The Globe and Mail
Sarah Laing
Published January 14, 2021
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In the three months or so her book has been out, Marlowe Granados’s friends have been sending her pictures of the volume in situ at their individual homes.
“You can see how they’ve all worn differently,” Granados
says on a video chat, one eye on her cat causing mischief just off screen. “My one friend always reads it in the bath, so it’s covered in water stains. One of my other friends has quite a few roommates, and it’s been on their coffee table. It’s gotten so torn up that I’m like, ‘What did you guys do to this book? It looks like someone chewed on it.’”