Power Q & A with Robin Pacific

Power Q & A with Robin Pacific

Robin Pacific’s memoir, Skater Girl, (Guernica Editions, 2024) is an electric and disruptive examination of a life that challenges assumptions of not only how a memoir should read, but also, how women should act. It is definitely one of our favourite nonfiction reads this year, and we’re thrilled to have Robin on our Power Q & A to share a little bit more about her scrappy and sensational book.

Welcome Robin!

Power Q & A with Melanie Marttila

Power Q & A with Melanie Marttila

It’s National Poetry Month, and we are celebrating by showcasing poet Melanie Marttila. Her debut collection, The Art of Floating (Latitude 46) is a testament to years of honing her craft. The collection of five sections of free verse poems is wide-ranging and eclectic, bringing to life her deep connection with the earth and sky of Ontario. The aptly named collection describes her learned ability to ride the unpredictable waves of mental illness and prevent herself from drowning within it, while seeking solace in the natural world around her. These lyric poems are stunning and transportative, absorbing the reader with captivating imagery, complex diction, and highly relatable themes most pivotal in life, such as loss, grief, and hope.

Power Q & A with Courtney Bates-Hardy

Power Q & A with Courtney Bates-Hardy

In one of the year’s most anticipated poetry releases, Anatomical Venus (Radiant Press, 2024), author Courtney Bates-Hardy offers a visceral collection that invokes anatomical models, feminine monsters, and little-known historical figures. It’s a journey through car accidents and physio appointments, 18th-century morgues, and modern funeral homes. Grappling with the cyclical nature of chronic pain, these poems ask how to live with and love the self in pain. Magic seeps through, in the form of fairy tales, in the stories of powerful monsters, in the introspection of the tarot, and the transcendence of queer love. 

We’re excited to have Courtney join us for this Power Q & A to speak to the slick and writhing vitality of her work.

Get Away to Go Home: How To Plan A Writing Retreat 

Get Away to Go Home: How To Plan A Writing Retreat 

As a special feature, we welcome the phenomenal author and workshop facilitator Lauren Carter to our blog to talk about something many writers dream about often, and execute less: we’re talking about writer’s retreats—those elusively but oh-so beneficial companions to a healthy writing practice.

Lauren Carter is the award-winning author of five books, with news of the sixth coming soon. She holds an MFA in Creative Writing and a certificate in teaching and training adult learners and regularly teaches writing. From June 7-9, 2024, she will be co-leading Stillwater: A Trauma-Informed Writing Retreat at a gorgeous historic estate on Ontario’s Lake Simcoe. 

Epilepsy Month Excerpt: In Sickness and In Health, by Nora Gold

Epilepsy Month Excerpt: In Sickness and In Health, by Nora Gold

March is Epilepsy Month, and we are honoured to be featuring an excerpt from Nora Gold’s new novella, In Sickness and In Health, which is part of a set of novellas published earlier this month by Guernica Editions.

The narrative around epilepsy has been, historically, fraught with misinformation and prejudice, and Nora explores this stigma and shame in her writing.

Power Q & A with Marion Agnew

Power Q & A with Marion Agnew

We first came to admire the writing of Marion Agnew when we read her debut book, a memoir: Reverberations: A Daughter’s Mediations on Alzheimer’s. When her second book—the novel Making Up the Gods was published—we knew we had to invite her on our Power Q & A series. Even though the books are markedly different, in narrative approach as well as genre, there was a major similarity readers were picking up on, and we had a question.

Power Q & A with Kate Rogers

Power Q & A with Kate Rogers

Kate Rogers is the author of The Meaning of Leaving, a tender and unflinching collection of poems that strives to show society's thoughtless acceptance of violence towards the vulnerable: women, the natural world, and the unhoused who struggle with mental health and addiction issues. These are brave and tender poems that will ignite and unite.

These are also incredibly personal poems, many of which Rogers identifies as autobiographical. In this Power Q & A, we ask Kate about the impetus and challenges of this project.

Power Q & A with Patrick Grace

Power Q & A with Patrick Grace

Patrick Grace's collection of poetry, Deviant, is one of the most anticipated debuts of the year, tracing a tender and salient exploration of queer identity and belonging, as well as Patrick's personal experiences with the systemic dismissal of intimate partner violence that occurs in 2SLGBTQ+ relationships.

We're stoked to have him on this Power Q & A to ask one of our most pressing questions about the collection.

"Afternoons are my favourite time for sex": A Sexual Health Week CanLit Special!

"Afternoons are my favourite time for sex": A Sexual Health Week CanLit Special!

February 12-16 is 2024 Sexual Health Week here in Canada, and we’re always up for raising awareness about sexual health, education, and care—especially when we can do that through amazing CanLit. That’s why we’re almost inappropriately excited to be featuring an excerpt of award-winning author Susan Wadds’ upcoming novel, What the Living Do, due out with Regal House Publishing on March 18, 2024.

Power Q & A with Carmela Circelli

Power Q & A with Carmela Circelli

Our Power Q & A guest today is Carmela Circelli—a Toronto psychotherapist and philosophy professor at York University, and also the author of the novel, Love and Rain (Guernica Editions, 2023). Love and Rain is a stunning story that explores the human cost of political ideology against the backdrop of the FLQ movement in Quebec and the Red Brigades in Italy. Carmela's work resounds with the depth and immediacy of the human psyche, and shows, with painful clarity, how we flail and suffer in times of civil unrest.

Power Q & A with Gail Kirkpatrick

Power Q & A with Gail Kirkpatrick

Gail Kirkpatrick is our esteemed guest for this Power Q & A. Gail is the author of the beautiful novel, Sleepers and Ties (Now or Never Publications, 2023)—a story about the importance of rebuilding community and friendships, and how these connections are often missing from (but necessary to) our everyday lives. This lack of connectivity is something so many of us feel, despite our increasingly digitally-tethered productivity-obsessed existences. We had to ask Gail: how does she take it slow?

Power Q & A with Catherine Owen

Power Q & A with Catherine Owen

The incomparable Catherine Owen is our guest for this Power Q & A, and we are honoured to welcome her. Catherine is a vital member of the CanLit community and she has published 16 collections in four genres. Today, we wanted to ask Catherine about her upcoming poetry collection, Moving to Delilah, (Freehand Books, April 1, 2024). Having been on 12 cross-Canada book tours, she’s chosen a distinctly different approach to launching this most recent collection, hosting salon-like in-home performances and discussions. We were fascinated and we had to ask: why?

Power Q & A with Niloufar-Lily Soltani

Power Q & A with Niloufar-Lily Soltani

Zulaikha is the gripping and gorgeous debut novel by Iranian-Canadian author Niloufar-Lily Soltani (published by Inanna Publications). The novel takes place over a forty-year period of war and upheaval in the Middle East—specifically, in Zulaikha's home territory of Khuzestan, which boasts the bulk of Iran's oil reserves. We’re delighted to have Lily with us for this Power Q & A to talk about the inspiration for this book and her world-building through language.

Power Q & A with Gary Barwin

Power Q & A with Gary Barwin

Welcome Gary Barwin to our Power Q & A! Gary is, most recently, the author of Imagining Imagining: Essays on Language, Identity and Infinity (Wolsak & Wynn, 2023). This transfixing collection of personal essays offers a wide-eyed exploration of identity, language, belonging, and the unruly wonder of our existence. Gary’s writing is a timely and vital antidote to the desensitization of the news cycle, and a reminder of the importance of belonging—a topic as relevant now as ever.