Search
Barnet’s biting wit reflects the rising tide of postmodern millennial fiction, most clearly seen in her dual wielding of sincerity and irony.
By Nived Dharmaraj
Little Mouse loves to spend quiet days sipping tea in her burrow and learning about the world through encyclopedias.
By Meaghan Thurston
Elvie, Girl Under Glass is an ambitious memoir following Elvira Cordileone’s early life in Montreal amid cultural revolution.
By Nadia Trudel
In her latest book, Nora Loreto identifies the boogeyman of neoliberalism as the culprit of our present troubles.
By Jack McClelland
Derek Webster’s second collection contains a panoramic meditation on the spell of nationhood and its grip on our lives.
By Martin Breul
Legault and Weststar repeatedly ask, “What does it mean to be a citizen at work in a project-based workplace?”
By Miranda Eastwood
Geneviève Bigué explores the precarity of both our natural and social ecosystems through the eyes of adolescent wonder and curiosity.
By Alex Trnka
his latest offering from Monica Arnaldo is a whodunnit for olfactory detectives.
By Meaghan Thurston
In Morris' novel, friendship is a life-saving light on a young woman’s quest for truth in the aftermath of sexual assault.
By Kimberly Bourgeois
Traditional country life is at the heart of the lullabies and nursery rhymes collected by Nathalie Soussana.
By Meaghan Thurston
Nauetakuan, translated from French by Howard Scott, reads a bit like a YA novel, following Monica’s gradual coming-of-age.
By Roxane Hudon
Drimonis' book presents observations on immigration in Canada, focusing on Quebec, alongside a specific consideration of asylum and refugees.
By Erin MacLeod