Crimson is a tale of love, lust, despondency and ‘queer life’ in modern Greenland.
Month: October 2018
NONFICTION NOVEMBER: My Year in Nonfiction
A month-long celebration of reading, reviewing and discussing non-fiction.
Winding Up the Week #41
This week we look at books read and reviewed, discover some of the best writing about literature on the blogosphere and highlight fascinating features from across the Net.
THE CLASSICS CLUB: The Haunting of Hill House
A classic supernatural thriller by an author who helped define the genre.
Books Before the Blog #2
This is the second post in a very occasional series in which I highlight several books read and enjoyed at some point before Book Jotter came into being.
Winding Up the Week #40
This week we look at books read and reviewed, discover some of the best writing about literature on the blogosphere and highlight fascinating features from across the Internet.
REREADING: Matilda by Roald Dahl
Reading the original, magical story after thirty years before sampling a collectors edition with a brand new cover from Quentin Blake.
1944 CLUB: Ficciones by Jorge Luis Borges
Collaborative book blogging: my contribution to the 1944 Club.
Winding Up the Week #39
This week we appraise books read and reviewed, look forward to Nonfiction November and German Literature Month, discover some of the best writing about books on the blogosphere and highlight fascinating literary features from across the Net.
BOOK REVIEW: Murder by the Book: The crime that shocked Victorian literary London
A gripping investigation into a crime that scandalized literary London.
Margaret Atwood: The Works
A comprehensive checklist of Margaret Atwood’s publications from 1961 to the present day.
Winding Up the Week #38
This week we appraise books read and reviewed, look forward to Margaret Atwood Reading Month, discover some of the best writing about literature on the blogosphere and highlight fascinating literary features from across the Net.
THE CLASSICS CLUB: Alias Grace
Based on the true story of one of the most enigmatic and notorious women of the 1840s, Margaret Atwood has created an extraordinarily potent tale of sexuality, cruelty and mystery.