Shelf-Absorbed

A blog about books 'n' such

header image

Main menu

Skip to content
  • Home
  • About Me
  • About You
  • Reading Challenge

Tag: No Horizon is So Far: A Historic Journey Across Antartica

by Liv Arneson and Ann Bancroft

Post navigation

Reading Bingo: March

Posted on March 28, 2014
by shelf-absorbed

Would you like a side of challenge with that challenge? Why, yes I would!  Continue reading →

Posted in Book blurbs, Reading Bingo | Tagged A Cupboard Full of Coats, Baking Cakes in Kigali, Imagining Argentina, No Horizon is So Far: A Historic Journey Across Antartica, The Bear, The Far Side of the Sky, The Rosie Project | 2 Comments

Post navigation

Thanks for stopping by! You look marvellous today. 😁

Quote/Unquote

“…I don’t really get the appeal of YOLO. I live many times over. Hypothetical, subterranean lives that run beneath the relative tedium of my own and have the power to occasionally penetrate or even derail it. I find it hard to name the one book that was so damn delightful it changed my life. The truth is, they have all changed my life, every single one of them—even the ones I hated.”

~ Zadie Smith

Recent Reads

Severance
Spirit Run: A 6,000-Mile Marathon Through North America's Stolen Land
Instrumental
No Ashes in the Fire
The Runaways
His Only Wife
We Ride Upon Sticks
The Queen
Africville
The Office of Historical Corrections: A Novella and Stories
Ready Player Two
Sisters in Hate: American Women on the Front Lines of White Nationalism

Lovely readers, let’s take a sec to acknowledge that the land where I sit to write this blog is the traditional territory of the Wendat, the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, and the Anishinaabeg, and is covered by Treaty 13 with the Mississaugas of the Credit. It’s part of the Dish with One Spoon treaty, an agreement among Indigenous nations and newcomers to peaceably share and care for the land. Toronto is home to many Indigenous peoples from across Turtle Island, and I am grateful to be able to live, work and celebrate literature here.

Join me in decolonizing our reading lives – we can do this by seeking out, reading and supporting the work of First Nations, Métis and Inuit writers, and authors from many diverse communities whose work has traditionally been disadvantaged by colonialism.

Happy reading! If you'd like to receive automated email notifications when new posts go up, drop me a line and I'll add you to the mailing list.

Categories

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
This site is powered by WordPress and styled with SemPress