Five Queer Canadian Audiobooks for Your Ear-Reading Pleasure

I love audiobooks for the fact that they allow me to read at times when I would otherwise be forced to not read (see: exercising, cleaning, doing the dishes, walking) but Canadian audiobooks can be hard to find, let alone queer Canadian audiobooks. All is not lost, though: I have tracked down five of queer Canadian audiobooks for your ear-reading pleasure. Enjoy and let me know if you’ve listened to any of these!

Fall On Your Knees by Ann-Marie MacDonald

This powerful, dark, beautifully written book is a must-read queer Canadian classic (warning: there is some very upsetting incest). I read it so long ago that it was before I started this blog and I’ve planned to re-read for years so I can review it; maybe I’ll listen to the audiobook soon. Here’s the synopsis: “They are the Pipers of Cape Breton Island — a family steeped in lies and unspoken truths that reach out from the past, forever mindful of the tragic secret that could shatter the family to its foundations. Chronicling five generations of this eccentric clan, Fall on Your Knees follows four remarkable sisters whose lives are filled with driving ambition, inescapable family bonds, and forbidden love. Their experiences will take them from their stormswept homeland, across the battlefields of World War I, to the freedom and independence of Jazz-era New York City.” Although that synopsis doesn’t point it out, there is some delicious lesbian content in the 1920s New York section of the book.

There are two audiobook versions of Fall On Your Knees to choose from. Nikki James’s version has atmospheric music and from the excerpt I listened to, her narration was clear and bright, but felt a bit too cheery for the atmosphere of the book. The other voice actor is Cassandra Campbell has a slower pace and a more sombre tone which I personally preferred. Like I said, I’ve only heard the samples of each of these so if someone has listened to either on them in full, I would love to hear what you thought!

Sister Mine by Nalo Hopkinson

Our protagonist is Makeda and she has a unique yet familiarly dysfunctional relationship with her twin sister Abby.  The fact that the two girls were born conjoined is the most ordinary part of their lives.  You see, their mother is human but their father is a celestial, a demi-god—not the top god, but you know, the kind with a lot of the powers and magic you would expect a god to have but the faults and quirks of a human.  Their dad’s family wasn’t exactly thrilled with his choice of partner so they’ve punished him by turning him into a temporary mortal and Makeda’s mom into a giant silver lake creature who lives in Lake Ontario.  The circumstances surrounding the girls’ separation are mysterious—Abby was left physically disabled (she uses crutches) and Makeda has been left with a distinct lack of celestial mojo (magic).  So she’s a part of this magical world, but has none of her own magic to participate in it.  She lives biculturally, not really fitting into the ordinary claypicken Toronto world, but feeling intensely left out of her sister’s world. When her father goes missing Makeda is forced to reconcile with her sister and jump back into the magical world she tried to leave. Here’s my full review.

Y’all, ROBIN MILES does the voice acting for the audiobook version of Sister Mine. If you’re not big into audiobooks you maybe haven’t heard of her, but I am here to tell you that she is one of the very best audiobook readers and that anything she reads is guaranteed to be amazing. (She also does, for example, The Fifth Season, Binti, various Jamaica Kincaid books, Another Brooklyn, and many other awesome books by Black women, many of whom are also queer). Her performances are exuberant and full of life and she is supremely talented at different accents, including the Caribbean one needed for some of Sister Mine.

Tomboy Survival Guide by Ivan Coyote

In case you had the wild notion that it wouldn’t be: Ivan Coyote’s latest and unbelievably 11th book is just as great, and possibly greater, than everything they’ve done up until now. If you’ve never read an Ivan Coyote book before, Tomboy Survival Guide would be a great one to start with, as I think it really shows this celebrated writer and storyteller at the height of their powers. Like in all of their work in various forms, Coyote’s writing in Tomboy Survival Guide is full of their trademark generosity and care. Characters that you might remember from previous collections, like their aunt Cathy who rode horses and was tough as nails when she broke her leg tobogganing with the kids, show up, and you get to meet some new folks, like Barry the sweet straight guy from Coyote’s electrician program who asks for advice on how to help patch things up with his long-time wife who he hasn’t been intimate with in a long time. Full review here.

