CanLit has become less about art and aesthetics than about morality and politics.
Author: Ashley Van Elswyk
Nathan Ripley, Craig Davidson, Timothy Taylor & Sharon Butala move away from traditional CanLit into genre.
“His wig and the heels of his clown shoes added some height, but Alice could reach his throat in a moment, if need be.”
Ian Weir’s phantasmagorical novel features a village of left-field characters.
Rice’s novel complicates and demands a rethinking of the apocalyptic category itself.
Sometimes the bartenders fill shot glasses until the liquid bubbles above the rim and it’s impossible lift them without dripping.…
In her latest collection, Amanda Jernigan turns Mennonite hymns into formally exquisite poetry.
Alberto Manguel’s 1991 Canadian anthology, “Canadian Mystery Stories.”
Everything essential about Adrian Michael Kelly’s new story collection, The Ambassador of What, is right there in the very first…
“Canada Reads” isn’t about literature, or discovering good books; it’s about what’s socially edifying, and new.