Alice Kuipers's Blog: Book Club, page 2

September 30, 2020

Ali’s Book Club: October 2020

Ali talks about two terrific books this October. The Glass Hotel by Emily St. John Mandel. Canadian and shortlisted for The Giller Prize.
The second is Small Reckonings by local Saskatchewan author, Karin Melberg Schwier.

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Published on September 30, 2020 17:20

August 31, 2020

Ali’s Book Club: September 2020

Black Water by David A. Robertson, memoir. From amazon: “A son who grew up away from his Indigenous culture takes his Cree father on a trip to their family’s trapline, and finds that revisiting the past not only heals old wounds but creates a new future.”

If Sylvie Had Nine Lives by Leona Theis (local author):

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Published on August 31, 2020 17:23

July 31, 2020

June 30, 2020

Ali’s Book Club: July 2020



Songs for the End of the World by Saleema Nawaz

It’s available as an eBook for now. It comes out as a paper book in August.

According to Twitter, Saleema Nawaz is a Napper. Tapper. Singer. Pickle enthusiast.

In this book, Saleema Nawz writes about a Corona Virus and its impacts on many individuals. Did you like the way she used different stories and different perspectives? Which was your favourite?

Were you surprised by how much Saleema Nawz seemed to know about Corona Virus, considering she wrote the novel between 2013-2019?

Was the real experience of living through a pandemic reflected in your reading experience? Did you enjoy reading about this alternate but close history?

How does hope play into this book? How did you find Saleema Nawaz used music to express this?

Local Book

Corvus by Harold Johnson

Corvus welcomes readers to a dystopian future not unlike our own where the illusions of an ideal society have been destroyed and rebuilt using technology and class warfare. By joining classical elements of speculative fiction including surveillance, forbidden relationships, and political dissent, to the traditions of aboriginal storytelling and the legends of the Trickster, Harold Johnson invites readers to consider the consequences of our current way of life.

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Published on June 30, 2020 17:30

May 31, 2020

Ali’s Book Club: June 2020

Readers!

 
Questions to think about for Recipe for a Perfect Wife by Karma Brown:
 
1. Alice and Nellie both have very different marriages, yet there are similarities, too. What do you notice about the way the two stories echo each other? Why do you think the author chose to use these two narratives?



2. The book has a lot of information about gardening and homemaking. How does that make you feel about the novel? What role did those elements play in the larger plot?



3. Alice leaves Manhattan to escape her problems. Is it possible to run away from your problems? Is it possible for Alice to?



4: The recipes in the book made me think of my own favourite recipes. Do you have a favourite recipe or a family recipe?



5. Which of the two stories did you prefer—Nellie’s or Alice’s? Did you prefer one of the characters and was this why you preferred their story? Or was it the plot that spoke to you more personally?
 
6. The house and the garden felt almost like characters themselves to me. What did you feel about the setting and the importance of it to the novel?
 
Interesting Fact about the Author: According to her Instagram posts, she can’t sew at all. But she loves baking, rhubarbs desserts and raisins in buttertarts.

Karma Brown @karmakbrown
 
 

Writing Prompt, from Canadian author Paul Coccia @pauljcoccia

For you or for any kids in your life to try:
Hi everyone! I was thinking about my Nonna’s recipes. She usually cooked by instinct but we asked her to start writing things down. She’d write things like “two fingers” of flour, which meant fill a cup with flour up to two of her fingers. But my fingers were bigger. And what cup did she use?

One of things I still love about looking at those recipes though is when she would write UN PO DI MAGIC, which meant to add a little bit of magic. I understood what she meant. Add a little bit of baking powder so your cake would rise and my Nonna only ever bought Magic brand baking powder. It made me think that magic can come from all sorts of places, not just spells and wands.
 
So the prompt:
Like all things magical, it started with something normal.
Something ordinary. It started with a teaspoon.

If you don’t like a teaspoon, add in your own item (no problem!) Tell your readers about something magic that seems ordinary. It can involve real magic or magical creatures if you want. It can involve everyday magic things like baking powder rising a cake. What is magic to you?

For those who like a challenge:
Think about who is telling the story? Is it in third person, first person, or the elusive second person? Who are your cast of characters? What makes each of them unique or surprising?
 