Well, Ivan Coyote narrates their own book here so that’s pretty much all I need to tell you. It is delightful and possibly even better than reading the print version. Coyote’s a masterful live storyteller; their talent and skills are showcased in the seemingly effortless delivery of these amazing personal stories. If you’ve ever seen Ivan Coyote perform in person you know how great a performer they are. This audiobook is a lovely chance to get to hear their smooth, intimate delivery and gorgeous, friendly voice.

Moving Forward Sideways Like a Crab by Shani Mootoo

Mootoo’s most recent novel employs multiple viewpoints to tell us the story of a parent and son, and the distances—literal and figurative—they have travelled on their own journeys and to reunite later in their lives. The person through whose voice we hear most of the story is Jonathan, who grew up in Toronto in the 80s with two moms; when the couple break up, his adoptive parent disappears dramatically from his life and he is left with his birth mom, a selfish aristocratic British-born woman absorbed by her work as a writer and unwilling to assuage his feelings of loss and abandonment. As an adult, Jonathan searches for his beloved parent, only to find the person he knew as Sid now goes by Sydney and is living in his native Trinidad. As the title suggests, the story does not move linearly, but rather goes back and forth in time and place (Toronto to rural Trinidad and back).

The audiobook version of Mootoo’s is narrated alternately by Graham Rowat and Kevin R. Free, who bring the two central characters Jonathan and Sydney to life. I especially liked being able to hear Sydney’s voice, since the Trinidadian accent and vocabulary are unfamiliar to me and it’s lovely to hear it as it should be heard. Mootoo’s writing is beautiful and it’s a treat to hear out loud lines like

Surely it is a failure of our human design that it takes not an hour, not a day, but much, much longer to relay what flashes through the mind with the speed of a hummingbird’s wing.

Landing by Emma Donoghue

This is one of my all-time favourite books so it’s pretty exciting to know that there is not one but two audiobook versions! Landing doesn’t pretend to be anything other than a love story.  The lovers are the epitome of opposites attract: Jude is a twenty-five year old archivist born, raised, and still living in a small town in Southwestern Ontario; Síle (an Irish name pronounced ‘Sheila’) is a thirty-nine year old flight attendant from Dublin who considers herself a citizen of the world.  The funny thing is, Jude is really an eighty-year-old in disguise, whereas Síle still has the stamina of an eighteen-year-old.  Also, Jude is a rural butch, and Síle is a classy urban femme.  Despite these differences, Donoghue quite convincingly paints a picture of the slow development of genuine love between these two women, along with some really amazingly well crafted side characters and hilariously witty dialogue. Read my full review here.

So the audiobook version that seems to be more popular is the one read by Laura Hicks. The job of narrating this book is tough: there are characters with Canadian, Irish, and English accents. Hicks’s narration is done in a standard North American accent which sounds just fine, but to me her Irish accent leaves a bit to be desired, to be honest—it doesn’t sound like someone who’s actually Irish for sure. But she does have good comedic timing! The other version is done by Stephanie Cannon; I couldn’t find a full version to check out so I only heard the Canadian and English voices, which seemed pretty good to me. I did find a review that said, similar to the other version, Cannon’s Irish accent leaves something to be desired. Have you listened to either version of this audiobook? I’d love to hear from someone who’s listened to the whole thing. Also check out the audiobook versions of other books by Emma Donoghue such as Frog Music, Kissing the Witch, and Hood!

Posted in Butch, Canadian, Caribbean, Emma Donoghue, Fantasy, Fiction, Ivan E. Coyote, Lesbian, list, Nalo Hopkinson, Queer, Romance, Rural, Shani Mootoo, South Asian, Toronto, Trans, Trans Masculine, Transgender | 4 Comments

Queer Can Lit Newsflash: New Queer Library in Vancouver, LGBTQ Festival of Words in Toronto, and New Work by Vivek Shraya and Zoe Whittall

Hello and welcome to this new segment on Casey the Canadian Lesbrarian! In response to reader feedback asking for more news posts and cause it would be nice to share all the little tidbits of information about queer and trans bookish things I encounter often, I’ve decided to start a monthly-ish column sharing any kind of news about stuff that’s happening in the Canadian and/or Indigenous LGBTQ2IA+ literary world. Got a tip for me? Send me an email at stepaniukcasey [at] gmail.com. Here’s some fun stuff that’s happened recently or is still happening in queer Can lit.

