Christina McLaurine

Book Review: The Perfumist of Paris by Alka Joshi

By Christina McLaurine

The final book of Alka Joshi’s Jaipur Trilogy, The Perfumist of Paris is a story of scent, memories, and secrets. In this novel, the reader follows Radha in 1974, and the spirited teenager we meet in The Henna Artist, has blossomed into a bright and vibrant woman. Living in Paris, Radha is trying to balance being a wife, and mother and her budding career as a lab assistant at a perfume house. In search of inspiration and materials for her first solo project, her first business trip takes her back home to India. While there, she learns that Nikki, the child she gave up at the age of thirteen, is on his way to Paris to find her. The secrets of Radha’s past are catching up to her and as they do, they threaten the stability of the family she’s created and the future she’s been working towards.

Nothing pulls a memory from the recesses of the mind like scents. They transport us back in time as they unlock memories of parents, lovers, heartbreak, and delight. Some readers might find Joshi’s descriptions of perfume synthesis and scent production uninteresting but they paint a vivid picture of the detail and refinement the process entails. The way Joshi uses scent to coax out memories from the characters’ past is sure to have readers reminiscing about the scents of their lives.

Unlike the first two books in the series, The Perfumist of Paris doesn’t alternate points of view. All four parts of the novel are told solely from Radah’s point of view. The first half of the book is slower paced as it’s more character-driven. The second half of the novel is plot-driven and as such is faster paced. The Perfumist of Paris is a wonderful finale to this exciting trilogy. Readers are reacquainted with characters from the first novel and left satiated as the loose ends are tied up and there are no questions left unanswered. Turning the last page of this book will have readers wanting to return to The Henna Artist to restart their journey with these enchanting characters.

Thank you, HarperCollins, for a complimentary copy in exchange for an honest review.

Book Review: Mindful of Murder by Susan Juby

By Christina McLaurine

Set off the coast of British Columbia on Sutil Island, Mindful of Murder is a lovely cozy mystery perfect for lazy Sunday reading. Helen, a recent graduate from Butler School, is about to start her first job when she receives a call informing her that her former boss, Edna, has died. Edna’s will lays out instructions for Helen to sort out her affairs. Her main task is to run a retreat for some of Edna’s relatives to determine who will take over Edna’s business, the Yatra Institute. As Helen begins to carry out this plan, Edna’s death makes less and less sense. With the help of her classmates, Helen starts asking questions to get to reveal the truth about what happened during Edna’s last moments.

Mindful of Murder is full of colourful characters. Edna’s relatives (Thaddeus, Wills, Rayvn, and Whitney) and the institute staff (Warfarer, Nigel, and Jensen) are quirky and fun—but Helen herself is the most interesting. Prior to working at the Yatra Institute, she used to be a nun, and before that, she spent time at a Buddhist monastery. It’s certainly not the typical backstory for the typical amateur sleuth protagonist but it works. As Helen asks questions about Edna, it reads as though she’s trying to place all of the pieces of a puzzle together instead of catching a criminal. In a way, this adds to the cozy feeling of the novel.

It’s common when reading mysteries or thrillers (or any genre for that matter) to try and figure out the twist or the ending before it arrives. In the case of mysteries, it’s figuring out whodunnit before it is revealed. Throughout the novel themes of mindfulness, specifically being present, are constantly discussed and referenced. In a way, Juby seems to suggest to the reader to be present where they are in the story and not rush ahead by trying to figure out how it will end. The end will come when it comes. And when it comes to solving the murder, if readers stay present with what’s unfolding exactly where they are in the novel, they will unearth the answers.

It’s a different way of presenting a murder mystery but it works. Mindful of Murder has all of the classic elements of a cozy mystery making it ideal reading for a rainy day or cottage getaway. It’s sure to leave readers hoping this is the first in a series.

 

Thank you, HarperCollins, for a complimentary copy in exchange for an honest review.

In Conversation with Jasmine Sealy author of The Island of Forgetting

With Christina McLaurine

 

Photo credit: Benjamin Gardere

 

The Island of Forgetting spans over many decades. When it comes to character development, did this broad time period make it harder or easier to move your characters through events and show the impact and change that time had upon them? Is there a time or place in the book that you wished you had expanded upon?

