This list will be updated as members choose their books.
Monday January 27th - Carla's choice, Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens, Marg hosting.
Monday February 24th - Betty's choice, Educated by Tara Westover, Janet hosting.
Monday March 23rd - Janet's choice, Bush Runner: The Adventures of Pierre-Esprit Radisson by Mark Bourrie, Carla hosting.
Monday April 27th - Marg's choice, And Then There Were Nuns by Jane Christmas, Jane hosting.
Monday May 25th - Linda's choice, The Home for Unwanted Girls by Joanna Goodman, Shirley hosting.
Monday June 22nd - Beth's choice, The Rosie Result, by Graeme Simseon, Linda hosting.
Monday September 28th - Colette's choice, Where'd You Go, Bernadette by Maria Semple, Michèle hosting
Monday October 26th - Jane's choice, Moon of the Crusted Snow by Waubgeshig Rice, Betty hosting
Monday November 23rd - Shirley's choice, The Weight of Ink by Rachel Kadish, Beth hosting.
Saturday, November 2, 2019
Friday, November 1, 2019
Starlight by Richard Wagamese - October 28, 2019
Our October meeting was hosted by Shirley. Present were Betty, Colette, Jane, Janet, Linda, Marg, Michèle and of course, Shirley. As usual we ate very well. Shirley presented us with a menu inspired by the three sisters of the Fall Harvest, pickled green beans enrobed in prosciutto, a wonderful corn and cheese dip with corn chips, and for dessert, a pumpkin (squash) & carrot cake with a divine cream cheese icing! Of course wine and tea were also served.
This month we discussed Jane's book choice Starlight by Richard Wagamese. He was a Canadian Ojibwe author and journalist. He wrote several novels and books that could be considered as memoirs or books reflecting on life. His most noted novel is Indian Horse which was adapted to film. Starlight was his last novel, a continuation of Medicine Walk that we read in 2014. Richard Wagamese died in March 2017 before finishing Starlight. His literary agent and the publisher McLelland & Stewart, opted to publish with little editing and as is unfinished, the story ends abruptly, letting the reader wondering what happened.
As Medicine Walk, everyone loved the book. We found his writing poetic, descriptive and strangely calming and touching. Many of us did not want the book to end, slowing our reading down so it would last longer. A continuation of Medicine Walk, the old man has died and left his farm to the young boy he raised, Frank Starlight. Frank has hired a man, Roth, to help on the farm and they become friends. We meet Emmy and her daughter Winnie when Frank rescues them in town and brings them home to live with him.
Frank has become a well-known photographer. At the beginning of the book he describes Frank Starlight's night outing to photograph a pack of wolves. His description of Frank running with the wolves leaves us breathless.
He ran easily. Like a wolf. He bent closer to the ground and loped, the slide of his feet skimming through the low-lying brush without a sound, and when he found the pace of the pack he angled off through the trees and took a parallel tack to them, keep them on his right and dodging the pine and spruce easily, his night eyes sharpened by use. He ran with them, the scuttling pace easy after the first three hundred yards. (page17)The main characters, Frank himself who we knew from Medicine Walk, Emmy and Roth are well developed, we easily understand the relationship between them. Cadotte, the man Emmy was running from gives us shivers, "He was a brute and he simmered in a palpable silence and stillness that could fill a room with its sweeping malevolence." (page 11)
None of us found the abrupt ending disappointing. We could each of us, imagine how it ended and thinking back to Mr. Wagamese's other novels, it is likely that the story ended well. We are all sad that no other novels will come from this wonderful storyteller and writer.
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