The Book of Form and Emptiness: Ruth Ozeki

Published by Canongate, 2021, 550 pages. “Stories never start at the beginning, Benny. They differ from life in that regard. Life is lived from birth to death, from the beginning into an unknowable future. But stories are told in hindsight. Stories are life lived backward.” “Things speak all the time, but if your ears aren’t …

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Equator: Miguel Sousa Tavares

Translated from Portuguese by Peter BushPublished by Bloomsbury Press, 2008, 396 pages. Original version published in 2003. It is a rainy morning in December 1905, and Luís Bernardo Valença is on a train from Lisbon to Vila Viçosa: he has been summoned by the King of Portugal. He has no idea why the King wants …

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Walking the Wild Places: An Interview with Andrew Terrill

Andrew Terrill is a writer and photographer from London, England, who now lives in Colorado at the foot of the Rocky Mountains. His books The Earth Beneath My Feet (2021) and On Sacred Ground (2022) describe a solo 7,000-mile walk from Italy to Norway. This walk raised funds and awareness for homeless people in the …

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Sacrifice: Cecilia Woloch

Published by Tebot Bach, 1997, 95 pages. “I wonder if any life goes far enough to ever heal itself.” The vivid and sensual poems tell the story of a woman from childhood to adulthood. They act as snapshots, highlighting important moments of her life. The poems in the first section are about childhood, life seen …

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A Musical Offering: Luis Sagasti

Translated from Spanish by Fionn PetchPublished by Charco Press, 2020, 111 pages. Original version published in 2017. “But have we not heard this in countless songs that begin all over again after a refrain? Or when the volume gradually fades, giving the impression that the band is disappearing into the distance and the song is …

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My Oedipus Complex and Other Stories: Frank O’Connor

Published by Penguin, 1963, 239 pages. Stories originally published in 1953 and 1957. “Some kids are cissies by nature but I was a cissy by conviction. Mother had told me about geniuses; I wanted to be one, and I could see for myself that fighting, as well as being sinful, was dangerous.” A child competes …

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Building Bridges through Stories

This article was first published in Teacher Plus, May-June 2024 (https://www.teacherplus.org/building-bridges-through-stories/) Photo: bee boys via Shutterstock Stories are an integral part of our lives. They shape us and are the way in which we remember, turning our lives into narratives. As children, we are raised on fables and fairy tales that teach us how to …

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A Killer in Winter: Susanna Gregory

Published by Time Warner Books / Sphere, 2003, 488 pages. Cambridge, 1354. “The winter that gripped England was the worst anyone could remember. It came early, brought by bitter north winds that were laden with snow and sleet. The River Cam and the King’s Ditch—usually meandering, fetid cesspools that oozed around the little Fen-edge town …

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A Focus on Outsiders: An Interview with Nilanjana Roy

Nilanjana Roy is an Indian author, journalist and editor. Her novels include Black River (2022), which was listed as one of the best crime novels of 2023 by The Guardian; The Hundred Names of Darkness (2013); The Wildings (2012), which won the 2013 Shakti Bhatt First Book Award and was shortlisted for the 2013 Commonwealth …

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From Calabria, Italy, to North Cape, Norway: A Walk through Europe’s Wild Places

The Earth Beneath My Feet and On Sacred Ground: Andrew TerrillPublished by Enchanted Rock Press, 2021, 357 pages / 2022, 397 pages. “Finding places that called as though I belonged was one of the reasons I’d started The Walk. ... In truth, I was walking to be somewhere, not get somewhere. My goal was to …

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