd call “superiority kindness“: the kind of kindness where one “selects“ to be kind even if they think you're rude ... as if they're bestowing their overweening goodness over you. Quite fake, IMHO. My so-called #TOTD. 💜

L😍VE that you shared this. 💛🤎🧡
1mo
lil1inblue @dabbe Ooh. Superiority kindness. Excellent word for it. And people also use it as a defense - they're so kind they can't possibly be at fault. 1mo
Deblovestoread Nail on the head, my friend! 🎯 @dabbe 1mo
dabbe @lil1inblue 🩵🎯🩵 1mo
dabbe @Deblovestoread 💙✊🏻💙 1mo
Suet624 This is perfect. Thank you for posting. 1mo
AnnCrystal 💝🫂💝. 1mo
AmyG Superiority kindness. I know someone who says the smarmiest things…and bam…says something not so kind or wants something from you. Well said @dabbe 1mo
CBee @dabbe 🎯 1mo
Amiable @dabbe “Superiority kindness” = absolutely perfect description! 1mo
dabbe @AmyG We might know some similar people. 🩵🎯🩵 1mo
dabbe @CBee 🩵🎯🩵 1mo
dabbe @Amiable IKR? 🧡🤎💛 1mo
53 likes18 comments
review
BarbaraBB
The Break | Katherena Vermette
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Pickpick

In the aftermath of a horrible crime, witnessed from a distance by Stella, a lot of stories come together. Most of them by women, most of them Métis, most of them carrying trauma and and loss. It‘s a tough read, with a lot of violence. I felt for these indigenous women and I could have spend some more time with them.

TheKidUpstairs Loved this book. She wrote a follow up a couple years later (which I've yet to get to, but its on my TBR) 3mo
LeeRHarry I thought this was a great read too. 😊 3mo
BarbaraBB @TheKidUpstairs Thanks! I had no idea it‘s a trilogy! 3mo
75 likes1 stack add3 comments
review
Mattsbookaday
The Diviners | Margaret Laurence
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Pickpick

The Diviners, by Margaret Laurence (1974 🇨🇦) ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️💫

Premise: When her daughter leaves home to find herself, an author recollects her own often difficult journey of self-discovery

Review: This is a deserved classic of Canadian literature, even if it left me feeling a bit empty. It succeeds best in its thematic exploration of storytelling, identity, and dispossession, and how those intersect with race, class, and gender. Cont.

Mattsbookaday Where I found it a bit wanting was in the plot, which got too bogged down in stereotypical second-wave feminist tropes to feel original or interesting to me. In this it‘s very much a product of its time—a smart and forward-thinking one to be sure, but it just left me wanting a bit more.

Bookish Pair: For a more recent CanLit take on similar themes, Jane Urquhart‘s In Winter I Get Up at Night (2024).
3mo
5 likes1 comment
review
Mattsbookaday
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Pickpick

Fifty-Four Pigs (Dr. Bannerman Vet Mysteries 1), by Philipp Schott (2022 🇨🇦)

Premise: An inquisitive and logical rural veterinarian pokes his nose into the mystery of an explosion at a friend‘s farm.

Review: This has a lot going for it: A unique and memorable setting, an engaging main character (whose strengths are also his weaknesses, which pays of in the story), fun details about veterinary life, and a mystery that worked quite well Cont.

Mattsbookaday Sadly, the writing just wasn‘t there; there is so much exposition and the dialog is some of the clunkiest I‘ve encountered in a long time. I‘ll read on in the series because of its many strengths — but I‘ll also hope the author is able to grow in his craft.

Rating: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
4mo
5 likes1 comment
review
Mattsbookaday
Street of Riches | Gabrielle Roy
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Pickpick

Street of Riches, by Gabrielle Roy (1955, trans. 1957 🇨🇦)

Premise: A series of stories about the author‘s childhood in Manitoba‘s francophone community.

Review: This was a marvelous surprise. These stories — seventy years old themselves, but recounting events of thirty years earlier — strike a perfect balance: You feel the foreignness of this version of Canada from a century ago, while also seeing the seeds for the country we‘ve become. Cont.

Mattsbookaday But it‘s the little common touches of universal humanity that I‘ll remember most about this tender and beautiful, deserved Canadian classic.

Bookish Pair:This would be an interesting pairing with a more contemporary collection, such as Bernardine Evaristo‘s Girl Woman Other (2019).

