#CanLit in Mississauga | Coming Soon

Heads up Mississauga #CanLit lovers: some exciting news coming your way this winter/spring!

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Image courtesy of the event website

In conversation with Charles Pachter and Margaret Atwood

Tuesday, March 29, 6 pm, Noel Ryan Auditorium, Mississauga Central Library

Tickets: FREE, book on Eventbrite

First up, Margaret Atwood (yes, the Margaret Atwood!) hits the stage at the Mississauga Central Library on March 29th. I am a huge fan of Margaret Atwood’s work, so you can bet I booked my tickets immediately and will be staking out a claim on a front row seat.

Atwood and Pachter will be in conversation about their book The Journals of Susanna Moodie (first published in 1970 and reprinted in 1997). The book features poems by Atwood, taking on Moodie’s voice, about life in rural Canada in the early 19th century, and Pachter’s illustrations of these poems.

The event is organized in line with Mississauga Museums’ exhibition The Journals of Susanna Moodie, featuring prints on loan from the McMichael Canadian Art Collection, and can be viewed at the Bradley Museum until April 17, 2016.

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13 Ways of Looking at a Fat Girl by Mona Awad

Publication date February 23, 2016, YA Fiction

Mississauga will also be getting its time in the #CanLit sun in Mona Awad’s upcoming novel 13 Ways of Looking at a Fat Girl. The story is set in Mississauga (or as the book’s protagonist Lizzie calls it, “Misery Saga”), and features an teenage girl’s struggle with her weight and body image. The author will be visiting Montreal and Toronto (check out the full list of publisher’s events for this book), so heads up if you’re interested.

The book sounds hilarious, and I definitely have it on my TBR pile, so keep an eye out for a review forthcoming on this blog.

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Image from Facebook

The Pitiful Human Lizard Issue # 7 by Jason Loo

Publication Date April 20, 2016, Pre-order at your local comic book shop

I’ve long been a fan of Jason Loo’s Pitiful Human Lizard comic book series about a self-deprecating Toronto superhero whose adventures are hilariously endearing.

In issue 7, coming this spring, our hero is stranded in the suburbs of Mississauga, with only his costume and not enough cash for bus fare back to the city. Will he get back home in time for work the next day? Will he discover the seedy underbelly of Square One’s parking lot? And above all, will he team up with iconic former Mississauga Mayor Hazel McCallion? We’ll have to wait until April to find out!

Review | The Productivity Project, Chris Bailey

25733994Many of us have likely been there: we have too much to do and not enough time to do it all. Every New Year, there is a new slate of books promising to help us improve our productivity and learn to get more done in a limited amount of time. Author Chris Bailey geeks out over productivity, and dedicated an entire year of his life in testing out various productivity techniques in order to weed out the useless ones and find the nuggets of gold. The result is The Productivity Project.

The book is full of useful tips, such as the following:

  1. Find out your personal periods of peak performance and schedule your tasks accordingly. For example, the standard work day may be from 9 – 5, but if you find you work best between 10 – 12 and 3 – 5, then schedule your most important work for those hours.
  2. Set aside a Maintenance Day. Rather than try to do chores like groceries and laundry intermittently throughout the week, push off all that you can until a Maintenance Day, when you can tackle them all at once. This will free up your concentration during the rest of the week to focus on more important things.
  3. Externalize your work by making notes on all the things you have to do in both your professional and personal lives. In this, Bailey imagines the brain much like Sherlock Holmes’ mind palace and the tasks we need to accomplish as clutter that needs to be put away for us to focus. By writing our entire to-do list down, we eliminate the need to think and worry about it, and can then focus on actually getting things done.

All of this and more are very useful techniques, and Bailey has a very practical, straightforward style that makes this book an easy read. I also appreciate the estimated reading time at the beginning of each chapter, as well as how he ends each chapter with a suggested exercise, including estimated usefulness, degree of difficulty and time commitment. Both his tone and the way the chapters are set up convey a respect for the limitations on his readers’ time, and helps us break up the reading into manageable chunks throughout our week.

