If Alice Munro were a man, she'd be Scott Randall. Randall's stories examine the small moments in ordinary life with the kind of exacting detail and intimate characterization we have come to know in the stories of some our best female writers. >>
This novel captures that unique Montreal joie de vivre that survives despite bitter politics, economic downturns, language laws, record snowfalls, crumbling streets, and a baseball team on the verge of disappearing. >>
Hunter's work is startling in its ability to capture both ephemeral beauty, humour and horrifying reality—from a rain-washed day at the lake to a dismissal of a former lover to a murder committed in rush-hour traffic in broad daylight. >>
RECENT
Launch follows Theo Strahl, a quirky Winnipeg scavenger, artist and inventor, whose long-held fears of the world's end are triggered by an otherworldly voice commanding him to build a spaceship. As Theo becomes obsessed with escaping the planet, his marriage and his relationships with his son and his closest friends are tested, as he confronts his deepest fears about survival, love, and hope. >>
Le soleil du lac qui se couche/The Setting Lake Sun (ebook)
Angèle is a young Métis woman who dreams of becoming an architect. One evening in a Winnipeg art gallery at a show by a Native artist she happens to meet Ueno Takami, an aging Japanese poet. It is an encounter that will change both their lives. >>
Navigating through tragedy with sincere inquiry, Learning to Love a River explores unlikely existences in and of Thunder Bay, a small northern Ontario city rife with stereotypes and misconceptions. >>
When she agrees to care for her dying ex-lover, Delia Buckley has no idea the ways in which the past will come back to haunt her. >>
Let the People Speak: Oppression in a Time of Reconciliation
Author Sheilla Jones calls for a revolutionary change in the relationship between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Canadians by empowering First Nations people through modernized Treaty annuities. >>