Power Q & A with Kathleen Lippa

Power Q & A with Kathleen Lippa

Arctic Predator: The Crimes of Edward Horne Against Children in Canada's North (Dundurn Press) by journalist Kathleen Lippa is a highly anticipated work of nonfiction. After years of research, Kathleen has written about the shocking crimes of Edward Horne, a trusted teacher who wrought lasting damage on Inuit communities in Canada’s Arctic when he sexually abused his male students.

Kathleen is not Indigenous and some people might question why Kathleen is the person to tell this story. We are honoured to have Kathleen on our Power Q & A series to talk about her position.

Power Q & A with Sawyer Cole

Power Q & A with Sawyer Cole

We met U.S. author Sawyer Cole a few years ago on Instagram and were immediately struck by their kindness, enthusiasm, and ability to talk about difficult issues movingly and with compassion. Sawyer is also a wonderful supporter of books and authors from around the world and today, we are delighted to welcome them to our Power Q & A to talk about reading with boundless curiosity.

Power Q & A with Louise Ells

Power Q & A with Louise Ells

Lies I Told My Sister is Louise Ells’ second novel and is a sensitive, poignant work of fiction. Taking place over just 17 hours and alternating between past and present, the novel takes us into the strained relationship of estranged sisters Rose and Lily, who are meeting at the hospital after Rose’s husband has been injured. Very quickly, issues of their childhood, the death of their older sister, and the inevitable truth of past lies and secrets surface. But while centering around a serious injury, the novel focuses on the cost of secrets, the depth of the bond between sisters, and just how far we will go to protect the ones we love—and ourselves.

Alchemizing the Mundane: Steven Mayoff Reviews Yellow Barks Spider by Harman Burns

Alchemizing the Mundane: Steven Mayoff Reviews Yellow Barks Spider by Harman Burns

The main narrative thrust of Yellow Barks Spider (Radiant Press, 2024), the debut coming-of-age novella by Saskatchewan-born trans-woman, filmmaker, sound artist and writer Harman Burns, is a rural boy’s journey toward transitioning to a woman. But to describe the experience of reading it in terms of coining a genre, I’d have to call it a Prairie Gothic Phantasia

Power Q & A with crystal fletcher

Power Q & A with crystal fletcher

all about canadian books (AACB) is one of our favourite author interview series. Host crystal fletcher doesn’t care if an author is a big name or the book a bestseller: she only cares that she likes the work. crystal has interviewed many of our favourite contemporary Canadian authors and brings with her to each conversation kindness, enthusiasm, and thoughtful and incisive questions—and her refreshingly raw and unfettered love of language. (Does anyone remember when she teared up during a National Poetry Month episode? As if we could adore her anymore!)

Power Q & A with Jean Marc Ah-sen

Power Q & A with Jean Marc Ah-sen

Kilworthy Tanner by Jean Marc Ah-sen (Vehicule Press, 2024) tells the story of Jonno—a ner’er-do-well and perpetually up-and-coming writer who becomes enthralled with the established, acclaimed, controversial, and already married but not monogamous author Kilworthy Tanner. What follows is a titillating metafiction that mirrors a literary world replete with “grasping, unprincipled” egos.

There’s much to love about this book, including Jonno’s narration, which teases and bites and soothes and is tender and playful. We are tickled to have Jean join us for this Power Q & A to talk about how he created his protagonist’s distinct voice.

Excerpt from On Beauty by rob mclennan

Excerpt from On Beauty by rob mclennan

Upon the death of her widower father, there came the matter of dismantling his possessions. Emptying and cleaning the house for resale. It wasn’t as though either of the children were planning on returning to the homestead, both some twenty years removed, but it fell to them to pick apart the entirety of their parents’ lives from out of this multi-level wooden frame, a structure originally erected by their grandfather and great-grandfather immediately following the Great War.

