Books in 140 Seconds: Algoma

Don’t worry, friends, we haven’t forgotten about you. In fact, we miss you. So much. [Hug monitor now.] We’re back this week with a fantastic first fiction offering from the wonderful Dani Couture. Check out what we thought of Algoma:

No offense to David Adams Richards. I like him. (Proof here.) But God he’s depressing.

We’ll be back again in a fortnight, talking (gushing, yelling, hand waving) about Brian Brett’s small farm memoir/manifesto/anthem/yawp Trauma Farm.

Books in 140 Seconds: Once You Break a Knuckle

Does everybody know what time it is? Tool time! But you should watch Books in 140 Seconds instead. Last time we talked Brian Francis’s sensitive portrait of a conflicted mother, but this time we’re getting in touch with our inner alpha males to talk about D.W. Wilson’s Once You Break a Knuckle:

Next up, we’re combining our love for graphic novels and NPR to talk about Brooke Gladstone’s The Influencing Machine (we also may start referring to ourselves as that).

Books in 140 Seconds: Natural Order

Exhausted by the afternoon desk job drowsiness? Books in 140 Seconds, the expresso shot of book clubs, is here to give you a little buzz. Last week we talked about the ripple effect of a gay teen’s death in Suzette Mayr’s (recently giller longlisted!) Monoceros, and this week we’re still talking about struggles with sexuality, in this case a mother’s with her gay son’s, in the incredibly moving and empathetic portrait of motherhood that is Brian Francis’s Natural Order. Have a look:

In some cases the videos are able to contain most of my thoughts or feelings about a book. In this case, I feel like I didn’t do it justice, so I’m really going to try to write a review of this extraordinary book. Other things I hope to share in this space soon: a post on the bookstores of Iceland and a post on my literary pilgrimage through London (and beyond). I do have a book deadline, so we’ll see how this all shakes out . . .

Anyway, next time on Books in 140 Seconds, we move away from motherhood into the land of men with D.W. Wilson’s short story collection of blue collar small town men, [...]

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