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DaydreamingBookworm

DaydreamingBookworm

Joined September 2016

LibraryThing member DaydreamingBookworm

review
DaydreamingBookworm
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Pickpick

Absolutely phenomenal. A big lesson I'm learning this year is that there's strength in vulnerability. Even if you're vulnerable, the person in front of you isn't judging. They're reflecting on their own lives and values. There's nothing wrong or inherently weak about sharing your story with the world. I wish I learned this sooner. I'm so grateful that Gay shared this story with us and that she came to Toronto twice this year!

15 likes1 stack add
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DaydreamingBookworm
The Right to Be Cold | Sheila Watt-Cloutier
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Pickpick

I can't remember reading a more informative book. Ignore the low Litsy rating because The Right to be Cold should be read by every Canadian. There is a lot of politics in the book but don't let that deter you! I learned so much about Inuit culture and as a teacher, Sheila's journey from educator to politician fascinated me. Check out my quotes from this book to learn more.

StephanieMarie I've had this on hold from the library since March! So frustrating, can't wait to finally read it (if my hold ever comes in..) 7y
rabbitprincess She gave a lecture at the University of Ottawa earlier this year and I'm looking forward to reading her book! 7y
11 likes2 stack adds2 comments
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DaydreamingBookworm
Who Fears Death | Nnedi Okorafor
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I'm at a three week training program for teachers heading to northern Ontario First Nation schools. Hence the inactivity. Many reviews to come.

Hoopiefoot That sounds fascinating. Hope it's going well! 7y
Melissa_J Do you know what community you will be going to? 7y
DaydreamingBookworm It's absolutely incredible. @Melissa_J I am going to Eabametoong First Nation. 7y
13 likes1 stack add4 comments
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DaydreamingBookworm
Betty: The Helen Betty Osborne Story | David Alexander Robertson
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I've completed my GoodReads challenge. 52 matches my book count last year. I read 8 graphic novels with crucial themes this year. Betty touches my heart the most because Betty wanted to be a teacher. The missing and murdered Indigenous women inquiry is losing hope. Canadian politicians should read stories to understand how systemic oppression is killing Indigenous women. #MMIW

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DaydreamingBookworm
The Right to Be Cold | Sheila Watt-Cloutier
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Our hunters--in fact, any of us who survived on the land--were scientists themselves. Our hunters and elders were carefully observing nature. They were finely attuned to small changes. They knew what to look for. They were experts because they had to be: their daily survival on the land and ice depended on it. As Maurice Strong had observed, if you wanted to learn about the environment, there were no better teachers than the Inuit.

StephanieMarie Are you enjoying this one? I've had it on hold since February! 😂 7y
DaydreamingBookworm I also had it on hold since winter. I had to push through the halfway point because she talks a lot about international politics. It can get quite dry. But I'm learning so much about the Arctic! 7y
13 likes1 stack add2 comments
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DaydreamingBookworm
The Right to Be Cold | Sheila Watt-Cloutier
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The shock of it all loosens up everything that needs attention and puts you on a fast track to heal intergenerational wounds. For the next few years, I looked inward, honouring how my lost loved ones had been a gift to me while they were living, and a source of perspective as I grieved their passing. My losses helped me recognize my life's calling and built my character, leading me courage leading up to my future work.

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DaydreamingBookworm
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Panpan

I didn't gain anything from reading this book. It felt like Singh was checking "write a book" off her to do list. I thought there would be more reflections about being Canadian or that moment she knew she "made it". Don't expect too much from this self-help book.