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Zoe Whittall / image via quillandquire.ca

Did you know Zoe Whittall, whose most recent novel The Best Kind of People was a Giller finalist, wrote and published a short story called “Half Pipe” this summer? On Twitter she said that she rarely writes short stories and that “I think it’s the first thing I’ve written that I really, really like (w/ no reservations or editorial ?s) in years.” It’s a pretty great story—“Now that strangers have seen me naked, I can move on to worrying about getting into college or my inevitable death.”—and it’s pretty great that you can read it for free at Hazlitt.  Did you also know that the film version of The Best Kind of People is going to be adapted and directed by Sarah Polley?

Vivek Shraya VS Books

Vivke Shraya / image via arsenalpulp.com

Vivek Shraya recently announced that she has a forthcoming book in fall 2018 titled I’m Afraid of Men to be published by Penguin Canada. The extended essay will “shine new light on the reach of toxic masculinity and its many guises, from sexism and sexual harassment to homophobia, transphobia, and bullying.” Pretty sure the world needed this book yesterday.

For you lucky folks in the Toronto area, Naked Heart Festival, an LGBTQ Festival of Words, is hosting its third annual event November 10-12th. Holy smokes are a ton of amazing Indigenous and Canadian queer and trans writers going to be there, including Casey Plett, Farzana Doctor, Kai Cheng Thom, Amber Dawn, Gwen Benaway, Catherine Hernandez, Sky Gilbert, and SO MANY MORE. Y’all I love living on the west coast but events like this make me wish I still lived in Southern Ontario even though I kind of hated it there.

nakedheart2017_websiteheaderThe festival has three types of sessions: “PANELS: A panel is a group of speakers who discuss a topic with a moderator and some audience participation. WORKSHOPS: Our workshops focus on building skills, insight and knowledge. They are often interactive and are led by someone experienced and skilled on their topic. READINGS: This is your classic literary event – it is a gathering of writers reading brief selections of their writing. There may be time for audience questions at the end.” Check out the website to see which of your favourite writers is doing which type of session (many seem to be doing more than one)!

OOTS logoBut it’s not only TO that has some cool queer stuff happening. For those of you in the Vancouver area, did you know an LGBTQ2IA+ library that is co-coordinated by yours truly just (re)opened??? I am so happy and excited and proud that my and a lot of volunteers’ hard work over the past year has resulted in our precious little library actually being open to the public! The Out On The Shelves library used to be downtown off of Davie St, which some of you may remember, and we are finally open at our new location on the west point grey UBC campus on Musqueam territory! If you went to the old Out On The Shelves, we would love to have you back. If you’ve never heard of Out On The Shelves, we would love to sign you up for a library card for the first time.

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It’s free for anyone to get a library card (you don’t have to be a student at UBC; we are located there but not affiliated with the university library). We are open 5 days a week (closed Wednesdays and Saturdays for now). We have some pretty rad books, including some you can’t find anywhere else in Vancouver. If you enjoy the reviews on Casey the Canadian Lesbrarian, hot tip: I donate a lot of the review books I get to the library so you can find some of those hard-to-find queer Canadian books at Out On The Shelves. Check out our catalogue here to see what we have. You can follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, and Instagram! I would love to see some of you in person at the library soon!

Posted in News, Queer, Queer Can Lit Newsflash, Short Stories, South Asian, Toronto, Trans, Trans Feminine, Transgender, Vancouver | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Interview with a Queer Reader: Anna Talks NEVADA by Imogen Binnie, Looking for Light-Hearted Trans Books, Having a Wife Who’s a Librarian, and More!

Anna is a bisexual and gray-ace trans woman from Wisconsin, and is finally settling into these identities after years of questioning. Reading, especially LGBTQ2IA+ books, is a crucial part of this process for her. She loves being outdoors, especially going hiking and camping and she lives somewhere with ample opportunities for those things! She also enjoys cooking, listening to music, and playing board games with friends. She says she’s “always been a geek at heart” (hey, me too!) and her first reading loves were science fiction and fantasy. Her tastes are a little broader now, but speculative fiction will always have a special place in her heart, doubly so if it features queer and trans characters!

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Keep reading to hear Anna talk about how Nevada by Imogen Binnie was a life-changing read as a trans reader, looking for light and uplifting books by trans authors about trans feminine characters, how perfect The Miseducation of Cameron Post is, having a wife who’s a librarian, and more!

