Fourteenth Week in Ordinary Time
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What has to die before you force yourself to change? That's the question facing the always quirky and often-queer characters of 'Canary'. From the communal showers of a hot yoga studio to seedy pubs on Vancouver's East Side, from Catholic …
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What has to die before you force yourself to change? That's the question facing the always quirky and often-queer characters of 'Canary'. From the communal showers of a hot yoga studio to seedy pubs on Vancouver's East Side, from Catholic merchandise salesmen to hitchhiking teenage lesbians, the people and places of Nancy Jo Cullen's debut are asphyxiating slowly on ordinary life. Yet in this joint-smoking urban underground, we also glimpse the families, communities, friends and strangers from whom unexpected kindness comes as a breath of fresh air. Trashy but poignant, comic and profound, Canary hangs luminous above the coal-heap of fiction debuts - and proves Nancy Jo Cullen a writer of astonishing depths.
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"What has to die before you force yourself to change? That's the question facing the always quirky and often-queer characters of 'Canary'. From the communal showers of a hot yoga …"
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