Alisa York, author of Fauna and Far Cry, calls Susan Wadds debut novel, What the Living Do, “a fierce and fearless novel about a woman drawn to self-destruction yet desperate to live – and maybe even love. A deeply moving and memorable debut.”
These words sum up what many readers have felt while immersed in the pages of this remarkable novel: a dogged persistence that seems at once a surrendering of one’s will to live and a testament to life. We asked Susan to join us for this special guest post to share about where this opposing and equal pull comes from. Her response was staggering.
Power Q & A with Myna Wallin
Mental illness is one of those subjects that always seems ripe for interrogation, especially when it comes to investigating our collective societal response to it. Myna Wallin’s new poetry collection, The Suicide Tourist (Ekstasis Editions, 2024), explores mental illness with verve, grace, and wisdom. It’s a collection that dives into the darkness and creates light; not by virtue of exposing any levity in living with mental illness, but by examining mental illness and neurodivergence frankly and with compassion, thereby alleviating, just a little, the burden of loneliness so many of us who live with it experience.
We’re honoured to have Myna on our Q & A series to talk about her beautiful and moving collection.
Power Q & A with Suzan Palumbo
A queer Count of Monte Cristo in space? Count us in!
We were fascinated by the premise of Countess (ECW Press) by Trinidadian-Canadian dark fiction speculative fiction author and editor Suzan Palumbo from the moment we heard of it, and our enthusiasm only compounded exponentially after reading this subversive and compelling novella. We’re delighted Suzan agreed to join us on our Power Q & A series. We had many burning questions about her thrilling adventure but wanted to ask specifically about bringing her culture into space.
Power Q & A with Jeff Dupuis
It’s Power Q & A time, and we are delighted to welcome author Jeffery Dupuis to our series to talk about his thrilling Creature X series (published by Dundurn Press). This trilogy follows Laura Reagan and her team as they travel the world in search of mysterious creatures unknown to science and find murder and intrigue. After reading the first book in the series, we wanted to know more about how Jeff created this cryptozoological adventure, which (let’s face it), must have involved a fair number of weird discoveries.
Power Q & A with Margaret Nowaczyk
Today’s Power Q & A features best-selling Polish-Canadian author and pediatric clinical geneticist Dr. Margaret Nowaczyk. Dr. Nowaczyk’s most recent book, Marrow Memory: Essays of Discovery invites readers to examine her DNA under a microscope, sharing her vast life experiences in a series of invariably absorbing and beautifully-crafted personal essays. From growing up in Communist Poland, to immigrating to Canada as a teen, to working as a pediatric clinical geneticist and professor at McMaster University, Nowaczyk bares her soul while encouraging readers to explore the ways in which our experiences and identities are entangled with our ancestral history.
Who is Blaise Cendrars? A special guest post by translator and author David J. MacKinnon
Like his contemporary Picasso, who also appeared to be locked in mortal combat with the tsunami of modernity, Blaise Cendrars’ kaleidoscopic lives can be viewed through the lens of successive periods, each of which mark Cendrars’ merging of art and life so radically, that the more he revealed, the more he appeared unfathomable, enigmatic and extraordinary.
Two Years In: What I’ve Learned as a Reviewer on Bookstagram
When I set out to start a book-focused account on Instagram two-and-a-half years ago, I hadn’t even heard the term Bookstagram. But when I retired from my busy professional life and rediscovered my love of reading, the idea of a book-focused social media venture took hold and wouldn’t let me go. I wanted to share my passion for all things books with others, so I made my first ever Instagram account, and I haven’t looked back.
Power Q & A with Emily De Angelis
Coming in at the perfect time for your summer reading list, The Stones of Burren Bay by Emily De Angelis, published by Latitude 46, is a moving, heartfelt, and fast-paced YA novel set on Manitoulin Island that combines magical realism, Irish Celtic spiritualism, and the core themes of YA fiction to which readers are drawn: the need to belong, self-discovery, and overcoming obstacles.
Power Q & A with Ariel Gordon
The original “fun-gal” of CanLit is back for a Power Q & A. We welcome the exubriant Ariel Gordon to the blog to talk about how she selected the home for her newest book, Fungal: Foraging in the Urban Forest (June 4, 2024).
Both personal and entertaining, Fungal: Foraging in the Urban Forest is the highly anticipated second book of a trilogy and shows Gordon at her best: interweaving the personal with the easily overlooked local and natural and local world around her, and passing on her contagious delight for the world at—and under—our feet.
Power Q & A with Joanne Jackson
We’re delighted to host Crime Writers of Canada Award-winning author Joanne Jackson on our blog. Her thrilling new novel, Sunset Lake Resort (Stonehouse Publishing, June 1, 2024), is a captivating narrative full of thrilling twists, exciting reveals, and gorgeously drawn characters. It is inspired in part by Joanne's own life. leaving the city to go to the lake, and her observations about the importance of community, and the cost of technological progress to our peace of mind.
This book is a perfect pick for an exciting and poignant summer read, and on this Power Q & A, we’re asking Joanne about one of our favourite parts of the book: namely, the championing of an older woman as a protagonist.
Excerpt: Dancing in the River by George Lee
May is Asian Heritage Month and we are honoured to be sharing an excerpt from the award-winning novel, Dancing in the River (Guernica Editions) by Vancouver lawyer and author George Lee.
Dancing in the River, won the Guernica Prize, and draws on Lee’s own life experiences growing up in China. It tells the coming-of-age story of a young boy during Mao’s Cultural Revolution—a boy named Little Bright living in a small, riverside town who is heavily indoctrinated by the anti-Western sentiment of the time and place. The perspectives afforded in this stunning novel—the insights into culture, politics, and personal experience—are crucial to a national and global understanding of Chinese history.
