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6 opere 92 membri 10 recensioni

Serie

Opere di Suzanne North

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Data di nascita
1945
Sesso
female
Nazionalità
Canada
Luogo di nascita
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Luogo di residenza
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
Agente
Meghan MacDonald
Breve biografia
Suzanne North was born and raised in Calgary, and now lives in Saskatoon. She is the author of the Phoebe Fairfax mystery series and has written for magazines and CBC Television, as well as for documentary films. She has also worked variously as a bibliographic searcher at a university library, a waitress, a high school teacher, a television announcer, a pianist at a ballet school, and an unbalanced bookkeeper. Flying Time is her first literary novel.

Utenti

Recensioni

I’m disappointed that it took me so long to read this book because it really was quite good and I would have finished it sooner if I had made the time to read it. I enjoyed the writing; I enjoyed the story; I enjoyed the characters. I enjoyed everything about it... except, maybe, how it ended ...

Adrianne
 
Segnalato
Adrianne_p | 2 altre recensioni | Mar 23, 2019 |
This is the story of an friendship that develops between two families when the nearly-adult daughter goes to work as a secretary for a Japanese-born businessman in Calgary just as WWII is breaking out. The author examines the relationships that develop within the context of the prejudice that gripped Canada as war with Japan loomed.

I hate giving bad reviews, but I mostly found the book boring. The narrator is now elderly in a convalescent home, writing her memoirs as part of a creative writing class, which seemed forced, and the story was broken up by conversations she had with her eccentric fellow resident. The writing style was a bit to light for my tastes.....mostly this happened and then this and I felt and he felt....… (altro)
½
 
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LynnB | 2 altre recensioni | Mar 21, 2018 |
Suzanne North is a new author for me and I'm sorry it took so long to discover her. She was born in Calgary and sets her books in and around there. Her detective, Phoebe Fairfax, is a free-lance camera operator on a lifestyles show. In this book (the third in the series) Phoebe, the show's on air host and the producer go to the Royal Tyrell Museum in Drumheller to view an exhibit of early hominid bones discovered by a prominent paleontologist who grew up in Alberta. Of course, the paleontologist ends up dead and the bones are also missing. Phoebe was the first person to find the body but she has no idea who killed him. There are a host of people with "bones to pick" with him but none of the issues seem serious enough to warrant murder. Phoebe is dragged into the mystery because everyone who was at the museum seems to want to share their secrets with her.

The mystery was decent and the setting was interesting. I learned a bit about paleontology along the way so that was a bonus. In this interview Suzanne says she writes her books as social comedies and this is what I found most entertaining about the book. I'll be looking for more of Suzanne North's books.
… (altro)
 
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gypsysmom | 1 altra recensione | Aug 7, 2017 |
Where I got the book: review copy provided by publisher. This review first appeared on the Historical Novel Society website.

On the eve of the Second World War, Kay Jeynes volunteers to transfer out of her typist’s job to work for Japanese businessman Hero Miyashita. The relationship between the sophisticated Japanese gentleman and the naïve working-class Canadian rapidly turns into that of mentor and disciple, and Kay’s family and friends learn to view the Miyashitas with less prejudice than is the norm in the Calgary of the Thirties. But war is looming, and in the wider Canadian context, prejudice against the Japanese is fast turning to fear and hatred.

Flying Time is an example of what literary historical fiction does well: provides a snapshot of a time and place through the small evolutions in relationships in a clearly defined context. North’s evocation of Calgary in 1939 is masterly, a clear sketch that is never too heavy on detail. Her writing style is fluid, chatty, and engaging, and the pages of this novel flew by for me. I was not initially thrilled by the framing device for Kay’s reminiscences, a memoir writing class in a nursing home, but North made it work through Kay’s awareness of the poignancy of old age and the fleeting nature of youth.

Personally, I could have enjoyed the story without Kay’s journey to Hong Kong, even though I found the depiction of international travel by flying boat fascinating. I felt that the really engaging aspect of Flying Time was the delineation of the relationships that built up from a chance meeting, enhanced by the poignancy of historical hindsight.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
JaneSteen | 2 altre recensioni | Dec 27, 2014 |

Premi e riconoscimenti

Statistiche

Opere
6
Utenti
92
Popolarità
#202,476
Voto
½ 3.4
Recensioni
10
ISBN
17
Lingue
1

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