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DaydreamingBookworm
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Excuse the creeper voyeuristic photograph BUT I GOT TO MEET ONE OF MY FAVOURITE AUTHORS TODAY AND IT WAS FABULOUS!! 😍😍😍😍

EloisaJames I have to read this book--I read an excerpt in a review and it was so moving that I can't stop thinking of it. 7y
TheBookStacker She's coming next week and I'm very excited. Her book moved me so deeply. 7y
DaydreamingBookworm I could listen to her talk all day. @EloisaJames the writing is incredibly moving. It was a difficult memoir for her to write and I'm so grateful that she wrote it. 7y
11 likes1 stack add3 comments
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DaydreamingBookworm
Exit West: A Novel | Mohsin Hamid
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Pickpick

This was a fabulous read. I picked it up because I'm interested in any refugee narratives and I heard that there was elements of magic realism. So obviously I had to read it! I'm a huge fan of Toni Morrison and Gabriel Garcia Marquez. I loved the appendages that made their appearance throughout the book that added to the literal deconstruction of country borders.

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DaydreamingBookworm
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"I try to keep all this feeling in a safe place, a nearly contained place, because that is where it will always have to stay. And then there is the intensity of want. Raw urges. Engulfing. Crushing. Tenderness and fierceness, both. Possession. The container is a lie. The container has been shattered. Someone has found the way to my warm. They have taken my atlas into their hands. They trace the arcing lines from beginning to end." Potent.

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DaydreamingBookworm
Birdie | Tracey Lindberg
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Pickpick

Another book read for my #ReadHarder challenge. Birdie was a Canada Reads finalist so it made its way onto my TBR. This #IndigenousRead compelled me with its beautiful cover art. The prose and focus on missing and murdered Indigenous women broke my heart. The story is written fluidly which may deter some readers. Lindberg's final words explaining how she presented Birdie's story allow the reader to understand the focus on healing versus trauma.

9 likes2 stack adds
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DaydreamingBookworm
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I only found a couple of books with planet in the title. #JuneBookBugs #APlanetInTheTitle

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DaydreamingBookworm
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This is the only time I'll upload a meme onto Litsy. #IFreakingLoveMemoirs

TheBookStacker Me too! I love them! So much! 7y
DaydreamingBookworm University taught me to love them. I wrote a lot of essays based on memoirs. It pushed me out of my comfort zone and I keep going back for more ❤️ 7y
DaydreamingBookworm @TheBookStacker If I may, what is your favourite memoir? 😊 7y
TheBookStacker I haven't finished Hunger yet but for this year it's probably that and 7y
10 likes4 comments
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DaydreamingBookworm
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I've waited two years for this memoir. My body is ready. #LibraryBook

TheBookStacker I'm not sure I'm emotionally ready..... 7y
DaydreamingBookworm 10 pages in and it's an emotional rollercoaster. Unfortunately this is from the library so I need to finish it in 3 weeks. Plus I've been reading a lot of Indigenous literature and books about colonization. This year I feel like I'm desensitized to trauma. 7y
10 likes2 comments
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DaydreamingBookworm
Alias Grace: A Novel | Margaret Atwood
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Pickpick

Alias Grace was everything I could ever want and more! Not only was there murder, secrecy, Victorian gender ideals and insane asylums, but there was historical sources and Canadian quilt patterns embedded into the chapters. I totally geeked out over this book! My mom is a quilter so I found Grace's seamstress abilities and obsession with quilts absolutely fascinating. I'd recommend this to anyone! I read this to fulfill a category in #ReadHarder.

DaydreamingBookworm Specifically the #ReadHarder2017 category of a book set within 100 miles of your location. I live in Hamilton and this book is set mostly in Richmond Hill/Toronto. 7y
7 likes2 stack adds1 comment
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DaydreamingBookworm
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I'm sorry Singh but this is so hard for me to get into at the moment. I wish I could return to you later but there's 40 holds on this brand new self-help book. I hope it's just me... I don't enjoy self-help books usually. Everyone else is giving this good reviews. Oh well - at least Singh is motivating me to set reading goals!

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DaydreamingBookworm
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This is a neat website! You insert the # of books in your to be read pile and it "calculates" it for you. The speed is calculated by the books you read in 2016. I am a relatively slow reader, hence the 25 years. I'll never be caught up because I'm continually adding more books on to it! Or recommendations! I will always read a book you recommend me! Go here to calculate your reading trajectory: http://www.readitforward.com/tbr-time/

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DaydreamingBookworm
Things Fall Apart | Chinua Achebe
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Pickpick

I read Things Fall Apart to satisfy a category on my #ReadHarder2017 book challenge, "read a classic by a person of colour." I understand why this novel is a classic. Okonkwo's rags to riches story during the rise of African colonialism is devastating to the heart. I have a small background in African history which also led me to love this novel set in Nigeria. If this book is on your TBR, don't hesitate to dive into it this summer.

