Sept. 24th from 11am to 1pm book signing of the Lemon Man series!

The Lemon Man book coverWe are having a book signing with Natasha Ferrill this coming weekend!

The first book in the series, “A Picnic, a Toad and Swampwater Road”, takes the young reader on a picnic adventure with The Lemonman and his friends, along with a trouble-making Pear and a swindling Toad. It is a delightful story about friendship, the gift of forgiveness, and the power of kindness toward others.

You can see inside the book on the Lemon Man web site!

“Georges and Pauline Vanier: Portrait of a Couple” by Mary Frances Coady

georgespaulinevanier.jpegThe Vaniers were one of the truly great couples to serve Canada, and this book shows why. Georges Vanier was a military officer in Quebec’s celebrated 22nd Battalion (the Van Doos). He lost a leg fighting in the First World War and this book gives some terrible pictures of that fighting. Later, in Montreal, he met Pauline Archer, a member of another distinguished French-English family. They got married and this double biography gives a most sensitive picture of their radically different temperaments, as well as their religious beliefs and desire to serve – how they complimented each other.

Georges had a number of assignments overseas: working for the British government, for the League of Nations, as Canada’s first Ambassador to France, and finally as the first French Canadian to become Governor General of this country. They, and their five children, had some harrowing times, in particular fleeing Hitler’s troops in France. Vanier supported de Gaulle in his struggle for French Resistance and also tried to save many of the refugees and bring them to Canada.

While Georges ran a very serious, protocol-minded office, his wife was unusually outgoing and vivacious. It made them an ideal couple in a stuffy diplomatic world. The author is very skillful at bringing this out – and also showing what a strong part their Catholic background played. Both had come close to entering the Church, and their son, Jean, was to become the world-known leader of a movement to care for the mentally-handicapped, called L’Arche.

Coady teaches writing at Ryerson University in Toronto. She has written a brilliant book in this Portrait of a Couple.

Review by Anne McDougall

“The Spoiler” by Annalena McAfee

thespoiler.jpegThis is a timely novel about the British press, coming as it does in the throes of the Murdoch scandals as well as the folding of the long-time “News of the World.” It’s a hard-hitting story with a surprise ending, quite in keeping with the drama of the whole book.

Annalena McAfee, wife of the renowned writer Ian McEwan, writes about two women journalists, one a distinguished war correspondent with a wide reputation, just turned eighty, and the other a 30-year old correspondent for a weekend entertainment supplement for which she compiles lists of who’s in and who’s out of the news with the emphasis on personal scandals. When the junior writer goes to interview the famous writer, their backgrounds are so different they can hardly talk to each other. The senior woman maintains silence on her personal life but this does not stop the junior from an incredible adventure of spying on her.

Journalists always talk about “putting the paper to bed.” In this book it is their turn. In a rollicking revealing story the junior writer does turn up some shocking background, but this in turn backfires on her own driving ambitions. The whole story is set against the added threat of the Internet usurping the newspapers as this cast has known them and altogether makes for a fascinating read.

Review by Anne McDougall

“The Beauty of Humanity Movement” by Camilla Gibb

beautyhumanity.jpegIt is a pleasure to read a book that is gentle and yet fearless in facing the big issues.

Camilla Gibb writes this way in her new novel, “The Beauty of Humanity Movement.” The result is a very successful story set in the new Vietnam – that links personalities from both past and present. Most of us think of the American War in connection with Vietnam. But this country has suffered from a long French oppression as well as a thousand years of Chinese domination. Today it is emerging as a “new Vietnam,” building its own institutions while clinging to part of the past.

Gibb introduces three special personalities to show us this picture. Most endearing is Old Man Hung, who makes the best pho (beef noodle soup) in Hanoi. He is so well-loved that although the police won’t allow him to set up a restaraunt, he wanders with his cart from spot to spot and his clientele follow him bringing their bowls with them. A young, modern Vietnamese is the tour guide, employed at the best hotel to look after tourists, many of them American. There is also the attractive Vietnamese-American woman, now living in the U.S., who turns up with questions about her father’s disappearance during the war. He had been an artist in the Beauty of Humanity Movement that met at Old Man Hung’s restaurant but disappeared when such artists were taken to camps for re-education.

Gibb was born in England and has a PhD in social anthropology from Oxford University. She moved to Toronto where she now lives. Her earlier novel, “Sweetness in the Belly” became a national bestseller, winning prizes. Later novels have been translated into fourteen languages. This one should follow suit.

Review by Anne McDougall

“And Furthermore” by Judi Dench

judidench.jpeg Judi Dench is not only a pleasure to watch acting, but just as rewarding to read in this newest book “And Furthermore.”

It is not the first book about the great actress. There is the 1998 biography by John Miller. But in this volume Dench fills in many of the gaps in her own words and so we get a frank and funny account of what it’s like performing on stage, in a film as well as on television. She does not drop names for the sake of it, but this book is really the story of theatre on both sides of the Atlantic for the last 50 years.

She grew up in a theatre-loving family. Her father, though a general practitioner in York, did a lot of amateur theatricals, as did her mother. Judi considered ballet dancing, as well as theatre design before getting into acting. In 1957 she was asked to play Ophelia with the Old Vic Theatre Company. In 1961 she joined the Royal Shakespeare Company playing with John Gielgud and Peggy Ashcroft in “The Cherry Orchard.”

She confides much of what she learned along the way. The Old Vic taught her how to be part of a company. She also says: “If you really want to know how to speak Shakespeare, Sir John (Gielgud) and Frank Sinatra will teach you. Because one used to present the whole arc of a speech, and the other presented the whole arc of a song, without any intrusive extreme emphases.”

