I think the rise of blogs has lead alot of politicians to say 'I should
have a blog' and alot of political staffers to say, 'Okay who should
write it?'.
But Paul Martin has a blog... well kind of. Check it out, its pretty funny.
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Friday, December 9
by
Siobhan McLaughlin
on Fri 09 Dec 2005 02:00 PM EST
by
Siobhan McLaughlin
on Fri 09 Dec 2005 07:12 AM PST
Despite my talk of abandonment, I have continued reading Working Class
Zero. I haven't had a chance to pick up my next books to read at
the library and I didn't want to be stuck out with nothing to
read.
The book continues in its light hearted way and we learn the troubles of Jay, a disillusioned bank employee with no university education who was once in a band. That's right he played in a band and has known the thrill of playing in front of an audience. The beat of the drum, slap of the bass, wank of the guitar etc. etc. Eddie VanHalen I hope you know what you have wrought. It seems like every novel about a guy who is going through his late-twenties crisis thinks his life would be more fulfilled if he was in a band. I would just like to read a novel in which the dream is something else. Or do I just not get it?
by
Siobhan McLaughlin
on Fri 09 Dec 2005 07:05 AM PST
What books have you abandoned reading? Nic points
out that it is the author who should feel guilty if a book is not a
good read and not the reader. The first book I abandoned was Minus Time
by Catherine Bush. Bush has great skills as a writer but I find
there is something wrong with the stories she puts together.
In Minus Time, for example, she creates tension around the idea that the character Helen Urie becomes a sudden celebrity because her mother became an astronaut and went on a mission. She writes of how people give Helen 'looks' in the subway. This is flawed for a book set in Toronto about a Canadian. I once saw the Right Honourable John Turner, former Prime Minister of Canada, jump onto the southbound train at St. George station just before the doors closed. Though most of the seats were full with people, I think I was the only one who looked at him and smiled in a 'hey I know you way'. I wouldn't recognize Chris Hadfield if he served me a coffee at Starbucks, let alone if his child did. So with much regret I abandoned Minus Time. If Catherine Bush couldn't develop her plot with the assumed fact that astronuts are not recognizable celebrities in Canada then I really couldn't go on with the book. Bookninja, a site Nic pointed me too, has an article on it about how Catherine Bush re-wrote her latest novel between the hard cover and soft cover printing. |
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