What was the first LGBTQ2IA+ book(s) you remember reading? How did you end up reading it (i.e., were you searching for queer books or did you just happen across it?)

My first was Queer 13: Lesbian And Gay Writers Recall Seventh Grade, an essay collection from 1998 edited by Clifford Chase. I somewhat bravely bought this from my favorite local used bookstore and coffee shop. I remember spending a lot of time browsing the small but exhilarating “Lesbian & Gay” section on a back shelf, and this title spoke to me at a time when I just began to question my own identity. I read Queer 13 in 2006 at the age of 25, and yet I related so intensely to the authors’ experiences of being 13 and (often awkwardly) exploring such important parts of themselves. I now find it telling that I clung to the stories of the queer women in this book, though I couldn’t articulate why at the time.

What is/are your favourite LGBTQ2IA+ books, and why?

The Miseducation of Cameron Post by Emily Danforth. I love this book so much, and I recommend it as often as possible! Cameron Post offers such a vivid sense of time and place (Eastern Montana in the early 90s), and its characters are all portrayed with such compassion and humanity. Cameron herself is a wonderfully realized protagonist; her feelings are palpable and she grows magnificently through the course of the story.

Annie On My Mind by Nancy Garden. This book is so beautiful and sweet; it also still astounds me that it was published in 1982! Garden’s prose evokes both the passion and tenderness of young love, and it warms my heart.

Adaptation and Inheritance by Malinda Lo. This is a terrific adventure story featuring a bisexual protagonist, thrilling action and SF intrigue, and one of my all-time favorite kiss scenes! Inheritance also explores some fascinating ideas about empathy and relationships in a way that I really relate to.

Nevada by Imogen Binnie. I expand on this in the next section, but Nevada is the first book I read by an out trans author. I connected with it quite deeply at times, and I look forward to revisiting it in the near future.

Which LGBTQ2IA+ book have you read that best reflects your experiences as an LGBTQ2IA+ person?

Nevada by Imogen Binnie. While I’m fairly different than the characters in this book, some of their thoughts and feelings hit home in unexpectedly intense ways. I read Nevada a few years ago in the early days of my transition; it was a tumultuous time for me, and I came to this book exactly when I needed to read it. It’s funny how that sometimes happens! Nevada is the first book I read that captures some of the subtler experiences of being a trans woman. The protagonist, Maria, shares such hopes, fears, and uncertainties with the reader; she felt so real to me. I’d never before encountered a trans character with such dimension and personality. I saw some of my own feelings and struggles reflected in Maria, and felt a little less alone. Considering what my life was like at the time, this is saying something!

Which LGBTQ2IA+ book do you wish you could read but can’t because it doesn’t exist yet?

I desperately want to read something uplifting, lighthearted, and charming that features a transfeminine protagonist. Maybe a love story? An adventure? Both? Just as importantly, I want something that’s not focused on personal struggles, violence, or the character’s transition. That said, I appreciate the importance of books that handle those difficult subjects – especially given the lived realities of so many trans women. I want more stories about the many other aspects of trans peoples’ lives, especially something that’s fun and engaging to read. There are probably some stories like this that I haven’t encountered yet; there’s still a lot of trans-centric fiction by trans authors on my to-read list. What I want is more specific, though. I want a major publishing house to publish and market such a book, and it needs to be written by a trans author. To my knowledge, only one book comes close to these criteria: If I Was Your Girl by Meredith Russo. While it’s an excellent read, it’s also fairly dark and emotionally taxing – especially for trans readers.

How do you find LGBTQ2IA+ books? How easy or hard is it in your experience finding the ones that you want to read?

Autostraddle_logo_grey_highresI have a few great go-to resources for new book recommendations. First and foremost, I hear about a lot of books and comics through Autostraddle and the contributors there. I also follow some of my favorite queer authors on Twitter, and they often provide great recommendations. Malinda Lo is a particularly good resource if you want suggestions for queer YA speculative fiction! Lastly, my wife is a librarian and she knows my tastes incredibly well. I get wonderful customized reader’s advisory through her. As for literally locating these books, my first stop is my local public library’s online catalog and digital collection. I’ve also learned how to make interlibrary loan requests and library purchase recommendations, so I can usually find what I’m looking for as long as I’m willing to be a bit patient for it.

