Masterpiece
*****
Excellent
**** 1/2
Very good
****
Good
**** 1/2
Just okay
***
Not for me
**
Definitely not for me
*

2nd Canadian Challenge Complete!

canadianchallenge2.jpg13 books about or by Canadians

One of my favorite challenges!  The books I enjoyed the most were the Montgomery titles, the play by MacDonald, Atmospheric Disturbances, Fugitive Pieces, and The Tricking of Freya.

Thanks, John, for hosting again. I’ll probably participate each time until I get my fill of Atwood, Shields, Montgomery, and the many other fantastic Canadian authors!

  1. Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood
  2. Goodnight Desdemona (Good Morning Juliet) by Anne-Marie MacDonald
  3. The Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson
  4. Atmospheric Disturbances by Rivka Galchen (shortlisted for Governor General’s Award)
  5. Anne of Avonlea by L.M. Montgomery
  6. Anne of the Island by L.M. Montgomery
  7. A Certain Mr. Takahashi by Ann Ireland
  8. Fugitive Pieces by Anne Michaels
  9. Natasha and Other Stories by David Bezmozgis
  10. The End of the Alphabet by C.S. Richardson
  11. Mistik Lake by Martha Brooks
  12. Yarrow by Charles de Lint
  13. The Tricking of Freya by Christina Sunley
  14. Skim by Mariko Tamaki and Jillian Tamaki

The Tricking of Freya

trickingoffreyaThe immigrant Icelanders are so obscure you could easily go your entire life in this country and never hear a word about them. [...] Nobody’s heard of New Iceland. Was it because we were so wretchedly oppressed? Hardly. If anything, the opposite was true. We assimilated more quickly than most, with our fair features and devotion to literacy, our ability to persist through hardship etched in our genes. No, the answer is simple enough, it seems to me: there were too few of us to matter. All said, only fifteen thousand Icelanders emigrated at the tail end of the ninteenth century — a droplet lost among the million-size waves of immigrants who flooded North America’s shores. It’s no wonder we never made it into my college history books.

The Tricking of Freya is a wonderful debut novel by Christina Sunley. Taking place in Canada and Iceland, the book is a love letter of sorts to her Icelandic ancestors and heritage.

Freya is the granddaughter of Olafur, one of Iceland’s greatest poets but who had, much to the chagrin of Icelanders, emigrated to Canada.  Though she spends her first 7 years in America, Freya learns first hand about her Icelandic heritage when she and her mother travel to Gimli, just outside of Winnipeg.  There she meets her grandmother for the first time and her aunt, nicknamed Birdie.  Birdie discovers that Freya’s mother has not been teaching her Icelandic, and she immediately begins that task.  Freya takes to Birdie and her Icelandic heritage very well, but also slowly learns that Birdie can be unstable.

When Freya gets the opportunity to go to Iceland, she becomes even more aware of her heritage.  One of the most interesting facets of Icelandic life is their love of books:

Cousin, that house was the most marvelous thing I had ever seen.  Not from the outside. From the outside was a three-story cement facade painted pastel green. But the inside! Books lined every wall of every room.  Books climbed up stairs and rested on landings. Books stretched over the arches of doorways like bridges, stood guard over mantels. Old leather-bound volumes with gilt titles gleamed in glass cabinets.  Books in the basement, books in the attic.  Four stories of books.  How many, I wanted to know.

“Nine thousand, six hundred,” Ulfur answered.  ”Approximately.  The largest private book collection in Iceland.”

This book’s themes include history, mythology, psychology, and the significance of one’s family roots and heritage.  I enjoyed it very much and will look forward to Christina Sunley’s next book.

2009, 342 pp.
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[Disclaimer: This copy was obtained from the LibraryThing Early Reviewers program.]

Skim

skimDo you always read what you know you will like, or do you sometimes try to stretch yourself to see ‘what’s out there’? I go in cycles.  Sometimes I have no patience for something that doesn’t fit my personality, and other times I do like to be exposed to books or other art that is far from my own personal norm.

Skim is not something I probably would have picked up if not for the Canadian Challenge or the Graphic Novel Challenge.  It was also a quick read.  While I very much sympathize with the typical teenage angst in the book, with themes of suicide, w*tchcr*ft, and hom*s*xual*ty, Skim just wasn’t for me.  I do give the author credit, though, for writing the characters in such a way that the reader does feel their emotional pain.  That alone, though, just wasn’t enough for me to enjoy the book.

2008, 142 pp.
2/5 stars