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Lynda Calvert Lynda Calvert

The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley

The Ministry of Time takes place in the near future. The British government has just discovered time travel and decides to pluck a handful of people from the past - men and women who died during tumultuous times in British history - and bring them to the present. The Ministry refers to them as ‘expats’, as in, expats from time. What can they learn from the expats, and about the effects of time travel? Unknown to them, the expats are guinea pigs in a scientific experiment, but, as the Ministry’s cold logic goes, they were going to die in their own time anyway. Will the expats survive?

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Lynda Calvert Lynda Calvert

Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt

Shelby Van Pelt’s Remarkably Bright Creatures is a treat. Exactly the kind of quirky, fun, wise, humorous, sad but ultimately uplifting novel I couldn’t put down.

The rescue of an ageing giant Pacific octopus named Marcellus kicks off events. Unhappy with the meals his keepers have been providing, Marcellus escapes from his tank, but his food run nearly turns fatal when his tentacles become entangled in power cords. His unlikely rescuer is the aquarium’s night cleaner - a tiny, seventy-year-old woman with a bad back named Tova Sullivan. Grateful for her life-saving assistance, Marcellus decides to help Tova solve the mystery of her son’s death.

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Lynda Calvert Lynda Calvert

Summer 2024 newsletter

I watched this year’s July 1 Memorial Day services live on TV. The remains of an unknown soldier, who died fighting with the Royal Newfoundland Regiment in WWI, had been returned to Canada from France and entombed at the Newfoundland National War Memorial in St. John’s. I’m not an overly emotional person, but at a few points I teared up during the ceremony. As to why I did that – watching remotely via an impersonal TV screen in a city half a continent away – well, that’s about story telling.

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Lynda Calvert Lynda Calvert

Spring 2024 newsletter

The injustice of social, economic and gender inequality are recurring themes in my fiction. No wonder then that attempts to ban books from public libraries – libraries that belong to the whole population – touch a nerve for me.

There is a vast array of knowledge and experience from the whole population of humans, and I think fiction featuring characters like Marcie is important. Marcie’s challenges may not be yours, but we still need to tell stories like hers. Most importantly, we all deserve full, unfettered access to stories like hers.

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