Review of Monia Mazigh’s novel ‘Mirrors and Mirages’ for the National Post | Jul 25, 2014


Mirrors and Mirages
To some in the West, the traditional clothes of Muslim women, the hijab and the niqab, are symbols of “the other,” anxiety-provoking obstacles. For many, the clothing incites curiosity: what are the unique experiences of Muslim women? In her newly translated novel Mirrors and Mirages Monia Mazigh reveals the personal and intimate lives of an ensemble of Muslim women in Canada. Read my review of Mirrors and Mirages here.

Review of J.M. Coetzee’s ‘Summertime: Scenes from Provincial Life’ for The Common Review | Mar 20, 2010

Thumbnail_Cover-240x300_1Summertime: Scenes from Provincial Life is the third installment of J.M. Coetzee’s memoirs, following on Boyhood (1998) and Youth (2002). Summertime pursues further the themes touched on in these earlier volumes: maturation, solitude and alienation, family dynamics, the outsider and the artist in society, South African politics, racism, sex, ideas of home and homeland, and exile. Taken together, the books offer a multivolume portrait of the artist.

They follow an arc across decades from Coetzee’s boyhood in the 1940s and 1950s through his maturity in the 1970s. Over this period he struggles to define himself as an individual, tries to make his way in the world, pursues grand literary ambitions, tallies up unsatisfying love affairs, makes compromises, and suffers humiliations and setbacks. A complex, enigmatic, and creative human being emerges in Coetzee’s own account. Continue reading “Review of J.M. Coetzee’s ‘Summertime: Scenes from Provincial Life’ for The Common Review | Mar 20, 2010”

Review of ‘Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters’ for The Georgia Review | Jan 30, 2010

Georgia Review Cover_2

Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg met at Columbia University in 1944. Thereafter, they kept in contact through an urgent, almost frenzied exchange of letters. Among the distinguishing features of Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters, edited by Bill Morgan and David Stanford, is that two-thirds of the 182 letters gathered here have never been published before. Continue reading “Review of ‘Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters’ for The Georgia Review | Jan 30, 2010”

Review of Thomas Trofimuk’s novel ‘Waiting for Columbus’ for The Globe & Mail | Aug 28, 2009

Waiting for ColumbusLate in Thomas Trofimuk’s novel, Waiting for Columbus, one of the main characters, a psychiatric nurse named Consuela Lopez, notices a group of patients where she works at the Sevilla Institute for the Mentally Ill, in Spain, working together to solve a puzzle: “There is a small gaggle of puzzlers across the room, patiently placing puzzle pieces, rotating, trying again and again to make the picture complete.” Read my review of Waiting for Columbus here.

Review of Mohsin Hamid’s novel ‘The Reluctant Fundamentalist’ for The Globe & Mail | Apr 14, 2007

Reluctant_FundamentalistNovels are uniquely suited to depict the complexities of mind and motivation behind events such as 9/11: John Updike, Jonathan Safran Foer, Ian McEwan and a few others have set their sights on the personal perspective in a post-9/11 world. We should now add to this growing list of ambitious writers the lesser-known, but very talented Mohsin Hamid. Read my review of his novel The Reluctant Fundamentalist here.

Review of Tricia Wastvedt’s novel ‘The River’ for The Globe & Mail | Jun 26, 2004

The  River - Tricia WastvedtA boy and a girl in a rowboat drift away from a riverbank in the Devon, England, village of Cameldip in 1958. They intend to go on a short adventure, but soon find themselves adrift, and they drown when the boat founders. For the next 30 years, their parents, Isabel and Robert MacKinnon, live in a grief-stricken purgatory. Read my review of Tricia Wastvedt’s first novel, The River, here.

Review of ‘The Swallows of Kabul’ for The Globe & Mail | Apr 3, 2004

Swallows of KabulIf you’re in the habit of judging books by their covers, as I often am, the small size, flowery, impressionistic title and pastel-hued dust jacket of the hardcover edition of The Swallows of Kabul is terribly misleading. Held in hand, the book feels airy and insubstantial, but inside is a riveting story of terror and redemption, told with haunting power and captivating grace. Read my review here.