Abdou's Litpicks

01.10.12

"2011 was a stellar year for Canadian Literature. I did manage to recommend a few of the great ones in my monthly columns. Here are some of my favourites that I missed."

12.03.11

We're Angie's LitPick!

11.01.11

Angie Abdou reviews The Boy by Betty Jane Hegerat in this month's "LitPicks".

10.02.11

Angie reviews the book of poetry Far and Against - "Rather than hiding behind clever postmodern tricks, McCartney takes personal risks and delivers meaty poems with emotional heft."

09.12.11

This month Angie Abdou reviews Far to Go by Alison Pick.

07.31.11

"If you read one new book this summer, make it Monoceros..." find out why Suzette Mayr has made it onto Angie's list of favourite Canadian writers with her latest review.

07.08.11

Call me a book geek, but I get chills just imagining this group of talented Canadian writers all together here in Fernie. My very favourite thing (Canadian Literature) is about to collide full-force with my very favourite place.

05.29.11

Angie reviews Marina Endicott's Open Arms.

04.23.11

You will want to buy Before I Wake after this review by Angie.

02.28.11

"The wonderful thing about Canadian Literature is its diversity—there’s something for everyone. However, Canada Reads gave everyone a chance to voice an opinion, and here’s mine: Unless is the most important and essential book on the Canada Reads’ list."

01.28.11

This month Angie Abdou reviews Snowdrift written by Lisa McGonigle - a "ski bum memoir".

12.30.10

Angie reviews Harvor's An Open Door in the Landscape - "I was already a big fan of her fiction, and I grew to become just as big a fan of her teaching. Now, I’m also a fan of her poetry."

11.30.10

Warriors of the Zombie Hamlet: Prose and Poems of the Great Zombie Apocalypse by Bubba T. Cook

10.29.10

This month Angie Abdou reviews a collection of poems about fly fishing, and learns that in actuality "death and life are everywhere in these poems."

10.03.10

“Air this thin turns anyone into a mystic” – so starts Steven Heighton’s beautiful new novel, Every Lost Country.

09.01.10

As we head into the new school year, I thought I’d recommend a funny novel. Funny’s good. Nothing wrong with funny. Or, as Jessica Grant’s protagonist would say, I would not say no to funny.

07.30.10

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By the time this review is published, many of you will have heard Jerry Auld speak at the opening reception of the Fernie Writers’ Conference, and you will already know what I am about to tell you: Auld is a writer perfectly suited to our little mountain town, and his novel should be on the must-read list of every mountain-sport enthusiast.

06.28.10

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Steven Heighton is coming to Fernie! I know at least a few literary ladies in Fernie whose feet haven’t touched ground since they heard the news. Plus, it’s not only Fernie’s writing community who thinks Heighton is hot stuff – lately, I can’t seem to open a national newspaper without seeing him and his words splayed across the book section. And soon he will be here in Fernie, with nothing to do but talk writing with us.

06.01.10

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I could write a whole book chronicling my cognitive and emotional responses to Nicola Keegan’s Swimming. Don’t worry, though. I won’t. I will tell you, however, that I came to this novel with great trepidation.

04.28.10

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Summer is coming, and that means it’s time for the Fernie Writers’ Conference (along with biking, fishing, cliff-jumping and a few other cool Fernie pastimes). This year the Conference organizers have stepped this annual event up a notch, building a presenter/instructor list that rivals those of the best literary festivals in the country. Watch for workshops and public presentations from the likes of Alison Calder, Steven Heighton, Sid Marty, and W.H. New. Most exciting of all, the keynote reading (July 23) will be given by Robert Kroetsch, “the Father of Canadian Postmodernism.”

04.01.10

I’m making a tradition of recommending poetry for The Fix’s Green Issue: Alison Calder’s Wolf Tree for 2008, Sheri Benning’s Earth After Rain for 2009, and now John Lent’s Cantilevered Songs for 2010. John Lent lives and writes in the Okanagan, and has been publishing poetry, fiction, and nonfiction for thirty years. He’s no novice, and his poems carry a relaxed confidence that comes with experience. Lent’s poetry captures the profound in the simple, the extraordinary within the everyday.

02.27.10

Short stories are an under-appreciated art form. Agents encourage their writers to craft novels instead. Novels sell better. Publishers will even slap “A NOVEL” across the cover of a collection of connected short stories in an attempt to increase the book’s chances in a competitive market. The preference baffles me. In this age of overfull day-timers and compromised attention spans, in a society that insists upon immediate gratification, shouldn’t short stories be the genre of choice? The best of short fiction delivers the same impact as a novel – but gives it to readers in a single sitting.

01.30.10

Christina Penner’s Widows of Hamilton House is both a postmodern ghost story and a postmodern romance. Expect nothing typical. Penner’s beautifully rendered novel leads readers to re-examine their most staid notions of love, family, science, and spirituality. In fact, Widows of Hamilton House challenges our confidence in language itself. In Christina Penner, we find a writer who doesn’t trust words.

12.30.09

In December, I had the privilege of reading a pre-publication version of Jon Turk’s The Raven’s Gift in manuscript form. This month, we all get the privilege of having Jon launch the real thing right here in Fernie. On January 22, you can hear Jon speak about the trials and tribulations that led to his startling and revelatory third book – a memoir that questions some of Western culture’s primary modes of thought and being.