One concern I had, I suppose, is that I didn’t really feel like I learned much that is new. In contrast to another book on productivity I read recently, Brian Tracy’s Eat that Frog!, which I found so useful that I actually noted my key takeaways from that book on Post-its in my workspace, I’m not sure what, if anything, so struck me when reading this book that I would post it at my desk.

I also found the book to be vague when it comes to explaining some of the techniques and more importantly, how exactly Bailey measured his success. Partly this may be because he was being productive about researching productivity, so I suppose the book itself is a measure of success. But, for example, in the chapter on procrastination, Bailey experiments with techniques to not procrastinate, and then compares his “before and after” time breakdown:

(BEFORE)

  • 19 hours on reading and research
  • 16.5 hours writing
  • 4 hours conducting and participating in interviews
  • 8.5 hours doing maintenance-type tasks
  • 6 hours procrastinating (page 56)

(AFTER)

  • 17.5 hours reading and research
  • 15 hours writing
  • 5.5 hours conducting and participating in interviews
  • 2.5 hours doing maintenance-type tasks
  • 1 hour procrastinating (page 67)

Here’s the thing: he never explains where those extra five hours go. The time spent on most of the other tasks also decreased, so it’s not like giving up the five hours of procrastination gave him more energy to work more on various tasks. It’s possible that not procrastinating meant he was able to get more done in a shorter amount of time, and the extra five hours from procrastinating and extra nine or so hours from other tasks went to having fun instead. But as it is, I don’t know how this time tracking comparison proves that not procrastinating makes you more productive.

I also don’t quite understand how Bailey defines or measures productivity. Partly, it’s because his project is so meta — he’s being productive in researching and writing about productivity, so unless he provides his entire resume and bibliography, this book is the single quantifiable marker of his productivity. But also because he simply asserts that he is more productive, without quite explaining what he means by that.

For example, in the chapter on productivity peak periods, he tells us he’s discovered that he is most productive at two particular periods in the day. How does he know that? Did he measure how many pages he was able to write per hour? Did he have an external consultant rate the quality of his work on an hourly basis? Or is it simply a generic feeling of when he felt most productive? Which I must clarify is nothing to sneeze at; we all know the feeling of being “in the zone.” But again, I wish Bailey made this clearer, so I wouldn’t have to infer it myself.

Overall, it’s not a bad book, and Bailey does have some good advice for being productive. This book also provided a pleasant distraction from my morning and afternoon commutes, as I ended up reading most of it on the subway.

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Thank you to Penguin Random House Canada for a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

Books, Be Mine: Valentine’s Day 2016

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Here’s a pretty awesome campaign by Simon and Schuster Canada for Valentine’s Day 2016. Valentine’s Day is for spending with your true love, so what better way to spend the day than with a book?

Every day leading up to Valentine’s Day, Simon and Schuster Canada will be sharing excerpts, quotes and other bookish fun on their Facebook event leading up to February 14th, so check it out if you’re looking for ideas on which books to spend the big day with.

Some ideas they’ve suggested include:

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And if you’re looking for a bit of a longer term love affair with books this year, check out the Simon and Schuster Canada Look Book, filled with samples of their Spring 2016 Fiction catalogue! It’s free to download on several ebook formats.

My personal Look Book highlights? I love Iain Reid’s memoir The Truth About Luck, and his upcoming I’m Thinking of Ending Things has been listed by the Globe and Mail as one of the most anticipated Canadian books in 2016. I’m also a big fan of Peggy Blair’s work, and am pretty excited to find out what happens next to Inspector Ramirez and his team. Keep an eye out as well on my blog for forthcoming reviews of Glory Over Everything and Kay’s Lucky Coin Variety, both of which have caught my eye and are currently on my TBR.

Thanks to Simon and Schuster Canada for this fun idea, and may you all have a bookish Valentine’s Day!

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