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BOOK REVIEWS

starGreen City: People, Nature and Urban Places

by Mary Soderstrom

Publisher: Véhicule Press
Price: $22.95 paper
ISBN: 978-1-55065-207-9
Page count: 240 pp.
Size: 5½ x 8½
Released: Nov.

We hear so much about “green” these days that the adjective has gotten a little tired. But readers with a taste for books on urban architecture and public planning – and more broadly, the sociology and history of cities – can thank Montreal writer Mary Soderstrom for breathing some exciting new life into the term.
Soderstrom (who is Q&Q’s Quebec correspondent) takes a fascinating look at the development of 11 cities that have each, in some important way, worked hard to carve out nature-rich spaces like parks and public gardens. Some of these cities, such as ancient Babylon, London, and Shanghai, are world-famous for their attempts to maintain green spaces. (In the case of Shanghai, this approach is part of a larger initiative to demolish skyscrapers and low-cost housing so that 35 percent of the city’s core will be reclaimed for green space by 2010.)
Though Soderstrom does a superb job chronicling the work of well-known green cities, it’s in her explorations of less-familiar urban centres that she really shines. Hamilton, Ontario, for example, has a well-deserved reputation for being a blue-collar steel city, but Soderstrom mines it for fascinating details about its private and public gardens, well-preserved marshland, and the city’s attractive green entrance from the shores of Lake Ontario – without ever forgetting that it was the steel industry that allowed it all to happen in the first place.
Books about urban planning and history often digress into dull, policy-wonk narratives. Soderstrom avoids this with a snappy, entertaining prose style, bolstered by meticulous research and many firsthand interviews.

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Inside: Q&Q looks back on the year that was in our December issue, now on newsstands, in which we highlight the year’s biggest books and news stories. Also in the issue, we look at the controversial decision by Random House of Canada and McClelland & Stewart to outsource foreign rights sales, and at how Annabel Lyon, Kate Pullinger, and a new wave of writers are revitalizing the genre of historical fiction. All that, plus reviews of new books by Jane Urquhart, Yann Martel, L.M. Montgomery, Barbara Reid, Gordon Korman, and more.

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