Do you know other LGBTQ2IA+ readers or participate in any LGBTQ2IA+ reading communities (in person or on the Internet)? What’s it like? Why or why not?

Many of my queer friends are also avid readers, so we discuss favorite books and recommendations pretty often. I’m not part of any formal queer reading groups, but I’d jump at the chance if I could find one in my area. I also participate in a wonderful fandom-oriented group chat with a couple of queer friends who live in different parts of the country. We started this group as a way to share our numerous Harry Potter feelings, especially since one friend just read the series for the first time and I’m finally rereading it. It’s also a great place to discuss queer headcanons and fan theories, along with other queer media like Buffy The Vampire Slayer and Steven Universe.

Thanks for sharing with us Anna! I’m really glad to finally be able to feature Nevada in this column since it’s such an amazing and ground-breaking book. Also I love how heavily libraries feature in this interview!

Posted in Bisexual, Fiction, Interview with a Queer Reader, Lesbian, Science Fiction, Trans, Trans Feminine, Transgender, Young Adult | 1 Comment

October Patreon Update: We Hit the $100 Milestone!

Happy October and happy Halloween, my favourite holiday!

This is by far my most belated update, and for that I am sorry! I do realize October is almost over and yet here I am posting the update I usually do first thing in the month. I was on vacation for the first 2 weeks of the month (in Japan, which was amazing) and since I got back I’ve been suffering with a seemingly never-ending cold while also starting my first full fledged librarian job! So you can probably see why I am behind on Casey the Canadian Lesbrarian. You can hopefully look forward to a chock-full end of the month and back to normal for November.

Some big Patreon related news is that I’m at over $100 a month now! I offered a little contest on Twitter to the patron who signed up and bumped me up over $100 and that lucky person Loretta has a queer book in the mail as we speak! Thank you all so, so much for all your continued support. I wouldn’t be able to keep up the content on the blog if it wasn’t for your support. There was of course also the usual monthly winner of a queer book, Nicole. Congrats to both of you! These are the books Nicole had to choose from:

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Did you miss any of my September content? I made a fun seasonally appropriate list of 5 spooky queer books, ranging from quite terrifying to slightly creepy. I also wrote reviews of Steam Clean, short little gem of a graphic novel about a queer women’s sauna party somewhere in Northern Europe and The Clothesline Swing, a poetic elegiac novel told from an elderly gay Syrian man’s perspective. Bisexual visibility week is over, but that doesn’t mean you don’t need these 10 Canadian bisexual books in your life and that you shouldn’t be mad about the bisexual erasure in Rainbow Rowell’s Carry On. Also check out my Book Riot post for National Coming Out Day on 13 YA books with bisexual boy characters.

And as always I want to individually thank all of the people who’ve signed up to be patrons. You lovely humans are: Danika, Leigh, Anna Marie, Jane, Jakelene, Emmet, Madeline, Heather, Carla, Laurita, Jason, Jillian, Shelagh, Priscila, Allison, Ang, James, Seed, Julie, Katherine, Rachel, Samuel, Amy, Sarah, Daniel, Sarah, Chantelle, Al, Undertheteacup, Karen, Nicole, Leora, Loretta, and Mandy!

Reminder that if any of you new (or old) folks are interested in being a part of the Interview with a Queer Reader series, write me at stepaniukcasey [at] gmail.com

Posted in Patreon, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

5 Spooky Queer Women’s Halloween Reads

Happy almost October! Doesn’t it just feel like the right time of year to be reading scary books? Is it dark and blustery where you are? Are the pumpkins out yet? Have you been drinking delicious hot beverages while wearing sweaters? Even if you haven’t done any of those autumnal things, you should read one of these seasonally appropriate queer books to get in the Halloween mood. If you want more scary queer books, check out this list I made a few years ago featuring The Haunting on Hill House by Shirley Jackson, Fist of the Spider Woman: Tales of Fear and Queer Desire edited by Amber Dawn and more!

The Drowning Girl by Caitlín R. Kiernan
What is it?
India Morgan Phelps—Imp to her friends—is schizophrenic. She can no longer trust her own mind, because she convinced that her memories have somehow betrayed her, forcing her to question her very identity. Struggling with her perception of reality, Imp must uncover the truth about an encounter with a vicious siren, or a helpless wolf that came to her as a feral girl, or neither of these things but something far, far stranger…

Why should you read it?
Well Morgan M Page says this is the best piece of writing Kiernan has ever done. Plus, it features a queer relationship between a cis woman and a trans woman in addition to being smart and creepy!

