Quill and Quire

BOOK REVIEWS

By Theanna Bischoff

There was an old lady who swallowed a fly. Borrowing from the well-known children’s nursery rhyme, the opening lines of Theanna Bischoff’s second novel introduce a metaphor that unfolds as the story does. Darcy, a ... Read More »

October 16, 2012 | Filed under: Fiction: Novels

By Cordelia Strube

In her ninth novel, Cordelia Strube continues to examine the complexities of contemporary life with equal doses comedy and misanthropy. Milo Krupi is an underemployed actor in his late thirties living in Toronto. His girlfriend ... Read More »

October 16, 2012 | Filed under: Fiction: Novels

By Jill Sooley

No matter how loving its members may be, it’s the rare stepfamily that doesn’t have at least some messiness attached to it. In her second novel, Newfoundland’s Jill Sooley examines the delicate dynamics of one ... Read More »

October 16, 2012 | Filed under: Fiction: Novels

By Chris Gudgeon

Song of Kosovo is half galloping Bildungsroman, half treatise on the fraught interplay of truth, lies, and myth in what we end up calling history. Zavida Zankovic, a Serb press-ganged into paramilitary service, finds himself ... Read More »

October 16, 2012 | Filed under: Fiction: Novels