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DaydreamingBookworm
Welcome Aboard | Victoria Farnsworth
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This looks fun, even though I've been on Litsy for months! @saguarosally #welcomelitten
1. Toronto, Ontario 🇨🇦🇨🇦
2. Hype from @bookriot
3. Where the Heart Is
4. No but I've had rats. I think I'm the only one who posted in the #ratsoflitsy hashtag

CouronneDhiver Toronto ❤️ 7y
saguarosally #ratsoflitsy ? I like it! 7y
DaydreamingBookworm @CouronneDhiver I'm actually from Hamilton but I doubt anyone international knows where that is. @saguarosally I don't own anymore rats (they have short lifespans) so you won't see any #ratsoflitsy posts in the near future. 7y
CouronneDhiver Haha! I was born in T.O but I live elsewhere now and i totally do that too... easier than explaining every time. 😄 @DaydreamingBookworm 7y
12 likes4 comments
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DaydreamingBookworm
Birdie | Tracey Lindberg
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Here's my #LibraryHaul from last week. Two new releases and #IndigenousReads in honour of National Aboriginal Month in Canada. Birdie was amazing (I'll review it soon) and I absolutely cannot wait to pick up Lee Maracle.

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DaydreamingBookworm
Exit West: A Novel | Mohsin Hamid
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... this meant investigating the possibility of securing passage through the doors, in which most people seemed now to believe, especially since any attempt to use one or keep one secret had been proclaimed but the militants to be punishable, as usual and somewhat unimaginatively, by death, and also because those with shortwave radios claimed that even the most reputable international broadcasters had acknowledged the doors existed.

8 likes1 stack add
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DaydreamingBookworm
Romeo and Juliet (Updated) | William Shakespeare
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Pickpick

I'm reviewing this as a teacher. I enjoyed teaching this but I wish I explored it more with my students. I never studied it before so the students were more open with their questions. I loved introducing it by showing them different adaptations through play posters, novels, and mangas. I wish I had a manga version to let them explore. Overall, I can see why people dislike the play but my great experience with my students gave me a new appreciation

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DaydreamingBookworm
Birdie | Tracey Lindberg
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I started Birdie a couple of days ago. Very powerful dedication. The difficulties in implementing an inquiry into the 1200+ missing and murdered Indigenous women breaks my heart.

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DaydreamingBookworm
Things Fall Apart | Chinua Achebe
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To complete my task of reading a POC classic for #readharder, I'm reading Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe. I'm only at 8/24 of my challenges so I need to catch up! I've read an African historical analysis about marriage and marital law so I think I'll enjoy this novel much more.

Redheadrambles I am planning on tackling this one as well 7y
DaydreamingBookworm @Redheadrambles I really enjoyed it because I love literature about colonization. I hope you'll enjoy it too. You may need to give it 30 pages or so before it starts picking up speed. 7y
6 likes2 comments
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DaydreamingBookworm
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Pickpick

I loved this book! Gabourey was making me laugh nearly every page. I loved her humour, and I admired her honesty about her disordered eating and weight loss surgery. I'd recommend this to anyone who enjoys reading about actors getting discovered and has an interest in Gabourey Sidibe's acting projects.

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DaydreamingBookworm
Alias Grace: A Novel | Margaret Atwood
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He is not making a joke. He really doesn't know. Men such as him do not have to clean up the messes they make, but we have to clean up our own messes, and theirs into the bargain. In that way, they are like children, they do not have to think ahead, or worry about the consequences of what they do. But it is not their fault, it is only how they are brought up.

