Under the Northern Lights: My Memoires of Life in the Finnish Community of Northern Ontario by Nelma Siilanpaa. Good memoir with an excellent introduction outlining the various political ramifications of Finnish immigrant existence.
Alan Bennett: Written on the Body. A memoir. A young diffident gay boy grows up. Anything by Bennett is worth reading.
Great Plains by Ian Frazier. Superbly written, this book outlines the history past and present of the area of the United States set between the Mississippi and the mountains.
Not Yet by Wayson Choy. So well written it makes me jealous. Everything flows. The plot is slight, the heart attack and recovery and then the failure to follow through with the various treatments and then the second heart attack. Along comes a Vietnamese woman who convinces him that he is being shadowed by two ghosts.
Wayson Choy
Dangerous Woman by Sharon Rushdahl The graphic biography of Emma Goldman. Wonderful book that covers the Goldman story but lightened with touches of humour. In the book, I meet old events and acquaintances: Alexander Bergman, Dr. Ben Reitman, the Spanish Civil War, the Sacco and Vinzenti execution, the Haymarket Massacre.
Paying For It: A Comic Strip Memoir about Being a John. By Walking Since Daybreak: A Story of Eastern Europe , World War II, and the Heart of Our Century. Great history mainly of Latvia but encompasses the entire Baltic region. I do not think I have ever read such a bloody history which was basically one massacre after another. Then came the Nazis. Eksteins is a good writer and the maps on the end papers were very welcome.
One Man’s Trash by Ivan E. Coyote. Anything written by Coyote is light, earthy and funny. I read these stories in an evening. The best: when the kids found the wallet with a thousand dollars and took it to the police station. The owner gave them an award, a milk shake. Their father said “I hope you enjoyed it because it is the most expensive fucking milk shake you’ll ever have.”Chester Brown
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