Power Q & A with Tim Bowling
Tim Bowling is the author of twenty-four works of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. He is the recipient of numerous honours, including two Edmonton Artists’ Trust Fund Awards, five Alberta Book Awards, a Queen Elizabeth II Platinum Jubilee Medal, two Writers’ Trust of Canada nominations, two Governor General’s Award nominations and a Guggenheim Fellowship in recognition of his entire body of work.
We are joined by this phenomenally accomplished and internationally-acclaimed CanLit icon for our Power Q & A series, to ask a quick question about his latest book, a collection of poems, In the Capital City of Autumn (published by Wolsak & Wynn, 2024).
Jewish Heritage Month Feature: Excerpt from Rubble Children by Aaron Kreuter
May is Jewish Heritage Month, and we are delighted to host an excerpt from Rubble Children (University of Alberta Press, July 2024)—new short fiction from Govenor General Award Finalist Aaron Kreuter.
Rubble Children is an absorbingly timely and necessarily explorative read, tackling Jewish belonging, settler colonialism, Zionism and anti-Zionism, love requited and unrequited, and cannabis culture, all drenched in suburban wonder and dread. Engaging, funny, dark, surprising, this collection is a scream of Jewish rage, a smoky exhalation of Jewish joy, a vivid dream of better worlds.
2024 Mother’s Day Book Recs
By its very nature, reading embodies two things so many mothers could use more of: downtime and connection. That’s why we’ve created a list of some of our favourite forthcoming and recently released books by Canadian authors. From wildly absorbing novels to tender, poignant poetry, to nonfiction that evokes reflection and joyous, kindred solidarity, these are reads that circle and explore ideas of mothering and motherhood for people who know you never stop growing up: there are always new things to learn, and perspectives to share.
Power Q & A with Mark Foss
The jury of the Guernica Prize called Borrowed Memories, Mark Foss’s third novel, “an evocative and nuanced story.” Borrowed Memories (8th House Publishing, 2024) juxtaposes a Canadian couple in their winter years against the rage and hope of the Arab Spring. In this tale of shifting identities, Ivan Pyefinch—a divorced translator—cares for his aging parents in the Thousand Islands while trying to find room in his heart for Mia Hakim, an immigrant filmmaker exploring her lost childhood in Tunisia. When Mia turns up unexpectedly at the Pyefinch home on the eve of Remembrance Day, a family health crisis puts all their stories on a collision course.
This poignant novel is about memories in all their forms—the ones slipping through our grasp, the ones we hold onto for others, the ones we never had but are trying to find, the ones we are trying to create.
Power Q & A with Dave Margoshes
Dave Margoshes’ new novel, A Simple Carpenter (Radiant Press, 2024) , is one of our most anticipated fiction releases of the year, and today, we are honoured to have this Saskatoon-area poet and fiction writer on our blog to speak to his remarkable book.
Set in the early and mid-‘80s in the Middle East, A Simple Carpenter plays out against a backdrop of strife in Lebanon and ethnic/religious tensions between Jews and Arabs in Israel and Palestine. This historical backdrop serves as an empathetic and thoughtful commentary on our modern political climate.
Excerpt from Fungal: Foraging in the Urban Forest
We’re tickled to be sharing an excerpt from the lastest book from the original “fun-gal”, mushroom hunter and author extraordinaire, Ariel Gordon.
Both personal and entertaining, Fungal: Foraging in the Urban Forest is the highly anticipated second book of a trilogy and shows Gordon at her best: interweaving the personal with the easily-overlooked natural world around her, and passing on her contagious delight for the world at—and under—our feet.
Power Q & A with George Lee
Author and attorney George Lee’s novel, Dancing in the River, won the Guernica Prize, and draws on Lee’s own life experiences growing up in China. It tells the coming-of-age story of a young boy during Mao’s Cultural Revolution—a boy named Little Bright living in a small, riverside town who is heavily indoctrinated by the anti-Western sentiment of the time and place. The perspectives afforded in this stunning novel—the insights into culture, politics, and personal experience—are crucial to a national and global understanding of Chinese history.
Power Q & A with Elena Bentley
Erasure poetry—it’s one of the best ways to get almost anyone to try creating a poem. All you’ve gotta do is black out some words and leave others. Simple right? Well yes. Simple, but not easy. Erasure poetry, also known as blackout poetry, isn’t burdened by many rules but it’s no small feat to turn a text saying one thing into a poem saying something different.
Elena Bentley (MA English, University of Toronto) is a multi-genre writer and proud Métis aunty. Her ecent poetry chapbook, taliped (845 Press), was a finalist in the 2022 Vallum Chapbook Award. And the poetry is all erasure.
We welcome her to our Power Q & A series today to talk with us about choosing erasure poetry for this project.
Power Q & A with Ellen Chang-Richardson
Poems are playful, precocious, and powerful things, and these are just some of the reasons we are so giddy to celebrate National Poetry Month by hosting the incomparable Ellen Chang-Richardson on our blog, as part of our Power Q & A series.
Ellen’s poems use the power of blank space to make bold, breathtaking statements and allow room for exploration. In their just-released debut poetry collection, Blood Belies (Wolsak & Wynn, 2024), Ellen writes of race, of injury, and of belonging in stunning poems that fade in and out of the page. They bring their father’s, and their own, stories to light, writing against the background of the institutional racism of Canada, the Chinese Exclusion Act, the head tax and more. From Taiwan in the early 1990s to Oakville in the late 1990s, Toronto in the 2010s, Cambodia in the mid-1970s and Ottawa in the 2020s, Blood Belies takes the reader through time, asking them what it means to look the way we do? To carry scars? To persevere? To hope?


















