Each year Halifax Public Libraries hosts many author readings. (Please see our
Author Stage videos for a great selection of past readings.) Authors are obviously readers themselves, and probably rather critical ones at that. So we asked some of our recent visiting authors,
What was your favourite new book of 2013? Here are some of their responses:
~~~
A.J.B. (John) Johnston, author of
Louisbourg: Past, Present and Future and co-author of
Ni-n na L-nu: The Mi’kmaq of Prince Edward Island (M )
I'd be delighted to share a book I loved this year. It was The Son (M) by Philipp Meyer. The parts of the book where the central character is living with the Comanches are spellbinding. It's an amazing achievement by the author. It is literally like the reader is there, and that's pretty scary stuff at times. I was also very impressed by Fauna (M), the One Book NS pick this year. It made me think about a whole bunch of topics in many different ways.
~~~
Sandra Barry, author of Elizabeth Bishop: Nova Scotia’s “Home-Made” Poet (M)
Right
off the top of my head, I would nominate Linda Pannozzo's The Devil & the Deep Blue Sea: an investigation into the scapegoating of Canada's Grey Seal (M), published in the fall of 2013 by Ferwood. It is not
only a superbly researched and and well-balanced approach to a highly
complex subject, but it is amazingly well-written. Linda's prose style
is fluid and elegant. I highly recommend this book.
~~~
Evelyn C. White, author of
Alice Walker: a life
A gem! Playing It Forward: 50 Years of Women and Sport in Canada (M) edited by Guylaine Demers,et al.
![http://discover.halifaxpubliclibraries.ca/?q=title:%22playing%20it%20forward%22demers](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhG2wdV2QDFS6zgvU6vlaMAxj5y9f0Cli7CrlI7RW9ulxUjXWdoQow1t1vzohybmO4GcWEB2atIHeRTeBQDSB7MHpEetqGbS-H6A_J3SzrIEWSAyoyui4KhT8OA4a9V0vgx0PrCysC-BDQ/s200/forward.jpg)
"
This book takes us inside the world of sport
in Canada. It shines a light on the efforts of a wide range of players,
from school girls fighting for the opportunity to play, to politicians
and academics defining policy and developing theory. What they have in
common is the courage to take chances, make claims and serve as role
models.
Women’s full physical prowess can threaten assumptions about gender. The
struggle to achieve equality in sport has been integral to the feminist
mission of the past 50 years. This book contains an inspiring
collection of stories from those on the front lines: athletes, coaches,
educators, and activists who stuck their necks out to bring about
change.
To read these stories is to swell with pride over the victories, to
empathize with those whose efforts were toppled by discrimination, and
to become re-energized to confront collectively the many hurdles left to
clear" - publisher
~~~
Terry Punch, author of
North America's Maritime funnel : the ships that brought the Irish, 1749-1852.
(M)
The Internal Enemy: slavery and war in Virginia, 1772-1832, (M) by Alan Taylor. Here is my nomination for a book published this year. It is an excellent explanation of the background from which the Chesapeake black refugees came after the War of 1812. Also fascinating reading as reading for its own sake. the library doesn’t hold this book, but for anyone interested in the history of Afro-Novascotians, this is a must read in my opinion.
~~~
Jon Tattrie, author of
Cornwallis: The Violent Birth of Halifax (M)
My pick is: Scamps and Scoundrels: true stories of Maritime lives and legends
by Bob Kroll (M)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjm7pEB8kE_oLHi4lrZdr4dmef0x7fIiM38sXYVTVCBIm6fYOaoUNcVLY9W9TdmzY27ylcTKNSFW1Tm6ExdoBIN2tn4pTIp4FPRvHwR5j20W0i_UBl2VFwIjyq0NIoYECRxYw2TLn0a5D8/s200/scamps.jpg)
"
A
miserly miller with a stash of gold, an island with an ever-changing
list alias, some sly smugglers who nevertheless remember to send a thank
you note, a stern schoolmaster who couldn’t tell time, and a thief with
two left feet are just some of the shady individuals who grace the
pages of Scamps and Scoundrels. Riotous, and witty, Bob Kroll writes
these tales of infamy in a delightfully folksy style, bringing to life
snippets of the Maritimes’ somewhat less glorious history. With over a
hundred tales from the 1700s to the 1900s, there is an example of just
about every odd, peculiar, silly, and ill-advised adventure you can
think of. Smugglers, sailors, robbers, murderers, and sometimes just
ordinary folk having a surprisingly bad day, Scamps and Scoundrels makes
itself a worthy read." - publisher
~~~
Keith Hollihan, author of
Flagged Victor (M)
I realized when I tried to answer your question that I haven’t read much published in 2013. I’m very out of sync with the times! But how about The Luminaries (M) by Eleanor Catton which I just started and think highly of.
~~~
Kelley Armstrong, author of
Omens (M)
The Shining Girls (M)
by
Lauren Beukes
![http://discover.halifaxpubliclibraries.ca/?q=title:%22shining%20girls%22](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEicI9WTvJNmH1Z4E_e0IGGVGOat5eQ2uIQjFcJPEuv4kM1He7vtGlYXHx8zJqtkTOpiEBLrs9tWWovDGO92R-Eril23_kf8v-pXjai7ieDiEVQ7qBoNDiIJbZxNWj9C2cQE9vQ-iDHm3m4/s200/shining+girls.jpg)
"A time-traveling serial killer is impossible to trace-- until one of his
victims survives. In Depression-era Chicago, Harper Curtis finds a key
to a house that opens on to other times. But it comes at a cost. He has
to kill the shining girls: bright young women, burning with potential.
He stalks them through their lives across different eras until, in 1989,
one of his victims, Kirby Mazrachi, survives and starts hunting him
back. Working with an ex-homicide reporter who is falling for her, Kirby
has to unravel an impossible mystery." -Publisher
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