I always knew I wanted the book to span several decades because I wanted to show the way the decisions made during each character’s youth rippled outwards, affecting the subsequent generation. In many ways, though the characters are related to each other, they are strangers, each never fully revealing themselves to the others. In a sense the reader actually knows these characters better than they know each other, and themselves. This was intentional on my part, because I was interested in exploring time, memory and secrets and how they impact a family dynamic. But it was hard to leave each character behind at the end of their sections. I could probably write a novel for each one and still have more to say. 

Mental health and various forms of mental unwellness are present in The Island of Forgetting. What inspired you to include them in this novel and how did it shape the way you chose to tell this story? 

Mental health is something that isn’t frequently discussed in Bajan families. Within my own family, there is alcoholism, depression, anxiety, but we tend to speak of these things euphemistically, which is common for the culture. My grandmother had a brother who used to “wander”, much the same way that Iapetus does in the novel, but he was always referred to as “the mad one”, his mental illness dismissed or made light of. Only in adulthood, through conversations with my parents, have I learned of violence they experienced in childhood that impacted their own parenting, and by extension my life. I became fascinated by the idea that so much of my life, the things I understood about myself, were shaped by events that happened before I was born. These unspoken intergenerational traumas, many of which are tied to untreated mental illness and addiction, inspired the novel.  

The characters within The Island of Forgetting feature many different struggles/challenges and you’ve fed them so seamlessly into one another, in a way layering them? This must have been very challenging. How did you keep yourself organized?

I wrote the novel in two major stages. The first draft I wrote chronologically, beginning with Atlas and ending with Nautilus. Once I had those sections more or less drafted I began the work of weaving them together, building connections and creating that layering. It was a long and tedious process involving a lot of rewriting. I probably have a whole second novel in deleted scenes!

Your story re-envisions aspects of Greek mythology. Was there a story or aspect of Greek Mythology that drew you to want to write The Island of Forgetting for a modern day audience?

I stumbled across Calypso’s story while diving down a late-night, insomnia-fuelled Wikipedia rabbit hole. I was actually checking to see if there was an etymological connection between “calypso”—as in the Caribbean folkloric music—and the Greek myth (there isn’t). But once I started reading The Odyssey I was struck by this image of Calypso as a Caribbean woman, falling hard for this foreign man who was just passing through. The depiction of Calypso, as this wanton woman, a seductress, mirrors the way Caribbean women are fetishized and sexualized in the media. Funnily enough, in the 1997 TV adaptation of The Odyssey, all of the characters are white, except for Calypso who is played by a black woman. I wanted to turn this cliché on its head. To dig into this idea of “the temptress” and tell it from Calypso’s point of view.

Did you know where you wanted the narrative to go and how you wanted it to end when you first began writing or did it reveal itself to you as you wrote? 

A bit of both. I actually changed the ending of the novel very late in the editing process. I knew how I wanted the reader to feel at the end of the novel, I had an idea of the message I was trying to get across, but it took me a few tries to figure out the “how” of it. But I didn’t do much planning or plotting ahead of time. It was a trial and error process (hence all of those deleted scenes!)

Can you describe your writing process? Do you outline each chapter? Are you a 5 am writer? Do you have any writing habits?

My writing process is incredibly chaotic. I do not outline but if I have a sense of what needs to happen next in a given scene I will write a few bullet point notes for myself at the top of the page so that I can keep track. I write mostly in bed, propped up on too many pillows and wreaking havoc on my spinal health. I do like to write in the mornings, but I require a good chunk of procrastination time before I can actually get into a flow. I work in bursts, sometimes churning out thousands of words day after day and then going several days where I write nothing at all and lie around feeling sorry for myself. When I look back on it I’m surprised that I somehow managed to finish this novel at all, the entire time I was always on the verge of quitting, convinced it would never be done. I wish I had a better system! But I think I’m doomed to always be a “muddle through” kind of writer. 

What is your “must-read” book recommendation and what book has had the most impact and influence on your writing?

I don’t have a “must-read” recommendation, but I would encourage readers to explore other works by Caribbean writers. It is such a diverse and endlessly fascinating region and there are phenomenal contemporary works being released all of the time. I recommend How the One-Armed Sister Sweeps Her House by Cherie Jones and What Storm What Thunder by Myriam Chancy. 

