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Seventeenth Issue
Volume 9, No. 1
 



features

Coming Of Age Reconsidered
By Claire Holden Rothman

Of Stripteasers And Scoundrels
By Joel Yanofsky


fiction

All That Glitters
Reviewed by Ami Sands Brodoff

Girls Closed In
Reviewed by Ami Sands Brodoff

The Rent Collector
Reviewed by Kristine Kowalchuk

The Extraordinary Garden
Reviewed by X. I. Selene

Adieu, Betty Crocker
Reviewed by X. I. Selene

The Far Away Home
Reviewed by Ibi Kaslik

The School At Chartres
Reviewed by Kelly Norah Drukker

Sextant
Reviewed by Angie Gallop

Cities Of Weather
Reviewed by Andrea Belcham

The Pagan Nuptials Of Julia
Reviewed by William Brown

The Unyielding Clamour Of The Night
Reviewed by Linda Leith


fiction at a glance

Guests Of Chance
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik


non-fiction

Stephen Harper And The Future Of Canada
Reviewed by Ted Smith

Farewell, Babylon: Coming Of Age In Jewish Baghdad
Reviewed by Mary Soderstrom

Margaret Macdonald: Imperial Daughter
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

How To Be An Intellectual In The Age Of Tv: The Lessons Of Gore Vidal
Reviewed by Mark Heffernan

The Adaptable House
Reviewed by Pamela Plumb

Truth Is Naked, All Others Pay Cash: An Autobiographical Exaggeration
Reviewed by Kimberly Bourgeois

Alexander Brott: My Lives In Music
Reviewed by Brian MacMillan


non-fiction at a glance

Dancing With Fear: Tips And Wisdom From Breast Cancer Survivors
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

The (practical) Guide To Finding The (right) Finance Job In Canada
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

Silk Stocking Mats: Hooked Mats Of The Grenfell Mission
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

On All Frontiers: Four Centuries Of Canadian Nursing
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

Yes, Sister: Memoir Of A Young Nurse
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik



poetry

Standing Wave
Reviewed by Bert Almon

The Pallikari Of Nesmine Rifat
Reviewed by Bert Almon

The Jill Kelly Poems
Reviewed by Bert Almon

Satie's Sad Piano
Reviewed by Bert Almon



young readers

Lucille Teasdale: Doctor Of Courage
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Earth To Audrey
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Emily's Piano
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

On The Game
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Split
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Birdhouses
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Bearcub And Mama
Reviewed by Carol-Ann hoyte

The Way To Slumbertown
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Dodo La Planete Do / Dream Songs Night Songs
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte




Dancing With Fear: Tips And Wisdom From Breast Cancer Survivors
By Leila Peltosaari
$18.95
paper 225 pp.
Tikka Books 1-896106-05-6

Peltosaari is donating a portion of the proceeds of the sale of each book to cancer prevention, awareness, and support.
non-fiction at a glance


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New Document Peltosaari, author/publisher of nine books, was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2000 and underwent the standard treatment of “slash, poison, and burn.” She has been cancer-free for five years now, and has transmuted her gruelling experience into something fine. She makes it clear from the outset that Dancing with Fear is not designed to replace medical advice. What she does is set out her own experience – learning the diagnosis, undergoing the various treatments, and living afterwards – then adds the experiences of 125 men and women (those with cancer and a few of their spouses), some of whom have had recurrences of this cancer, some of whom have been cancer-free for decades.

This approach has the benefit of giving a wide range of reactions to each step of the cancer journey. Some women take the positive approach, some seethe with rage; some follow their doctors’ advice, others question every treatment; some benefit from survivors’ groups, others find them depressing and overly disease-oriented. It shows that there is no single right way to deal with this devastating illness.

The cover picture of an enormous engulfing wave graphically demonstrates how the author felt when she received her diagnosis, and judging from the heartfelt response to her book, the image and the title obviously resonate.

In her introduction, Peltosaari writes, “I can never unhear the diagnosis of cancer.” What she has done with this experience should inspire and comfort those with this disease, and educate their friends and families.

By Margaret Goldik, co-editor of the Montreal Review of Books



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