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Lynda Reads

Bite size reflections on the plethora of stimuli that drift in through my (more or less) open mind: commentaries, ideas, book reviews, resonances struck and ire stirred. My way of exposing my side of the conversation with other minds encountered. I also blog about the Okal Rel Universe, my own fictional enterprise, at Reality Skimming.)

by Lynda: Sci-Fi Author, Educator, Technologist.


Friday, August 19, 2005

Sandinista by Marie Jakober

Sandinista by Marie Jakober It is a testament to the power of Marie Jakober's Sandinista, that I remember it so well, years after reading it for the first time. It made me miss a bus. I was visiting Alison Sinclair, in Calgary, at the time. Never good at navigating, my wanderings landed me in a fast food restaurant, about noon, where I settled down to read after reassuring myself that I knew which bus to catch, when, in order to get back to Alison's apartment that night. But I became so engrossed in Sandinista that I failed to look up until I finished the last page, hours later. I had not even noticed the young man sweeping up around me with a hopeful air of expectation that I might leave.


The magic of Sandinista lives in the weave of the very human lives that Jakober uses to tell the story of a painful time in history, with her usual gift for embedding people in the circumstances and setting of her novels.

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