Arielle Twist’s elegant debut ends with a powerful postscript: “Ah-hay, my Indigiqueer and Two- Spirit kin, this is for…
Browsing: Reviews
Our first warnings about the internet’s impact grew out of our personal experience of it. You didn’t need any technical…
“Ill at ease”: that’s the phrase, antique but applicable. With Sophie Bienvenu’s one-of-a-kind Worst Case, We Get Married I found…
Samantha Heather Mackey isn’t like the other MFA students at Warren University, an Ivy-League school in a seemingly quaint New…
In John Miller’s third novel, two women from divergent backgrounds find themselves on the streets of Toronto working in the sex trade.
Technology meets desire in Liz Harmer’s post-apocalyptic debut novel.
“Black Star” is one of the better entries in a string of recent novels featuring protagonists losing their grip on reality.
Nathan Ripley, Craig Davidson, Timothy Taylor & Sharon Butala move away from traditional CanLit into genre.
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.