

Ozzie’s Promise by Kathleen Schurman
Reviewed by Timothy Niedermann Locket’s Meadow is an animal rescue farm in Bethany Connecticut. It is a real place, filled with all sorts...


Welcome to ORB's March Issue
The Ides of March are upon us, but the only thing to be beware of is some outstanding new books by Canadian women. To celebrate the...


Kay's Lucky Coin Variety by Ann Y.K. Choi
Reviewed by Ian Thomas Shaw Every once in a while, a debut novel brings us a fresh look at what it means to be Canadian. Ann Choi's...


The Witches of New York by Ami McKay
Reviewed by Menaka Raman-Wilms The Witches of New York is a fascinating intertwining of the tangible and the magical. It’s set in New...


The House on Selkirk Avenue by Irena Karafilly
Reviewed by Timothy Niedermann It is late September 1998, and Kate is back in Montreal to help her daughter, Megan, move in to the...


A Darkness Absolute by Kelley Armstrong
Reviewed by Wendy Hawkin This is a bizarre title for a thriller, but once you dive into the plot you'll understand why. Book Two in the...


Elementary, She Read by Vicki Delany
Reviewed by Jim Napier Talk about timeless: nearly two hundred years after Arthur Conan Doyle’s classic tales first appeared, interest in...


Welcome to ORB's February Issue
This is Ottawa's foremost source of literary reviews.


A Plea for Constant Motion by Paul Carlucci
Much of Carlucci's writing is reminiscent of the work of Russell Wangersky. Both skillfully portray ordinary people rubbing against hard


Waste by Andrew F. Sullivan
All in all, it would be a challenge to find a grimmer novel than Waste. The book is bent on cataloguing the depth and intensity of darkness,