As for books that have influenced me, there are several but the one that comes to mind first is Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys. I love stories where the mad woman in the attic is allowed to come downstairs and bare her soul.

What advice would you give to aspiring authors who are trying to navigate the publishing world?

Learn how to sell your own writing. Learn the skill of a good pitch. Knowing how to summarize your own work and make it sound compelling is something they ought to teach in MFAs, its importance cannot be overstated.

Do you have another novel in the works? When can readers expect to get their hands on it? 

I do! I’m working on another novel set in Barbados, a work of historical fiction that takes place in the late 1960s during the independence era, when Barbados broke away from British colonial rule. It includes murdered prime ministers and mysterious starlets and lots of women behaving badly.  

Book Review: The Island of Forgetting by Jasmine Sealy

By Christina McLaurine

The Island of Forgetting is a debut novel by Jasmine Sealy about family, memory, and truth. Iapetus is haunted by images of his mother and brother murdering their father. Feeling indebted to his uncle Cronus for taking him, Atlas struggles to choose between leaving the island and staying to help run the family business. Calypso, determined to live a colourful robust life far removed from that of her parents and her Uncle Z’s hotel, falls heedlessly in love with a visiting businessman. Struggling with his identity and lack of parental relationships, Nautilus is on a dangerous path of self-destruction. Four generations. One family trying to grapple with their past in the hope of a better future. 

The Island of Forgetting is broken into three parts, and each reads almost like a novella. The stories of Atlas, Calypso, and Nautilus are told in chronological order but lead one into another, generation by generation, to tell a beautiful family saga.

Sealy weaves themes of mental unwellness throughout The Island of Forgetting in a way that centers the person and not the illness. Multiple characters struggle with varying degrees of mental unwellness, which is both depicted through internal dialogue and interactions with other characters. Some readers may recognize behaviour patterns but they are never named or referred to by western pathologies. In this way, there is no separating the character from an illness or diagnosis. Be it incoherent ramblings, drastic changes in mood, or self-destructive tendencies, they are part of the character, and the focus is not on treating an illness or managing symptoms but on helping the person heal and grow.

The Island of Forgetting is a medium-paced novel perfect for readers who enjoy character-driven stories. 

 

Thank you, Harper Collins, for a complimentary copy in exchange for an honest review!

Book Review: This is Assisted Dying by Stefanie Green

By Christina McLaurine

After spending 12 years in maternity and newborn care, Dr. Stefanie Green’s focus changed to providing medical assistance in dying (MAiD). This Is Assisted Dying is a recounting of Dr. Green's first year providing MAiD in British Columbia. In an emotive and educational manner, Green details the history of MAiD in Canada—from the Rodriguez case in the early 1990s, to Carter v. Canada in 2011, to details on the way the unanimous decision of the Supreme Court in 2015 changed end-of-life care in Canada. Green also highlights similarities and differences between Canadian legislation and regulation of MAiD to those in other parts of the world. 

Through portraits of her patients, Green outlines the eligibility for and the process of MAiD. Readers get a glimpse of what the event and final goodbyes may look and feel like. Dr. Green writes in a way that makes all parts of the book easy to understand. Readers who were not previously familiar with MAiD or do not have a medical or legal background will be able to follow along easily. 

From the title, one might assume This Is Assisted Dying is a melancholic read about death, suffering, and grief. While those themes are present, the focal points are the hope, choice, and control MAiD can bring to people facing terminal illnesses. Ethics, law, and family relationships and dynamics are also explored through the final goodbyes and events of Dr. Green’s patients. 

The spectre of death hangs over us like an elephant in the room. Whether it be ailing loved ones or aging parents it is always challenging to face our mortality. The stories of her patients provide an opening to broach these difficult conversations. This Is Assisted Dying is an engaging book that will stay with readers long after they’ve turned the last page. 

Thank you to Simon & Schuster Canada for a complimentary copy in exchange for an honest review. 

Book Review: My Ackee Tree by Suzanne Barr with Suzanne Hancock

By Christina McLaurine

My Ackee Tree is a memoir full of food and heart. Suzanne Barr is vulnerable and open as she recounts her journey to becoming a chef. This journey takes her from her childhood home in Plantation, Florida, to New York City for college and in search of her independence. Soon, she finds herself in Atlanta, where she discovers her activist spirit. However, before long, she returns to Florida to care for her ailing mum. While grieving the loss of her mother, Barr sets off again. Her travels take her back to New York City and subsequently to culinary school. Post culinary school, she spends some time in Hawaii, the Hamptons, and France before eventually settling in Toronto, where she opens her own restaurant.  