Rating: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
6mo
4 likes1 stack add1 comment
review
merelybookish
Street of Riches | Gabrielle Roy
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Pickpick

Loved!
Roy was a successful mid-century 🇨🇦 writer. Her novel Tin Flute still gets assigned in Canlit classes but otherwise her reputation has dimmed. Which, it turns out, is a shame because this is wonderful! A semi-autobiographical collection of linked stories told from the perspective of a young girl growing up in a large French family in Manitoba. Nothing flashy. Just lovely, rich insights into the complexity of people through innocent eyes.

merelybookish I pulled this off my shelf for the #192025 challenge. So glad I did!! @Librarybelle 6mo
Sace I just ordered a copy from ThriftBooks. When I googled the author, I saw that some consider her “the Canadian Willa Cather”. I generally dislike comparisons like this, but I am a fan of Cather. 6mo
Librarybelle This sounds good! 6mo
See All 8 Comments
merelybookish @Sace Interesting! She's from the prairies so I guess that fits. Also her style is unadorned like Cather's so it's not totally inaccurate. I will be excited to hear what you think!! Also, be forewarned that it does contain some ideas about race (the first story is called The Two Negros) that are not okay. 6mo
Sace That comes with the territory when reading older books. 6mo
Suet624 Sounds like one I would enjoy. Stacked! 6mo
merelybookish @Suet624 I think you'd enjoy it too!! 6mo
kwmg40 Another fan of Gabrielle Roy here. I've not read Street of Riches but I really liked Where Nests the Water Hen, also set in Manitoba. 6mo
62 likes3 stack adds8 comments
blurb
merelybookish
Street of Riches | Gabrielle Roy
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Nice to see the river open again. And a duck!
More 🇨🇦 #Canlit 🇨🇦 for my #weekendreads.
Print: Streets of Riches (1957) by Gabrielle Roy
Audio: Beautiful Losers (1966) by Leonard Cohen. (This one is challenging. 😬)
@rachelsbrittain

eclectic-reader Hi, Margot 👋 I hope you are doing well 6mo
merelybookish @eclectic-reader Hey Scott!! I'm doing okay. How are you? 6mo
eclectic-reader @merelybookish I'm okay; it's been a strange winter: political turmoil, waylaid by covid & blizzards & then had to move in February. Settling into spring now. Def enjoying the calm. 6mo
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eclectic-reader Also, I'm curious why you say the Cohen is challenging. Is it the format or the content? I love him as a singer, but I haven't read any of his novels. I can see how some of his novels might not work so well, though... 6mo
merelybookish @eclectic-reader Agree it has not been an easy winter for lots of reasons! Hope you like your new place. Is it still in NKC? As for the Cohen....well ... It's postmodern and so difficult to follow (allusive, plot-less, meandering, etc.) AND sexually explicit to the extreme. Every sexual act, organ,and conquest is described at length. Repeatedly. It's A LOT!! 🤣 6mo
eclectic-reader I hope that your family is doing okay. I'm still in the same area, I moved only a few minutes away from my old place. The Cohen does sound like a lot. I think I had one of his novels on my shelves, don't think I'll bother.
Although the following isn't really explicit, it was certainly a very unusual and intense novel by a singer
6mo
50 likes6 comments
blurb
TheKidUpstairs
The Diviners | Margaret Laurence
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I've read 24. Being a theatre major definitely helped there, lots of plays listed. And presently surprised by the amount of Canadian content.

Three of my all time favourites were on the list:
The Bell Jar - Sylvia Plath
Alias Grace - Margaret Atwood
The Diviners - Margaret Laurence

Thanks @dabbe for another fun #ThreeListThursday

dabbe Yay for Canadian writers! All 3 of yours are now on my TBR! I've read Atwood, but not ALIAS GRACE--yet. 🤩 Thanks for playing and sharing. 🩶🩵🩶 8mo
41 likes1 comment
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Bookwormjillk
The Break | Katherena Vermette
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#12BooksOfChristmas November @Andrew65

I think November was my best reading month of the year so it was hard to pick. This book stuck with me the most though- and I never would have read it if it weren‘t for #FoodAndLit #Canada

LeeRHarry I finished this just before the end of 2024 and know I‘ll be thinking of it for some time. 8mo
Andrew65 Not a book I know but looks good. 8mo
BarbaraBB I purchased this (probably based on your review) but haven‘t read it yet 8mo
kspenmoll This sounds intriguing! 8mo
Tamra This one is so good! I look for this book every time I go to a bookshop, but haven‘t found it yet. 8mo
74 likes3 stack adds5 comments