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Alison Espach, Notes on Your Sudden Disappearance

In the novel Notes on Your Sudden Disappearance, Sally Holt worships her older sister Kathy, who knows everything about everything. They spend a dull suburban summer infatuated with the same boy, Billy Barnes. Then tragedy strikes and everything changes. The novel is a coming of age story that will take you right back to your teen years. Author Alison Espach joins us to talk about it.

Buy the book!

Author Alison Espach
Author Alison Espach

Also this episode, Janet Somerville, book critic for the Toronto Star joins us to talk about some good recommendations for your summer reading list. Check out one that looks good ... or all four!

Flora Harding, The People's Princess
A dual narrative featuring the newly engaged Diana Spencer in 1981, rattling around Buckingham Palace before her wedding to Charles, Prince of Wales; juxtaposed with the life of a previous Princess of Wales, Charlotte in 1813, whose life Diana reads about in an archival diary. Both struggle with the strictures of palace life. Their tragic early deaths, respectively, plunge a nation into crisis.

Eliza Knight, The Mayfair Bookshop
Another dual narrative, featuring Lucy St. Clair in 2020 who is on loan from a US library to work in special collections at Heywood Hill in Mayfair, a big Nancy Mitford fan, juxtaposed with 1938 and Nancy Mitford and her literary set including Evelyn Waugh. Takes place as Mitford is writing the novel that will make her famous, The Pursuit of Love. A delight for literary nerds.

Heather Marshall, Looking for Jane
About the safe underground abortion networks in Canada before abortion was legalized in 1988, and the maternity homes to which pregnant unwed women and widows were sent and forced to give up their babies for the church's profit. Weaves 3 generations of women together, exposing the need for ongoing reproductive health care. A startling debut.

Rachel McMillan, The Mozart Code
At the heart of this novel set in Cold War Vienna and Prague are two things: a Soviet spy network called "Eternity" that M16 operative Simon Barre and his team are trying to expose and bust... plus the blackmarket restoration of art & antiques stolen by the Nazis, focusing on the recovery of Mozart's death mask by former SOE agent Sophie Villers, aka "Starling." There are two subtextual "languages" of chess & music that propel the narrative.

Janet Somervilleis a critic for the Toronto Star and the author of Yours For Probably Always: Martha Gellhorn's Letters of Love and War, 1930-1949.It is also available as an audiobook,read by the phenomenal Ellen Barkin.

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