Somewhere in the gathering dawn beyond the blinds, the first car alarm in March hails…
Robert Lacerte (or “Baloney,” as he’s known in the Montreal literary scene) has been a…
Why Margaret Atwood’s 1972 novel remains an uncannily courageous, weird, and potentially explosive work.
“Given that I see and experience the world only from the perspective of my own tiny-skull-sized kingdom, reading a novel is the closest I’ve come to feeling the experience of someone else.”
“Mars became a metaphor for the act of writing itself — venturing toward a truth, a compelling intuition, a distant heartbeat…”
Selections from the Lost Library of CanLit graphic novels
Selections from the Lost Library of CanLit graphic novels
“Goose Territory” & “October Moon”
Described as a cross between Room and Olive Kitteridge, Rebecca Rosenblum’s first novel, So Much…
In Nathan Whitlock’s sharply funny second novel, Jeremy is the owner of The Ice Shack,…