Toronto

  • December 30th, 2010

    Editors’ Picks: Books To Hunker Down With

    Seven Days in the Art World by Sarah Thornton
    My book club is reading Sarah Thornton’s Seven Days in the Art World over the holidays. I’ve barely cracked the spine, but I can already tell that it’s going to be a riveting read. $14.60 at Amazon.ca
    Athena Tsavliris, Toronto editor

     

    The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet by David Mitchell
    We adored Cloud Atlas, David Mitchell’s metaphysical romp across time, so we’re itching to read his latest. The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet may stick to a single time period, telling the story of a clerk in a Japanese outpost of the Dutch East Indies Company, but that doesn’t mean it’s not a magical read. $21.12 at www.chapters.indigo.ca
    Jennier Nachshen, Montreal editor (English edition)

     

    An Object of Beauty by Steve Martin
    Man of many talents, funny guy Steve Martin has just released his third novel, An Object of Beauty. The story follows a young and ambitious woman who takes the New York City art world by storm until finally, she comes face-to-face with circumstances no one, including her, can control. Martin, an avid art collector, also gives us the inside scoop on the art market including photos and details of some of the works discussed in the novel.
    $18.80 at Amazon.ca
    Malwina Gudowska, Calgary editor

     

    Essays In Love by Alain de Botton
    Consider this author Descartes for the everyday. A scribe of practical subjects like work, travel and architecture, he’s smart and spot-on. This book charts his relationship with a girl from unexpected meeting to saying “I love you” with all the abstract insights on universal truths to make you “ah-ha.” $15.87 at Amazon.ca
    Joy Pecknold, Vancouver editor

     

    Dear Diary by Lesley Arfin
    Not for virgin ears (or eyes), this book chronicles the adolescent life of a suburban girl-turned-Vice Magazine columnist as she retraces her diary entries from age 12-25. Acerbic and funny, Arfin tracks  down old friends and enemies and revisits schoolyard bullying, high school drama, college experimentation and her early twenties as a heroin addict in New York City. $16.89 at Amazon.ca
    Maria Tallarico, Managing editor

     

  • November 29th, 2010

    dandy life

    When we think of Cecil Beaton our minds dart to the Ascot scene in My Fair Lady where Audrey Hepburn arrives dressed like a box of bonbons, her white gown trimmed in black velvet striped ribbon and accented with giant bows, lace and feathers.

    The famed costume designer (he worked on My Fair Lady, Gigi  and Anna Karenina, to name a few), Vogue photographer and scrapbooker extraordinaire is the subject of a new Assouline book, Cecil Beaton: The Art of the Scrapbook packed with press clippings, playbills, pictures and diary entries sourced from his personal scrapbooks.

    It’s a wonderful snoop into the life of a social butterfly who scored invitations to the best parties and hobnobbed with the gratin of 20th Century society.

    Our Toronto Editor has a Standard Schnauzer named Cecil Beaton, so we know what’s going under her tree.

    $157.50 at Amazon.ca

     

  • August 18th, 2010

    Editors' Picks: Labour Day Weekend Reads

    Need a long weekend beach read? Herewith, our editors' favourite summer page turners.

    Summer Sisters by Judy Blume
    If Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret was your pre-teen bible, pick up Blume's more mature novel, Summer Sisters. It follows two best friends from grade school to their 30s and blends adolescent whimsy and angst with some very grown up topics. (PS: Check out Judy Blume on Twitter). $10 at Amazon.ca
    Maria Tallarico, Managing editor

    Angelina: An Unauthorized Biography by Andrew Morton
    Members of Team Jennifer will enjoy sinking their teeth into. But we’d never diss Angie—why mess with a gal with a knife collection? $16 at Amazon.ca
    Marianne Wisenthal, Montreal editor

    The Recessionista by Alexandra Lebenthal
    "Too Big to Fail Goes to the Beach," is how New York Magazine's Jessica Pressler described Alexandra Lebenthal's hot summer debut novel, The Recessionistas. A fabulously juicy read. $19 at Amazon.ca
    Athena Tsavliris, Toronto editor

    Juliet, Naked by Nick Hornby
    From the author of High Fidelity and About a Boy, Nick Hornby’s Juliet, Naked is the author’s latest look at what happens when love, parenting and relationships get in the way of life. The story of a washed-up musician also deals with one of Hornby’s favourite subjects: music. $21 at Amazon.ca
    Malwina Gudowska, Calgary editor

    One Day by David Nicholls
    Expressed in snapshots of the same day spanning twenty years, this tale of two opposites, Dex and Em, who connect just before graduation, go their separate ways, yet stay in touch, sucked us in right from the start (perhaps because it begins with the pair bantering and snogging). $13 at Amazon.ca
    Joy Pecknold, Vancouver editor

     

  • June 11th, 2010

    Quote, Unquote

    With all the one-liners your kid spouts, sometimes you feel like you have a little Letterman on your hands.

    Immortalize their best observations with My Quotable Kid, a journal to help you keep track of who said what, and when. So next time little Tommy decides to tell everyone at the dinner table, "Mommy said Daddy came home late last night and has a headache from drinking too much apple juice," you can take note.

    Er, maybe leave that one out of the book.

    My Quotable Kid: A Parents' Journal of Unforgettable Quotes, $15 at Amazon.ca