8 likes1 stack add
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DaydreamingBookworm
The Hate U Give | Angie Thomas
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Pickpick

The Hate U Give should be a mandatory read. It was an incredibly powerful read that included a lot of integral information about the Black Lives Matter ideology. Most importantly, The Hate U Give looks at the history of black resistance to racism! I always shock people when I "revise" their knowledge of the Black Panthers. That movement wasn't violent - they created breakfast programs, crosswalks etc. I recommend this book to everyone and anyone.

myers85 If you've not read it already I also strongly recommend Malcolm X. Written during the middle of the civil rights movement, it's fascinating. 7y
DaydreamingBookworm @myers85 I tried looking it up. Are you referring to Malcolm X's autobiography? 7y
myers85 Yeah, that's the one. It's probably my favourite non-fiction book. His views weren't as acceptable to society as King's were but I think they echoed how a lot of people felt at the time. 7y
13 likes1 stack add3 comments
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DaydreamingBookworm
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Gabourey has me laughing every page. What a fantastic memoir!

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DaydreamingBookworm
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I really want Gabourey's dress.

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DaydreamingBookworm
The Hate U Give | Angie Thomas
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But that moment he grabbed my hands and I flashed back to that night, it's like I suddenly really, really realized that Chris is white. Just like One-Fifteen. And I know, I'm sitting here next to my white best friend, but it's almost as if I'm giving Khalil, Daddy, Seven, and every other black guy in my life a big, loud, "fuck you" by having a white boyfriend.

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DaydreamingBookworm
The Wonder | Emma Donoghue
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Pickpick

This lived up to the hype. For some reason, I thought this book took place during the Potato Famine, not afterwards. I'm a little disappointed about that. I wish that the significance of Anna becoming the first Irish saint since the 13th century was highlighted more. The ending was also satisfying. I'd recommend this to anyone who likes learning about Florence Nightingale.

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DaydreamingBookworm
The Taming of the Shrew | William Shakespeare
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Mehso-so

I taught this in an English class. This was the first time I've ever read it so I was learning alongside my students. It was a great experience teaching Shakespeare but I absolutely hate the ending. I've heard that some adaptations have Katherine winking at Petruchio at the end, like the bet was entirely planned, and I feel like that's the only redeeming aspect of this play. As a feminist, I couldn't teach this play without looking at feminism.

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DaydreamingBookworm
The Wonder | Emma Donoghue
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Unfortunately I didn't touch all of these books this long weekend BUT I'm done teacher's college! I'm ready to continue my #ReadHarder challenge. Bring on the books!

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DaydreamingBookworm
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Pickpick

I picked up this book because I plan on reading all volumes of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission this summer. This comprehensive overview of the residential school system should be a mandatory read. It explores the overwhelming evidence of the horrors of residential schools. But the book also highlights the complexities of the system by examining resilience, sports, and FASD. These topics gave me a new nuanced view on residential schools.

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DaydreamingBookworm
The Wonder | Emma Donoghue
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Pat's adolescent face was similar to his sister's softer one, allowing for the fact that boys part their hair on the right. But his eyes; something wrong with their glitter. The lips dark, as if rouged. He leaned back on his indomitable mother like a much younger child, or a drunken fop. What was that line in the psalm? Strange children have faded away.

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DaydreamingBookworm
The Wonder | Emma Donoghue
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Starting this book tonight. I haven't read fiction in far too long!

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DaydreamingBookworm
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Pickpick

This was a fantastic addition to the Dear Canada series. It is a little optimistic about the food choices so make sure you read other memoirs about the residential school system. Also Violet was one of the lucky who quickly returned home and didn't completely lose her language or culture.

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DaydreamingBookworm
Secret Path | Gord Downie
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Pickpick

Absolutely amazing. I can't wait to teach this in my future classroom. Love the soundtrack and the gorgeous watercolours.

