The Apothecary’s Garden by Jeanette Lynes
If you’re looking for romance and whimsy and magic, look no further than Jeanette Lyne’s newest novel. If you are suffering from a case of the morbs, The Apothecary’s Garden is your balm. Enchantments abound and broken hearts become whole in this spellcasting novel.
On shelves June 28, 2022.
Astra by Cedar Bowers
Occasionally, a writer offers the world a book so glorious that readers find it difficult to articulate just what, exactly, was so profoundly breathtaking about said book. This is my experience of Astra. Okay, so I didn’t love every story included in this linked short story collection (only ten of the eleven episodic chapters were my favourite.) I didn’t even really love the main character whose story is told eleven different ways, only one of which is from her point of view (brilliant!)
2021 Giller Finalist Book Review: The Listeners by Jordan Tannahill
The Listeners by Jordan Tannahill is a wild and intoxicating ride. Current tensions including fake-news, mass hysteria, the dissemination of misinformation, polarization, cancel culture, identity politics, and incivility weave throughout the narrative creating confusion and anxiety not only for the fictionalized characters, but for the reader as well. Tannahill pits opposing worldviews against one another, but he also marries them. In so doing, he begs the question: What is the difference between de normalcy? What is truth? What is reality? What is sanity?
2021 Giller Finalist Book Review: Fight Night by Miriam Toews
Fight Night by Miriam Toews is a brilliant novel. Written in the voice of a girl named Swiv as she pens a letter to her absent father, Toews captures the universal vicissitudes of a life lived. All readers will likely relate to Swiv; her young perspective reflects the vulnerable child in all of us, the piece of us that always feels a bit uneasy and unprepared for the challenges we face.
Fight Night leaves a lasting impression and begs to be reread—a Giller competitor, indeed.
2021 Giller Finalist Book Review: What Strange Paradise by Omar El Akkad
Lately, reports of displacement seem to be less newsworthy, but El Akkad won’t let us forget; his novel invites readers to look, to see, to know, and to do better. For those of us privileged enough to have never been forced from our homes, What Strange Paradise is necessary reading; it is an exceptional book.