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Denison Avenue
Denison Avenue | Christina Wong
7 posts | 7 read | 1 to read
A moving story told in visual art and fiction about gentrification, aging in place, grief, and vulnerable Chinese Canadian elders Bringing together ink artwork and fiction, Denison Avenue by Daniel Innes (illustrations) and Christina Wong (text) follows the elderly Wong Cho Sum, who, living in Torontos gentrifying ChinatownKensington Market, begins to collect bottles and cans after the sudden loss of her husband as a way to fill her days and keep grief and loneliness at bay. In her long walks around the city, Cho Sum meets new friends, confronts classism and racism, and learns how to build a life as a widow in a neighborhood that is being destroyed and rebuilt, leaving elders like her behind. A poignant meditation on loss, aging, gentrification, and the barriers that Chinese Canadian seniors experience in big cities, Denison Avenue beautifully combines visual art, fiction, and the endangered Toisan dialect to create a book that is truly unforgettable.
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review
MysticFaerie
Denison Avenue | Christina Wong
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Pickpick

4.5⭐️/5⭐️

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xicanti
Denison Avenue | Christina Wong
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Sunday afternoon book & beer. I‘m halfway through the words part of DENISON AVENUE, and the thing that strikes me so far is that while Wong Cho Sum may be grieving her closest connection following her husband‘s death, she‘s still in community with so many kind people. It‘s beautiful.

The beer, a Great Scott! Cream Ale from Blackwheat Brewing Co out of Brandon, MB, is just what I feel like tonight. Crisp malt & slight biscuit finish, as promised.

KadaGul Great Combo, book 📖 + Beer 🍺 = LOVING 🥰 SUNDAY #DaylightSavingsErrrr (edited) 9mo
xicanti @KadaGul yessss! 9mo
39 likes2 comments
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BookishTrish
Denison Avenue | Christina Wong
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Pickpick

A gorgeous meditation on community, grief, belonging, aging in place, gentrification. I think this one will go far in the Canada Reads debates this week.

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Nebklvr
Denison Avenue | Christina Wong
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Mehso-so

While parts of this story connected, much of it fell flat. It is more art than story and while that art is gorgeous, it didn‘t grab me. CanadaReads2024

kwmg40 That's too bad. I was intrigued by this one. I might read it anyhow, if only to admire the artwork. 10mo
Nebklvr @kwmg40 Definitely give it a go! Would love to hear what you think. 10mo
kwmg40 I‘m still on my library‘s waiting list. I‘m curious about the book also because I‘m somewhat familiar with the area. My daughter lived nearby when she was studying in Toronto. 10mo
Nebklvr @kwmg40 That would help. I love to read about places I have been. 9mo
kwmg40 @Nebklvr Yes, me too! 9mo
35 likes5 comments
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LaraS
Denison Avenue | Christina Wong
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I‘ve read 4 of the 5 #CanadaReads books so far, the only one left is a graphic novel. I know I can easily nab the e-book from my library‘s express on overdrive, but when it comes to graphic novels I just prefer the actual physical book, ya know? Sadly I think I have to face reality and accept that I‘m not going to get my hands on the physical one before March!

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JacqMac
Denison Avenue | Christina Wong
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Pickpick

A work of art. The smooth sensuality of glossy paper. The way she conveyed emotions with the placement of the words on the page. A story about grief and resilience. “Decades of saving. A life spent saving, waiting for the right time, for the right moment. A moment that never arrived, continually delayed, postponed. Because we assume there will always be another time, another moment. Why do we wait?” My number one for #CanadaReads2024.

TheKidUpstairs Are the pictures interspersed throughout the story in the physical book? I read an e-book and the pictures were all relegated to an appendix at the end, it was my only complaint about it. Such a beautiful, poignant story. 10mo
JacqMac @TheKidUpstairs No, they were all at the end. But upside down. You had to flip the book over and read it from the other side. Almost like it was two books in one. I think I would have liked to have them interspersed throughout the book, too. 10mo
40 likes2 comments
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TheKidUpstairs
Denison Avenue | Christina Wong
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Pickpick

The story of Wong Cho Sum navigating grief, aging, and a changing neighbourhood is full of emotion, beauty, and grit. Told in alternating styles - literary realism comingles with poetry - the silences and blank spaces offer a profound moment of pause and speak to the disorientation, confusion, and grief Cho Sum experiences. There are also plenty of beautiful moments of hope and connection within the community. (cont'd in comments)

TheKidUpstairs ... For those familiar with Toronto's streetscape, the choice to set the book prior to the closure of Honest Ed's brings a familiarity and immediacy to the themes of a changing, gentrifying cityscape. Honest Ed's (“Chaan Lau“ to Cho Sum) serves as a touchpoint throughout the story - mentions of a sales, signs, and landmark building abound - and it is of course no more.

(cont'd in next comment)
11mo
TheKidUpstairs ... Daniel Innes' illustrations of a changing Chinatown and Kensington Market are beautiful and incredibly detailed, but in the digital version I read they were relegated to an addendum after the novel. I think they would have been more effective peppered throughout the story. I'd be interested to know if the physical book is the same format?

A strong contender for #CanadaReads
11mo
BarbaraBB Wow, I am now super interested while I hadn‘t heard of it until now! 11mo
57 likes3 comments