5 likes2 stack adds
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DaydreamingBookworm
The Break | Katherena Vermette
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Pickpick

I wish I could fit the whole cover in! I loved this novel. It deserves all the praise it's received. Definitely​ relevant in the face of the missing and murdered Indigenous women epidemic. I'm looking forward to reading other Canada Reads books.

shawnmooney I loved it so much too! (By the way, I plunk cover and other gifs into a wordprocessing document so that I can size them appropriately and then do a screen capture. Then the whole image fits into the Litsy screen…) (edited) 7y
DaydreamingBookworm @shawnmooney Thank you for the Litsy tip! You're the greatest 😀 7y
8 likes1 stack add2 comments
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DaydreamingBookworm
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Mehso-so

I enjoyed this book but as a history major, a lot of this was repeat for me. The first half of the book was fascinating because it focuses on anthropology and ancient civilizations. But the second half was a bore. Sapiens is still a great comprehensive look at homo sapiens and challenges the Western view scientists and historians have valued in the past.

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DaydreamingBookworm
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Pickpick

I'm so glad I read the audiobook. This is the first memoir I've listened to that isn't self narrated which is a little disappointing. But the narrator has a lot of skills reading men's dialogue and reading in general. I read this because I'm interested in the grieving process and I wasn't disappointed.

9 likes1 stack add
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DaydreamingBookworm
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Sad that I couldn't see Roxane Gay speak at the TPL but I need to finish this library book anyways.

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DaydreamingBookworm
Difficult Women | Roxane Gay
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Pickpick

I'm currently in love with the short story format. I flew through this book after finishing a lot of assignments. Gay takes an important stance on portraying difficult women. I didn't connect to all of the characters but every story gave me a different experience. Gay's book is quintessential for women today because we're all descendents of difficult women and we should not forget it.

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DaydreamingBookworm
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Pickpick

I loved this book. Saul challenges the common deficit model that defines Indigenous peoples in a negative light. There's such a difference in focusing on the persistence of Indigenous peoples rather than their persecution. I loved the contemporary focus and the focus on politics. This is necessary to underscore the continuity of assimilation practices.

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DaydreamingBookworm
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Pickpick

If there's any book on truth and reconciliation I'd recommend to every Canadian, it's this one. This collection of essays is marvelously eye opening and enlightening in its scope and depth. Highly recommend. I learned so much.

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DaydreamingBookworm
All the Way | Jordin Tootoo
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Pickpick

This was my first hockey memoir and it certainly won't be my last. I read this to see if I could ever use this book as a teaching resource. Tootoo's voice has a lot of expletives but it's very valuable when examining life up north. Tootoo also provides a lot of hope through his work with youth. Contains themes of resilience, alcoholism, the land, suicide, and lessons in coping. I'd use this in the classroom, especially with students who swear heh

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DaydreamingBookworm
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Pickpick

Greenberg loves focusing on the power of the story. I came upon the plot for The One Hundred Nights of Hero in an analysis of 1000 Arabian Nights. I love how she tied in the plot of this novel with her earlier novel The Encyclopedia of Early Earth. Highly recommend!

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DaydreamingBookworm
Hag-Seed | Margaret Atwood
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Pickpick

I'm a huge Atwood fan. Although I've never read The Tempest, I really enjoyed this novel. It tells the tale of a fallen theatre director who plots his revenge against his foes while also coping with the early death of his daughter. I encourage anyone who enjoys Orange is the New Black to read this.

Pruzy I'm also a huge Atwood fan and loved this! 👍 7y
7 likes1 comment
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DaydreamingBookworm
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Pickpick

This is an academic text that examines the history of Haundenosaunee resistance to colonialism, assimilation, and Western legislation. I live on unceded Haundenosaunee land so this knowledge was personal to me. The text explores Joseph Brant, Pauline Johnson, and many other Haundenosaunee writers. There isn't any writings about residential schools but it is mentioned in passing. I fully intend on using this as a teaching resource in the future.

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DaydreamingBookworm
Black Apple | Joan Crate
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Bailedbailed

I usually stick through a book, especially a book about the residential school system. But after examining principles of truth and reconciliation, I cant get through the problematic perspectives in this novel. There's an awful racist head nun who begins this journey to see her students as humans. The novel centers around a student who fulfills too many archetypes. Although this is written by a Metis author, this novel does more harm than good.