Search
Judith Henderson makes sure that readers are laughing and smiling along with the adorable pair of pals in this story as they reach for the sky.
By Phoebe Yì Lǐng
Johanne Durocher provides a starting point by fulfilling her daughter’s wish that she tell her story through a book.
By Dana Bath
In his book, Paul Huebener proposes a critical analysis of sleep as a human activity and as a symbol in Canadian culture.
By Karolina Roman
Judith Adamson’s latest memoir, Ghost Stories, is an exploration of biography as a form of storytelling.
By Aishwarya Singh
Hellner-Mestelman's debut is a travel guide for explorers with no known destination. Put another way, this is a book of questions.
By Meaghan Thurston
Eleven of the smartest minds define, demystify, and dismantle the imagined histories of the centuries preceding Canadian federation.
By Jack McClelland
Québécois writers Jean-Lou David and Gabrielle Izaguirré-Falardeau weave a tapestry of longing and rejection, nostalgia and despair.
By Emma Dollery
Mirion Malle's book resonates with the familiar feeling of wanting to accept easy answers, while also having to learn to listen to yourself.
By Ashton Diduck
The Montreal Review of Books launches its Spring 2024 issue on Thursday, March 14th, at Hotel 10 (10 Sherbrooke Street West) in partnership with the Blue Metropolis International Literary Festival!
By
Sarah Gysin is a part-time illustrator and comics artist ...
By
Three new plays –Trench Patterns, Shorelines, and Blackout – remind us that the past is prelude to present quandaries.
By Jim Burke
Sarah Gilbert considers the consequences of gentrification, and how the places we inhabit shape our relationships.
By Ariella Kharasch