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Going to bed for the holidays…

Dear avid readers: Many books, back issues, and missed blog posts are crying out for attention, so the TRB is curling up in bed to read till January. Thank you for an immensely fun first few months on the planet. All the best for all your seasonable fests—and don’t forget to join us in welcoming the…
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TRB’s Recap of Recaps: 2011 in Review

Along with a rousing chorus of debate, complaint, oneupmanship, celebration, a riot of hyperbole, and swells of self-congratulation and dismissal, the year’s end brings an avalanche of collective re-evaluation, listification and the general ordering of things that have transpired since the first of January. Rather than add another voice to the already bloated collection of…
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Bookishness: Week of December 19, 2011

Independent bookstore lovers unite Book and bookstore lovers spent much of last week raging at Slate technology writer Farhad Manjoo’s essay on the superiority of Amazon over independent bookstores. The piece, a response to Richard Russo’s op-ed on Amazon’s recent thuggish price-check promotion, decries bookstores as user un-friendly (user!?) and “mistakenly mythologized.” Not surprisingly, bookstore…
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Joe Culpepper’s Exits and Entrances at the New Gendai Workstation

Reviewed in this essay: Joe Culpepper, Exits and Entrances New Gendai Workstation, 25 November 2011 What disappears in a vanishing act? Is it the illusionist himself or something within us? And what might it matter when what vanishes is, ultimately, the illusion? In his performance art–magic act Exits and Entrances, performed Friday 25 November at…
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“Hatred Warms the Heart”: Umberto Eco’s The Prague Cemetery: A Novel

Reviewed in this essay: The Prague Cemetery: A Novel by Umberto Eco, translated from the Italian by Richard Dixon. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2011. Umberto Eco’s The Prague Cemetery is a novel about hatred, and about why people love to believe conspiracy theories, which confirm their worst fears about groups they fear or resent. “In some…
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Coming Soon… TRB Issue Two!

We’re thrilled to announce that Issue Two of The Toronto Review of Books will be dashing in on the coattails of the new year. To mark the occasion, Good Readers, join us, the TRB staff and writers, on January 10 at Poetry Bar, 224 Augusta Ave., in Toronto’s Kensington Market. Along with an action- and…
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Bookishness: Week of December 12, 2011

Gold medal stories In celebration of the 2012 olympic year the BBC’s annual short story award, usually known as the BBC National Short Story Award, is going international. Says this year’s chair, Clive Anderson, “Given the popularity nowadays of the Tweet compared to the full length letter, the YouTube clip compared to the boxset and a…
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The Charles Taylor Prize announces its first ever longlist

The Charles Taylor Prize for Literary Non-Fiction has announced the 11 finalists on its first ever longlist. Prize founder Noreen Taylor commented on the decision to release a longlist in a statement: “Last year, at our 10th anniversary, the jury informed us that there were so many additional titles so close to being named to the…
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Tattooing The Heart Of Darkness: a Review of Prick: Confessions of a Tattoo Artist

Reviewed in this essay: Prick: Confessions of a Tattoo Artist, by Ashley Little. Tightrope Books, 2011. Though no babe in the woods himself, when Anthony Ant Young, the redheaded protagonist in Ashley Little’s brief debut novel Prick: Confessions of a Tattoo Artist initially enters a Victoria tattoo parlour seeking an apprenticeship, his questionable virtue is unblemished…
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e-Reading – Wherefore, Why, and How: A TRB Symposium

Whether you feel naked without your mobile device, or you’re a bookworm who’s only hungry for paper, or if you couldn’t be more bored of all the standard fuss about e-reading, The Toronto Review of Books has a provocation in mind for you: I’m very pleased to announce that we’re collaborating with the University of…
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Fashion Designers At The Opera

Reviewed in this essay: Fashion Designers at the Opera, by Helena Matheopoulos. Thames & Hudson, 2011. Season after season both fashion designers and opera producers have to contend with the fact that their work will be hotly debated by the masses. Much of the scrutiny they receive comes from that greyest of all grey…