How Scary?
More haunting than actually scary, and haunting in a kind of intellectual, post-modern kind of way. But maybe scarier if the idea of not knowing what is real or not is especially frightening to you.

The Gilda Stories by Jewelle Gomez
What is it?
The winner of two Lambda Literary Awards (fiction and science fiction) The Gilda Stories is a very American odyssey. Escaping from slavery in the 1850s Gilda’s longing for kinship and community grows over two hundred years. Her induction into a family of benevolent vampires takes her on an adventurous and dangerous journey full of loud laughter and subtle terror.

Why should you read it?
I mean, Black lesbian vampire superhero and a Lakota lesbian vampire mentor. ‘Nuff said. Okay, also, this is a vampire book that will appeal to people who don’t usually like vampire books.

How Scary?
There are scary things in this book, not so much to do with vampirism and other paranormal stuff as with how fucking terrifying it can be to be a Black woman in the US at pretty much any stage of the 19th, 20th, or 21st century.

Through the Woods by Emily Carroll
What is it?
A collection of scary graphic stories that have a distinct fairy tale feel, albeit a very creepy fairy tale: ‘It came from the woods. Most strange things do.’ Five mysterious, spine-tingling stories follow journeys into (and out of?) the eerie abyss. These chilling tales spring from the macabre imagination of acclaimed and award-winning comic creator Emily Carroll. Come take a walk in the woods and see what awaits you there…

Why should you read it?
In addition to the deliciously creepy tales that seem like they’ve been handed down for generations, the illustrations are fucking amazing; they’re the kind of thing I’d frame and put on my wall.

How Scary?
I admit I was scared to turn the light off and go to sleep when I read this before bed, so pretty damn scary? There were also a few times I was afraid to turn the page. Souls braver than me will probably be fine to read this at any time of day they want, but if you’re a bit wimpy like me you might want to read this in the daylight. This will likely creep you out and make you a little jumpy.

My Favorite Thing is Monsters by Emil Ferris
What is it?
Set against the tumultuous political backdrop of late ’60s Chicago, My Favorite Thing Is Monsters is the fictional graphic diary of 10-year-old Karen Reyes, filled with B-movie horror and pulp monster magazines iconography. Karen Reyes tries to solve the murder of her enigmatic upstairs neighbor, Anka Silverberg, a holocaust survivor, while the interconnected stories of those around her unfold. When Karen’s investigation takes us back to Anka’s life in Nazi Germany, the reader discovers how the personal, the political, the past, and the present converge.

Why should you read it?
First of all, for the messy but gorgeous art that is presented as if it really were a girl’s diary. Also, if the idea of literal monsters but also the figurative monsters within intrigues you.

How Scary?
Scary as in real people can be monsters but not scary as in you’re going to be jumpy after reading it. There are lots of monstrous things in here, especially Karen’s drawings, that aren’t necessarily scary even though they feel very Halloweeny.

White Is For Witching by Helen Oyeyemi
What is it?
In a vast, mysterious house on the cliffs near Dover, the Silver family is reeling from the hole punched into its heart. Lily is gone and her twins, Miranda and Eliot, and her husband, the gentle Luc, mourn her absence with unspoken intensity. All is not well with the house, either, which creaks and grumbles and malignly confuses visitors in its mazy rooms. Generations of women inhabit its walls. And Miranda, with her new appetite for chalk and her keen sense for spirits, is more attuned to them than she is to her brother and father. She is leaving them slowly, slipping away from them. And when one dark night she vanishes entirely, the survivors are left to tell her story.

Why should you read it?
Oyeyemi has a beautiful flare for writing stories that feel at once like timeless fairy tales but utterly modern. In this case, she is channeling the lengthy tradition of the Gothic haunted house story but also investigating racism, sexuality, and the particular bonds that twins have.

How scary?
Pretty fucking scary and dark, in the way that books where you know things are not going to end well from the beginning manage to keep you rapt to find out just how badly things will go. It’s about the same level of scariness as The Haunting on Hill House, with its obvious parallel of the question: are there really spirits in the house or are they a result of someone’s imagination?

Posted in Black, comics, Fiction, Graphic, Non-Canadian, Short Stories | 1 Comment