Barr is candid about the challenges and losses she’s faced along the way and offsets them with her strength and leaps of faith. From learning to quell self-doubts to navigate being a Black female in white-male dominated spaces and vindictive landlords and business partners. As Barr recounts each challenge, she contrasts it with her takeaways and lessons learned in a way that both educates and inspires her readers. Those who have limited knowledge of culinary school or the restaurant industry shouldn’t shy away from reading My Ackee Tree. Barr does a great job of explaining and illustrating those spaces for those unfamiliar with them.

Sometimes it’s not about what is waiting for us at our destination but about how we’ve changed and grown during the process. Barr seamlessly weaves themes of grief, race, identity, activism, and community through her journey while highlighting the importance of the journey itself. It’s unmistakable that Barr is deeply influenced and inspired by the places she’s been, the experiences she’s had, and the people she’s met. Each one has not only shaped her but also directly or indirectly influenced the rest of the journey. She carries them with her in her soul and infuses them into everything she does, especially her food. My Ackee Tree reads like an ode of thanksgiving for the people, places, and experiences that have inspired her the most.  

Thank you, Penguin Random House, for a complimentary copy in exchange for an honest review. 

Book Review: Detachment by Maurice Mierau

By Christina McLaurine

Detachment: An Adoption Memoir, winner of the 2016 Kobzar Literary Award, is about family, trauma, history, and healing. Mireau and his wife Betsy adopt two little boys from Ukraine. Upon their return to Winnipeg, Mireau is confronted with the challenges of building familial bonds and helping his children, Peter and Bohdan, adjust to their new life in a new country. This adjustment period is filled with trials and tribulations that puts a strain on Betsy and Mireau’s marriage. In an effort to understand his sons better, Mireau turns to his family history. His emotionally distant father, who was also born in Ukraine, has a traumatic past. Maybe, if he can better understand his father’s painful and traumatic childhood, he can be a better father and better understand his sons.  

Mireau gives readers the opportunity to see the displeasing side of overseas adoption. From the inscrutable bureaucratic adoption process and strain that it can put on a marriage, to the paltry living conditions in the orphanages. Not to mention the challenges of bonding as a family once the process is complete. While the book is about Mireau, Peter and his struggle to adjust commands the reader’s attention and becomes a focal point of the narrative. Their hearts will break as Mireau recounts Peter’s struggle to reconcile being left at the orphanage by his birth mother and trusting his new adoptive parents.  

It’s obvious Maurice loves his family, but between being a writer, husband, and parent, he’s having a hard time. Mireau is candid about these struggles and how it affects the relationships he has with everyone around him. It’s impossible not to empathize with Mireau and Peter as they try to navigate through this season of change and pain. As Mireau reflects on the ways his father’s trauma affected him and their relationship, he uses it as a catalyst to ensure the same doesn’t happen with his son’s trauma. 

Detachment: An Adoption Memoir is a gripping, heart-wrenching read that tells an unforgettable story about the strength and resilience of family. 

Thank you to Freehand Books for the complimentary copy in exchange for an honest review!

Book Review: The Promise by Lucy Diamond

By Christina McLaurine

The Promise.jpg

Lucy Diamond’s sixteenth novel The Promise is about grief, love, and family. After his brother Patrick’s sudden death, Dan vows to do his best to step into Patrick’s shoes so that he can be there for his sister-in-law Zoe and her children. But as he begins to sort out some of Patrick’s affairs, he uncovers a few secrets that threaten to break this already fragile family. As Dan struggles to figure out what the right thing to do is, he begins to realize there was so much more to his brother than met the eye. 

The Promise is filled with wonderful characters. We have ”living in his brother’s shadow” Dan; Zoe, the grieving widow and mother who’s doing the best she can; eccentric and independent Lydia; and ”not as perfect as we thought” Patrick. Diamond’s characters are rich and complex. Although readers may not adore all of them, they will find it challenging not to empathize with them. The growth and development of these characters is so well done, especially considering that the character of Patrick is never present or alive in the novel. All his interactions are portrayed solely through the recollections and memories of the other characters.