Tell the story the way you like it best. And since this is magic, add as much sparkle and fun as you like.
 
 

Local Author

Lisa Bird-Wilson is a Métis and nêhiyaw writer from Saskatchewan. Her short stories, Just Pretending, give a glimpse of her incredible talent and ability with words. It was a One Book, One Province pick and it’s outstanding.
 
Her novel, Probably Ruby, will be out in 2021 and I can’t wait!

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Published on May 31, 2020 17:34

November 12, 2018

Me and all the appliances. Our #stovetop stopped working a week...



Me and all the appliances. Our #stovetop stopped working a week ago (for any of you who know how many stoves we’ve been through, the answer is I DON’T KNOW WHY THEY KEEP BREAKING or why they take so long to be fixed….) Multiple kids and their friends and our friends and the occasional teenager and many meals made on the griddle/instapot/eaten cold later, I’m just about ready for the #longweekend to be done! Back to #writing and #editing tomorrow, but still gotta get the monkeys fed tonight and then to bed #wishmeluck #writinglife #writersofinstagram #momlife

https://www.instagram.com/p/BqGU11ln6go/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=7vhkzdk6b5yd

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Published on November 12, 2018 15:32

November 11, 2018

As part of #loveyourbookstore , Yann and I went to...



As part of #loveyourbookstore , Yann and I went to @mcnallyrobinson @mcnallyrobinsonsk to share a #book on my wish list. The vivid and gorgeous prose that I heard excerpted at @wordfest this year, from this book written by the inimitable @claudiadeytona put #heartbreaker at the top of my #wanttoread list. What do you recommend I add to my #Xmas wish list of books? #independentbookstore #raincoastbooks @raincoastbooks

https://www.instagram.com/p/BqDarItnjTT/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1xbg33k76541l

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Published on November 11, 2018 12:26

November 8, 2018

This is one of the activities that the group of kids at...



This is one of the activities that the group of kids at @readsaskatoon did with me. We took it in turns to write a line (they were too little to actually #write, so they spoke and I transcribed ;-) I love doing this with #children because after we’ve finished #writing together, I #read the story out loud to them. I love seeing how proud they are to hear their #words. I do this a lot at home with my #kids too (when I have time, at least)—they tell the #story, I write it, mistakes and silliness and everything. Normally they draw #pictures too (when they’re drawing is when I’m cleaning up/making supper/going on #socialmedia ;-)

But now it’s tome for me to go back to #editing —thinking of you @kristinescarrow as we get this done! #writersofinstagram #mustwork #books

https://www.instagram.com/p/Bp7LlOHnkWr/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=k1a5uzrxyvam

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Published on November 08, 2018 07:40

November 7, 2018

Curled up in my office in the basement, drinking tea and...



Curled up in my office in the basement, drinking tea and #editing. I was talking to @kristinescarrow earlier about how much work editing is. Neither of us realized when we first fell in love with #writing that so much of the process of #publishing a #book is actually reworking the text over and over. It’s so easy to become distracted from the nitty-gritty of editorial work, with the fun of #socialmedia or the endless pull of #email. But slowly, line by line, I know if I concentrate, I’m making a book better… at least, I hope I am. And I’m lucky to have amazing authors like Kristine to chat to when it’s all too much?!#writersofinstagram #writingcommunity

https://www.instagram.com/p/Bp5NnS0nSdy/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=75j3wf317pgi

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Published on November 07, 2018 13:19

November 6, 2018

Beautiful morning with @readsaskatoon Thank you for having me...



Beautiful morning with @readsaskatoon Thank you for having me with this lovely group of #readers and #writers! Lots of noise and fun, then #reading, #singing and #writing together. The kids helped me create a fun story, with fairies and an octopus in it! I love that my job pulls me out of my office for moments like this #writersofinstagram

https://www.instagram.com/p/Bp2pTCeHzxq/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=mybkxvkcsgvw

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Published on November 06, 2018 13:23

Book Club

Alice Kuipers
Creating a community of people who love to read.
Tell me your favourite books to add to the TBR pile!
#readinglikeawriter
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