Power Q & A with Caroline Topperman

Power Q & A with Caroline Topperman

Caroline Topperman’s memoir is not only highly anticipated but powerfully titled. Your Roots Cast a Shadow: One Family's Search Across History for Belonging (HCI, December 17, 2024), arises from Caroline’s 2013 move from Vancouver to her family’s homeland, Poland, and encourages readers to examine the ways in which family histories shape our understanding of ourselves and society.

Power Q & A with Paola Ferrante

Power Q & A with Paola Ferrante

It’s easy to lose yourself in the dark and dreamy world of Paola Ferrante’s Her Body Among Animals (Book*hug Press). This collection of short fiction absorbs and unsettles. It explores the pressure of the patriarchy with playful and twisted stories that have dazzled readers since the book’s release in 2023. Paola’s book has been a finalist for the 2024 Governor General’s Literary Award for Fiction, a runner-up for the 2023 Danuta Gleed Literary Award, the Silver Winner of the 2023 Foreword INDIES Book of the Year Award for Short Stories, and a finalist for the 2023 Shirley Jackson Awards.

We are delighted to have Paola here with us today to talk about how her stories pitch darkness into light.

Excerpt from Your Roots Cast a Shadow by Caroline Topperman

Excerpt from Your Roots Cast a Shadow by Caroline Topperman

I am standing in the middle of the street, crying. “I hate this coffee. Why does everything taste so weird? Why is surówka served with everything?” To this day I don’t get what’s to love about a type of coleslaw. Why did we come here? What was I thinking? My poor husband stands helpless, watching my meltdown. He later tells me he was concerned by my extreme reaction, and worried that I was going to unravel. He felt bad, he said. He had no idea how to help me. We haven’t found our support system. For now it is just the two of us trying to navigate our daily existence. 

Power Q & A with Greg Rhyno

Power Q & A with Greg Rhyno

Greg Rhyno’s got a way with mystery. His novel, Who By Fire (Cormorant Books), is a gripping whodunnit that rings with sharp, witty observations that rival the hard-boiled pluck of Daschel Hammit. But without the sexism and with a delightful dose of Canadiana. In fact Who By Fire is set in Toronto. The novel tells the story of Dame—the daughter of a retired master sleuth—trying to pull her life together in the aftermath of a painful divorce. She is pulled into taking a PI job to try to make some extra cash. The job sounds easy: follow her landlord’s supposedly wayward wife around and confirm she’s been cheating. But what Dame uncovers is far more dangerous and dark than she imagined.

Power Q & A with Molly Peacock

Power Q & A with Molly Peacock

Molly Peacock’s experience of widowhood wasn’t what she expected. This is the catalyst for creating her collection of poems, The Widow’s Crayon Box(W.W. Norton and Company.) As an internationally beloved poet, biographer, and creativity activist, Molly is no stranger to the creative process or the act of releasing a book into the world. Still, to some extent, releasing a new book always carries some unexpected twists and turns.

In this Power Q & A, we asked Molly what she anticipates readers might find most surprising about her breathtaking new book.

Looking Under the Hood: A Conversation on the Writing Life with Michelle Berry and Peter Darbyshire

Looking Under the Hood: A Conversation on the Writing Life with Michelle Berry and Peter Darbyshire

Michelle Berry and Peter Dearbyshire are Canadian writers who are widely regarded as masters of their genres. Berry is known for her exhilarating and provocative literary thrillers. Her most recent novel, Satellite Image (Wolsak & Wynn, 2024), has been hailed as “a super-creepy, anxiety-filled tale that will dash any urbanite's fantasy of escaping to the tranquil countryside.” (Elyse Friedman, author of The Opportunist and The Answer to Everything.) Peter Darbyshire is renowned for wild and immersive speculative fiction that “mashes pop-culture genres together, exposing profound truths beneath classic tropes in ways at once hilarious, weird, and heart-breaking.” (Publishers Weekly.) Staring with The Mona Lisa Sacrifice, Darbyshire’s Cross Series, (which was originally published by the now defunct ChiZin)e, is enjoying a second reincarnation this year thanks to Hamilton, Ontario’s beloved publisher Wolsak & Wynn.

