About Nico


I'm a bibliophilic reader, writer, editor, blogger, reviewer, poet, kitten tickler and social media junkie based in Toronto, Canada.


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Shelf Life: June 2011

By Nico on Friday the 1st of July, 2011 at 9:00 am

Books Read in June 2011Happy Canada Day, kids! I love it when it falls on a Friday and we get an extra long weekend in the summer.

I mentioned yesterday how I’d like to get more social in regards to books and reading – normally such a solitary activity – so I’m going to try a new series I’m calling Shelf Life.

Each month I’ll post brief notes and reviews of the books I’ve read, and solicit recommendations from you guys.

June was an eclectic month, reading everything from cookbooks to novels to poetry. A couple of humour books, and two graphic novels which did not live up to their potential.

Yes, it is possible to read a cookbook.


Gourmet Preserves Chez Madelaine, by Madelaine Bullwinkel56. Gourmet Preserves Chez Madelaine, by Madelaine Bullwinkel
I’m rather inexperienced when it comes to making jams, jellies and preserves – in fact, I wasn’t clear on the difference between those three terms before I read Gourmet Preserves. I didn’t know how to tell if a batch has reached its gel point. Or what that even meant. I’d made exactly one jelly before, and I required my hand to be held throughout the entire process. It turns out it’s not actually that hard.

The introductory chapters give clear step-by-step instructions for everything you need to know to make preserves work, and the recipes are delicious. I’ve tried three so far: two batches of strawberry jam, a rhubarb and fig jam, and a blueberry jam – all came out fabulously.

A Storm of Swords, by George R R Martin57. A Storm of Swords & 58. A Feast for Crows, both by George R R Martin
I read the first two books, A Game of Thrones and A Clash of Kings, in May, and they were followed closely by the final two books in print so far (the fifth volume, A Dance with Dragons, comes out in July).

Initially I began the first one to prepare myself for the show (which was excellent). I’m not a huge fan of fantasy, but this series largely revolves around political intrigue at court with an extensive cast of characters who can – and do – die.

Ok, ok, there are hints of wights and, eventually, dragons, but they take backstage to war, betrayal, honour and, above all, complex characters worth knowing. I’m hooked.

A Visit from the Goon Squad, by Jennifer Egan59. A Visit from the Goon Squad, by Jennifer Egan
It’s billed as a novel, but it’s really more a series of linked short stories spanning several decades. Characters weave in and, more often, out. Narrator changes; point of view changes from first, to third and, yes, even second. One story is told through PowerPoint. The concluding tale is kind of sci-fi speculative fiction. It’s crazy.

It won this year’s Pulitzer Prize. I’m not sure how much that means. Prizes are notoriously inconsistent and given for various reasons, but I enjoyed Goon Squad. A very different sort of book. Continue reading »

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A-fucking-dorable: Go the Fuck to Sleep

By Nico on Monday the 27th of June, 2011 at 11:11 am

Go the Fuck to Sleep, written by Adam Mansbach, illustrated by Ricardo CortesGo the Fuck to Sleep, written by Adam Mansbach, began life as a random comment on Facebook. Friends encouraged Mansbach to write it, and he began with a few verses.

The illustrations were completed by a friend, Ricardo Cortes, and they found a publisher, Akashic Books, and it shortly went viral, reaching number 1 on Amazon.com a month before it went on sale.

It’s drawn some criticism for exposing “yuppie parents’ sexlessness, self-pity, and repressed rage” (ouch). Others manage to find endearment even in the awkward rhymes, and the evolution of fuck’s literary freedom.

I’m not a parent, but I’ve spent enough time watching other people’s kids to sympathize with the sentiments expressed:

The owls fly forth from the treetops.
Through the air, they soar and they sweep.
A hot crimson rage fills my heart, love.
For real, shut the fuck up and sleep.

Cortes’ illustrations are gorgeous, depicting lambs, kittens, tiny mice, fuzzy lions and tigers – all slumbering peacefully, save for the wide eyed cherubic children who refuse, of course, to go the fuck to sleep.

Samuel L Jackson narrated the book for Audible.com, where it is free to download. The audio and text has been put together in various places on YouTube. For your viewing and listening pleasure, I’ve linked to it behind the cut: Continue reading »

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