Big Reader
Marilyn Stanley
, Kirsten Lyon
, Karen Nordrum
, Deana Bueley
, Jude Castillo
, Barry Kazimer
, Alice Law
, Simran Bassi
, Lori Watson
, Heather O'Connor
, Andrea Gillespie
, Deb Philippon
, Val Ross
, Natalie Webber
, Chantal Comeau
, Linda Leitch
, VJ Hatton
, Noelle Walsh
, Holly Elisabeth
, Elaine Baptie
, Hilary Squires
, Michelle McGrane
, Chris Carvalho
, Gina Bergman
, Tina May
, Jacob Cebulak
, Elizabeth Obermeyer
, Chelsey Boley
, Megan Bishop
, Anndee Newson
, Sarah Schwartz
, Melissa Kohlman
, Hoda Montazeri
, Joshua Lewis
, cassandra schiemann
, Nora Gould
, Butcher Rochelle
, Katherine Koller
, Shayla Leung
, Leila Grobel
, joy mills
, P. Thompson
, Margo Beredjiklian
, Marissa Yip-Young
, Nancy Daoust
, Pat Hoorelbeke
, Macy McCubbing
, Debra Fisher
, Lori Cameron
, Lise Gaston
, LJ Law
, Sarah Beaudin
, Kim Cappellina
, Cynthia Heinrichs
, Marie Claude Gagnon
, Leslie Vermeer
, Michelle Power
, Maria Mclean
, Elizabeth Blondin
, Brenda Power
, Joan Clare
, Aingeal Stone
, Laurie Burns
, C. Ray
, Bob Paterson-watt
, Judy Richardson
, Susan Toy
, Paula Ritchie
, Pamela Roberts Griffith
, Megan Brodie
, Donna Gamache
, Melissa Poremba
, Patricia Johnson
, Karen Kendrick
, carolyn redl
, Elizabeth Ivanovich
, Catherine Westerberg
, Pearl Saban
, Nancy Steinhausen
, Christopher Evans
, Naomi MacKinnon
, Annesah Hussain
, Heather Belliveau
, BJ Underwood
, Rachel Edmonds
, Beth Follett
, Patricia McKeown
, Natasa Ilic
, Vicki Bedford
, Lynn Hallson
, tom stormonth
, Alanna King
, Deanna Radford
, Randi Ann Doll
, Robert Hykawy
, Joann Horgan
, Debbie Youngman
, Pat Johnston
, Rebecca Forest
, Ken Gilmour
, Ruth Osgood
, Teira Stauth
, maria blanco
, Benita Hartwell
, Yolande Thivierge
, Vivian Thorgeirson
, Alex Henderson
, Andrea Pole
, Cindy Bodini
, Phreia Von Woolfgard
, Stephanie Baird
editor@49thShelf.com
Ever since childhood, Susan Olding has been a big reader, never without a book on the go. Not surprising, then, that she turns to the library to read her own life. From the dissolution of her marriage to the forging of a tentative relationship with her new partner's daughter, from discovering Toronto as a young undergrad to, years later, watching her mother slowly go blind: through every experience, Olding crafts exquisite, searingly honest essays about what it means to be human, to be a woman—and to be a reader.