Power Q & A with Sheila Stewart

Power Q & A with Sheila Stewart

Sheila Stewart’s stunning poetry collection, If I Write About My Father, (Ekstasis Editions, 2024) dismantles the patriarchal religious ideologies of Sheila’s upbringing by a protestant minister, while sustaining the emotional intimacy experienced in familial relationships. 

Sheila explores the daughter-father relationship, uncovering the complexities of growing up as the minister’s only daughter in a family shaped by church and manse in small-town southern Ontario. She braids narrative and lyric, the textures of liturgy and memory. While critiquing patriarchal weight and constraint, the work explores how a particular religious upbringing shapes thinking, the rhythms of language, and the fabric of consciousness. 

Power Q & A with Wayne Ng

Power Q & A with Wayne Ng

Crime Writers of Canada Award-winning author Wayne Ng’s highly-anticipated Toronto-based novel, Johnny Delivers, is being released this November 1st by Guernica Editions, and it has already been included in CBC's and the 49th Shelf's Most-Anticipated Fall Fiction lists.

Set in 1977, Johnny Delivers tells the absorbing story of 18-year-old Johnny Wong—the son of Chinese immigrants to Canada—who calls on the spirit of Bruce Lee to help him navigate the still relevant challenges of racism and how it permeates our interiority, our institutions, our relationships, and our livelihood.

Power Q & A with Michelle Berry

Power Q & A with Michelle Berry

Michelle Berry is an acclaimed author of literary thrillers. Her newest novel, Satellite Image (Wolsak & Wynn, 2024) follows the story of Ginny and Matt, a young married couple from the city who decide to buy a house in a small town and move after Ginny is assaulted.

On the night before the move, however, Ginny and Matt, while looking at a satellite image of their new home, see what is undeniably a body in their backyard. Thus the stage is set for this eerie story.

Power Q & A with Alice Fitzpatrick

Power Q & A with Alice Fitzpatrick

Secrets in the Water by Alice Fitzpatrick is an absorbing mystery set in Wales that tells the story of Kate, a recently divorced woman who returns home to the fictional location of Meredith Island after her grandmother’s passing. There, she learns that her beloved aunt’s suicide may not have been a suicide. What follows is an exciting whodunnit in the tradition of great British mysteries.

Excerpt from In the Capital City of Autumn by Tim Bowling

Excerpt from In the Capital City of Autumn by Tim Bowling

Took the fat family bible and tossed it 
off the Lions Gate Bridge 
Goodbye Toronto pre-Depression infant death So long psalms of Edwardian fiscal failure 
Hurled it the same as Cobden-Sanderson  
into the Thames his blocks of type 
so no one could come after 
so no one could traffick in his lonely fight 
Good riddance to fleshpress and letterpress 
the antiquarian appetites of every cast 
let the orca swallow the bile anvil 
for a fibrillating sponge 
and sound so deep 

Power Q & A with Ian Colford

Power Q & A with Ian Colford

Books have long lives, but if it’s possible to be late to the party celebrating an amazing book, we are definitely late to this one. Ian Colford’s 2023 Guernica Prize-winning novel, The Confessions of Joseph Blanchard, is a mesmerizing read that runs a dazzling gamut of human emotion: love, greed, grief, jealousy, rage. You name it: the characters in this novel—particularly our protagonist, Joseph—sing with range that would make Mariah Carey weak with envy.

Power Q & A with Elizabeth Ruth

Power Q & A with Elizabeth Ruth

Award-winning writer Elizabeth Ruth’s first collection of poems, This Report is Strictly Confidential, (Caitlin Press, 2024) is stunning readers with its tender and biting look at Elizabeth’s aunt’s life in a notorious government-run residential hospital. These are poems that centre humanness in inhumane situations and undress taboo, pushing darkness into light and giving voice to the often voiceless.

Because the collection is so autobiographical in nature, we wanted to ask Elizabeth about the choices she made in deciding to share these parts of her aunt’s story with the world. Elizabeth was gracious enough to answer our question.