Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Our first event in April

I am really excited about! Three dynamic authors with novels that are garnering rave reviews:


"Bride of New France is a gorgeous historical debut, in no small part because Suzanne Desrochers's superb imagination brings this period of Canada's story to vivid, vivid life."
− Joseph Boyden
The filles du roi, the impoverished girls and women of the infamous Parisian hospital and poorhouse Salpêtrière, sent to New France in the 1660’s to become the wives of soldiers and farmers. They were tasked with giving birth to a new colony. Did the filles du roi embrace the opportunity to escape the poorhouses, or were they forced into a life of servitude in a strange new land? But what happens to a woman who attempts to make her own life choices in such authoritative times? We are excited to meet Suzanne Desrochers and learn about this part of Canadian history. The Bride of New France is her first novel.

Tiger Hills, the sensational first novel by Toronto author Sarita Mandanna, has been long-listed for the 2011 Man Asian Literary Prize. The novel is set on a coffee plantation in Southern India at the turn of the 20th Century. As the first girl born to the Nachimada family in over sixty years, the beautiful Devi is the object of the adoration of her entire family. Strong-willed and confident, she befriends the shy Devanna, a young boy whose mother has died under tragic circumstances. The two quickly become inseparable, until Devi meets Machu the tiger killer, a hunter of great repute, and a man of much honour and pride. When Machu and Devi fall deeply in love, a wedge is driven between Devi and Devanna. It is this tangled relationship between the three that leads to a devastating tragedy -- an event that changes their fates forever and has unforeseen and far-reaching consequences for generations to come. I am reading this right now and can't wait to go home to find out what happens next! The author, Sarita Mandanna made waves in the publishing world when she received the highest advance ever paid by an Indian publisher to a first-time author.

When Kalila is born to Maggie and Brodie, joy jostles for emotional space with devastation: their daughter has been born with a variety of medical problems doctors are unable to diagnose under a single heading. The young parents take turns sitting by the isolette, soaking up all information they can glean (which they must then decipher on their own). They watch the other babies in distress, and the other parents’ coping, or not, with the horror of those situations, comparing their own baby’s chances for recovery, their own place in this strange, bewildering universe they all inhabit. This is a book not just about parenthood and the imperative of love and responsibility for another life, but a novel about illness and death, and how we—as a society—approach this universal yet feared element of our shared existence. Told with grace, honesty, and ultimately uplifting humour, Kalila is a sensitive, nuanced account of the strange horror of being a parent to a very ill baby. Rosemary Nixon penned Kalila on two continents over fifteen years.


I hope you can attend what is sure to be an enjoyable and interesting evening with these three dynamic women! - Bronwyn



Friday, March 18, 2011

Spiritual Events in the next few days:

We have something for Buddhists, Christian and
Celtic Spirituality Buffs in March:

Thursday, March 17, 2011

You're Finally Here!


Melanie Watt's books for children are pretty funny. Her newest features a hyperactive, enthusiastic bunny with a control problem! This zanny picture book will resonate with anyone who's ever been kept waiting (as in anyone who is friends with me and my family!). This is no ordinary picture-book character, and it will quickly become clear that this is no ordinary picture book - because you the reader are LATE! At first, this little bunny is deliriously excited by your arrival, but now that you're finally here, he wants to know: where were you? He's been waiting long enough to learn an accordion solo, among other time-consuming pursuits. After he's shown you how it feels to be kept waiting and just when he's finally satisfied that you're a good steady page-turner who's here to stay, something happens to turn the tables. The result is an off-beat ending worth waiting for!

Tuesday, March 08, 2011

Major Pettigrew’s Last Stand By Helen Simonson


What a lovely book! I’d recommend this to all the same folks I pushed The Gurensey Literary and Potato Pie Society on last year. Major Pettigrew is a retired British army man, and seemingly the last person in the seaside village of Edgecombe St.Mary’s with any sense of decorum. At a moment of grief, when his guard is down, he forges a friendship with the owner of the small local shop- a widow of Pakistani origin. The romance between these two was just so satisfying, in an unspoken but still highly emotional Jane Austen kind of way.

The main thread of romance late in life in cut with hilarious farcical scenes set at the golf club’s annual dinner dance, which has somehow become “A Night at the Mughal Court” in theme, raising the hackels of the local immigrant population who have been asked to help with the decorations and entertainment, but would never be admitted to the club as members. Another particularly hilarious scene takes place at the local Lord’s manor, where the student body of a local boarding school and a swarm of enviromental protesters somehow get unleashed during the annual shoot.

I really enjoyed the way Simonson could make you laugh, portray a touching love story and still manage to indict the casual racism that still exists in a lot of places. Best of all, the whole thing has a happy ending, which I for one think is nice for a change. - Carolyn

All Cakes Considered...



This cook book caught my eye just because how beautifully designed it is, but once I opened it up I was delighted to find that it possessed great content to go along with great form! Written by a producer of the popular NPR show All Things Considered the cook book was born out of her tradition of making a cake to bring into the office every Monday.

What a lovely idea! What an easy way to get popular. I’ve decided to cook my way through the cookbook in an attempt to engender the cupboard love of the entire staff at Words Worth Books. The book is set up to be cooked through chronologically, starting with the more basic recipes like pound cake and working up to more elaborate fare like “Stephen Pyle’s Heaven and Hell Cake” which has layers of devils food cake and angel cake, all stuck together with peanut butter filling and coated in a thick chocolate ganache. Yes, please!

But it’s not just the great recipes, or the beautiful design of the book that endear it, but the great anecdotal writing style of author Melissa Gray. Each recipe comes with a hilarious rambling introduction, and lots of great side-bars.

So far I have attempted the “Man Catcher Sour Cream Pound Cake” and the “Brown Sugar Pound Cake”… and they were both huge hits! - Carolyn


Thursday, March 03, 2011

Next Chapter Recapped

So Saturday was an amazing celebration of the bookstore's history under Chuck and Tricia and a chance to congratulate Dave and Mandy for taking on the mantle of guiding the store into the future. Here are some great photos of the day, if you didn't get a chance to stop by:
Mayor Halloran stopped by and said a few words of congratulations.
Carolyn made the incredible cake!
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