Diamond turns the saying “Don’t speak ill of the dead” on its head in this novel. After someone dies, it’s common for their highest achievements and positive personality traits to be the focal points of their legacy. The Promise starts out this way and very quickly changes gears. Slowly the idealized persona of Patrick starts to fall away into something that is more nuanced and complicated.  

Although grief is central to the story, The Promise is not a heavy, grim read. Diamond writes her characters through the grieving process so well that the reader feels part of this cathartic experience. The Promise is an emotionally engaging read, encouraging readers to find and celebrate the best in people.  

 

Thank you to Pan Macmillan for the complimentary copy in exchange for an honest review! 

Book Review: The Missing Treasures of Amy Ashton by Eleanor Ray

By Christina McLaurine

Content Warning: domestic abuse

The Missing Treasures of Amy Ashton is a debut novel by Eleanor Ray. The protagonist, Amy Ashton, is a collector who finds it’s easier (and safer) to surround herself with things. After suddenly losing the most important people in her life 11 years prior, Amy opts not to create any space for new people in her life. Instead, she fills her life and her home with her things: wine bottles, mugs, cookbooks, newspapers, and a cornucopia of thrift store finds. This is because at the end of the day, her things, her treasures, will never abandon her. However, when a new family moves in across the street, something in Amy shifts and she starts to question if life is better with her things or if she can make some space for new people in her life. 

The novel is told solely from Amy’s perspective and is divided between the past and present. This gives the reader a complete picture of how important the people she lost were and how much it affected her. Getting glimpses of who she was then and who she is now, the reader can’t help but cheer for her to heal from her past and create a more vibrant future. 

Considering Amy’s trauma response is the defining characteristic of her personality and central to the overall plot of the story, The Missing Treasures of Amy Ashton never feels heavy or draining. In fact, the emotional load of the novel remains light throughout the novel, such that the resolution and Amy’s growth felt rushed, not quite matching the pre-established pace of the novel. The Missing Treasures of Amy Ashton is a novel filled with quirky characters, tender moments, and a bit of mystery that will draw in the reader and keep them captivated until they turn the last page.

Thank you to Gallery Books for the complimentary copy in exchange for an honest review!

Book Review: My Mother's Daughter by Perdita Felicien

By Christina McLaurine

My Mothers Daughter.jpg

Content warnings: domestic abuse and violence

My Mother's Daughter is a raw and honest intergenerational story of two-time Olympian Perdita Felicien and her mother, Catherine. Felicien is candid and open in her memoir as she details her mother's life in St. Lucia prior to immigrating to Canada and the struggles and challenges she faced while trying to gain citizenship. Felicien's upbringing, athletic career, and transition into journalism are told in tandem with Catherine's story.

My Mother's Daughter is equal parts inspiring and heartbreaking. Felicien writes, “I came to believe that every single person is a hurdler, even if they don’t know it. While most aren’t sprinting over literal fences, everyone has something to overcome. Sometimes we fall in our attempts, and that’s okay because there is always a reason to pick yourself up and move forward.” Before Felicien even knew what a hurdle was, she was jumping them with her mother. Despite the ill-treatment, abuse, and poverty, Catherine remained determined to make a better life for herself and her children on Canadian soil. Through it all, no matter the hurdle, they were her reason to keep moving forward.

This same tenacity and determination are evident in Felicien’s recount of the 2004 Athens Olympics. Readers will find themselves holding their breaths and at the edge of their seats as Felicien shares her side of the story and the events that unfolded in the aftermath of this pivotal moment in both her life and athletic career. She doesn't shy away from talking about the grief and devastation that followed, as well as her struggle to come to terms and make sense of it all. Felicien proves that she is her mother's daughter as she picked herself up and forges ahead just as her mother had during previous adversities.

Felicien's prose is clear, and the story easy to follow. Told in chronological order, My Mother's Daughter is divided into three parts, allowing the reader to easily situate where they are in Catherine's and Felicien's story. The admiration Felicien feels for her mother is evident on every page. My Mother's Daughter will give readers familiar with Felicien and her quest for Olympic gold a chance to see a different, more intimate side of the former track and field star.

Thank you to Doubleday Canada for the complimentary copy in exchange for an honest review!