Judi Dench went on to give indelible performances in the classics as well as some of the greatest plays and musicals of the 20th century. She is still acting as anyone knows who catches her in the long-running BBC series “As Time Goes By” with Geoffrey Palmer. This book gives a closer picture of the great actress, with the story of her happy marriage to actor Michael Williams, her actress daughter Finty Williams and grandson Sammy. There are many charming photos. The book has no conceit, just a sharp intelligence and endless sense of humour.

Review by Anne McDougall

Book Signing Saturday, June 25, 1:00-3:00pm: “Prose to Go: Tales from a Private List”

Be sure to come down to Books on Beechwood on Saturday, June 25 between 1:00 and 3:00pm to meet authors Barbara Florio Graham and Hilda Young. They will both be here in the store signing their new book “Prose to Go: Tales from a Private Life,” a collection of stories that give us a sneak peek into the private lives of 18 professional writers from North West Territories to Prince Edward Island.

From the jacket:
“Drive through the Northwest Territories with Helena Katz as she brings a herd of alpacas to their new home in her back yard.
Join Trudy Kelly Forsythe at the Rolling Stones’ Big Band Tour, and Barbara Florio Graham in her encounter with actor Peter Falk (aka Columbo).
Watch award-winning humorist Steve Pitt deal with cherry stealing kids, and award-winning cookbook author Julie Watson wrestle with a lobster on TV.
Climb inside a Santa suit with broadcaster/humorist Gordon Gibb, and see a Christmas tree from Helen Lammers-Helps’ vantage point.
Experience birth from an infant’s point of view, in a mesmerizing piece by Elle Andra-Warner.
Share household hilarity with Lanny Boutin and Joanne Carnegie, while Debbie Gamble deals with body issues and Lorri Benedik with unwanted compliments.
Cry with Barbara Bunce Desmeules Massobrio as she describes My Life Now, and with Hilda Young as she comes to terms with her son’s suicide.
Discover Canadian trivia book author Mark Kearney’s secret to winning prizes at fall fairs, while Irene Davis deals with a vanished voice and Fred Desjardins with growing older.”

We look forward to seeing you all here on Saturday afternoon to meet these two wonderful authors! Come by, have a chat, buy a book and get it signed! See you then!

Gary Miller Signing “Miller’s Tales” on Saturday, June 18 from 12:00-2:00pm

Come down to Books on Beechwood on Saturday, June 18 between noon and 2:00pm to meet author Gary Miller. He will be in our store signing copies of his new book “Miller’s Tales.” The book retails at $22.50 and a portion of the proceeds will be going to the Beechwood Fire Fund for victims of the Beechwood Fire. We look forward to seeing you all on Saturday!

“Incidents in the Life of Markus Paul” by David Adams Richards

incidentsrichards.jpegThis is the story of an accident down at the wharf of a First Nations reserve in the Maritimes.

A seventeen year old Indian boy had his first job loading logs on the Dutch cargo shiop “Lutheran.” The load slipped and he was crushed. His white neighbour, also loading that day, is accused of killing him.

David Adams Richards devotes his book to the attitudes and prejudices of the dozens of people involved in this story. The Indian boy, unlike his peers, was heading for university to be a doctor, arousing jealousy among the less-educated boys. The white man, who lived on the very edge of the reserve boundary, had been abandoned by both parents and lived alone. He was known as a hard worker, generally, and quite well-liked by both whites and Indians. After a bitter story, he turns out to be the hero of this tale.

Richards takes us into the lives of a whole variety of types: the wise old chief, the well-meaning but disliked white officials — in a way that no newspaper account can ever give of what happens on the reserves. Richards has earned his reputation for penetrating the hearts and minds of his characters in books like “The Lost Highway,” “The Friends of Meager Fortune” as well as the celebrated “Miramichi Trilogy” and “For Those Who Hunt the Wounded Down.” His new book is a fine addition to the list.

Review by Anne McDougall

“Alone in the Classroom” by Elizabeth Hay

aloneclassroomhay.jpegThis is an up-close look at teachers and their pets in a school on the Prairies, followed by the long-lasting effects of these pressures on the next generation in the Ottawa valley.

There is the golden woman teacher, beloved by all her pupils who cannot find love in her own life. Also unforgettable is the 32-year old bachelor, brilliant as teacher and principal, but sadistic and finally defeated by a mental breakdown.

The narrator is the niece of the star woman teacher, Connie Flood. It is up to her to tie in the family relationships, many of them in an Ottawa that we all know. It is a wrenching story altogether and brings in not one but two rapes and murders that come out of the unhealthy relationships developed at the Prairie school. It is a curiously timely moment to be reviewing the book, with world-wide attention on scandals with the head of the International Monetary Fund, as well as the governor of California grabbing the headlines.

Alone in the Classroom has the intuitive, penetrating writing we have come to enjoy with Hay’s earlier books, like Late Nights on Air, and Garbo Laughs. It is a much grimmer tale but Hay does not duck the ramifications and reviews call this her most compelling novel yet.

Review by Anne McDougall

Pat Moore Signing “Clean Water for Lukong” Saturday, May 28 from 1-3pm

Come down to meet author/singer songwriter Pat Moore who will be reading and signing her children’s book “Clean Water for Lukong” from 1:00pm to 3:00pm on Saturday, May 28. Drop in and enjoy the fun sing-along of “The Kumbo Water Song” that Pat wrote to accompany the story. Illustrator Mary Moore, will also be here to tell you about the illustration process.

Proceeds from book sales will go to literacy programs. To learn more about Pat Moore, visit www.patmoore.net

Come by the store, sing a song, buy a book, and get it signed! We look forward to seeing you all on Saturday!