This is a story about a year in the life of a girl in NDG, during Expo 67. She did not know a thing about her mother, and her father was quite old. She made good friends, the neighbours were very kindly, and there was some darkness thrown in for good measure. The dialog was not very realistic, and an unusual number of characters were unusually nice. But the story was interesting enough that I read it rather quickly (for me).
Sunday, November 16, 2025
Tuesday, November 11, 2025
“All Families are Psychotic” by Douglas Coupland
A brilliant astronaut daughter with a missing hand because her mother took thalidomide. Two loser brothers and a loser father with new wife. People with aids. Pregnant people. An ultra wealthy Swiss pharmacist. The list goes on. Needless to say, the book was interesting, but I found the writing style to be quite cold and clinical. As a result, I never really got into the book, though I did enjoy the jaded, intelligent mother, who got aids via a bullet which passed through her son. She hooked up with the ultra wealthy and unscrupulous pharmacist, who was able to cure the family of aids, and in the case of the father, of terminal liver cancer.
Monday, November 10, 2025
'The Capital of Dreams" by Heather O'Neilll
This seemed like an odd book at first. A girl wandering through a war, accompanied by a talking goose, and remembering her life with her intellectual mother. As is usual with O'Neill, the book becomes more complete and moving the closer you get to the end. The goose was a figment of the girl's imagination, to help her cope with having turned her mother in to save herself. The ending is beautiful.
The war theme was moving to me because my parents and relatives lived through a war.
Saturday, November 8, 2025
“How to Read Buildings: a crash course in architectural styles” by Carol Davidson Cragoe
It literally took me years to finish this book, which I bought in the National Art Gallery. It did contain some information which was interesting to me, but sadly, I don’t think I retained anything.
It did not help that the book has the format of cobbled together lecture notes. As a result, some things are not well explained at all, and some illustrations, which would have worked well as slides, don’t really have much effect on a small page. That said, if this book is indeed based on a university course, I would have enjoyed taking that course.