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10 MIN READ TIME

First impressions

ONE OF THE PLEASURES of working on our twice-yearly preview issues is that Q&Q’s editorial team gets an opportunity to spotlight debut authors months before some of their books go on to receive critical acclaim. Looking back at last fall’s preview, there were several titles that stand out, such as Inuit throat singer Tanya Tagaq’s genre-defying Split Tooth, which later became a bestselling literary-award winner, and Anne T. Donahue’s essay collection, Nobody Cares, which continues to delight readers. Months after appearing in our spring 2019 preview, Shut Up You’re Pretty, the debut collection of linked short stories by Toronto writer Téa Mutonji, received a starred review in this magazine. (This year’s fall preview, which features more than 150 titles by both debut and veteran authors, begins on page 16.)

This issue I also want to give a shout-out to another debut of note in the magazine. Our cover photo of blockbuster novelist Cherie Dimaline was taken by Alia Youssef, a new contributor to Q&Q. I first encountered Alia’s work through her Sisters Project, a series of 160 photographs of Muslim women taken across Canada. I was struck by the confident power in not just her photography, but in its expression across her wide range of portrait subjects.

Alia’s photos of Cherie Dimaline are not just stunning, they capture the author’s joyful essence and strength, also expressed beautifully in associate editor Ryan Porter’s feature profile on page 12 (which marks the first time axe-throwing has been the activity of choice for a Q&Q feature.) Alia worked closely under the guidance of our new art director, Adrian Doran, whose sharp aesthetic and design skills are apparent all through this issue. Adrian’s selection for the shoot’s location – a line of empty rail tracks in the west end of Toronto –nods to the dark atmosphere of Cherie’s new novel, Empire of Wild.

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Quill & Quire
July/Aug 2019
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Other Articles in this Issue


FRONTMATTER
PROFILE Uncanny valley
How Christy Ann Conlin found an eerie muse in Nova Scotia’s rural Annapolis Valley
NEWS Pictures and words
Kobo CEO Michael Tamblyn on knowing your customers – even when you can’t predict what’s coming next
AGONY EDITOR Click and go
Author websites are handy promotional tools, but don’t get too carried away
BOOKSELLING The Curiosity factor
How readers helped build a local literary community and thriving fall festival in small-town Ontario
BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE Greystone’s dream team
Publisher Rob Sanders launched the new Greystone Kids imprint after connecting with the right people at the right time
FEATURES
It’s a wild ride
When she became a blockbuster YA novelist with The Marrow Thieves, Cherie Dimaline was courted by the major players in Canadian publishing. Her one request: push me harder
2019 Fall Preview
150+ new titles in fiction, non-fiction, and books for children and young adults
Picture books
In his first picture book as author and illustrator
REVIEWS
MEMOIR Street life
Jesse Thistle honestly and forthrightly confronts his own lived experience and a system that betrays lost souls searching for a place to call home
FICTION Rabbit season
In her sophomore novel, Mona Award delves into areas of female rage and desire
POETRY Here and now
The pull of home, cynical humour, and metaphoric craft characterize a trio of new collections
MEMOIR Organizing principles
New memoirs by two noted political figures relate different approaches to their subject matter
EDITOR’S CHOICE The wanderer
Biographer Ian Cutler provides a glimpse into the peripatetic life of itinerant writer, artist, and musician Jim Christy
BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
GRAPHIC NOVEL Happily ever afters
A new queer comics collection offers a joyful tone
NON-FICTION But why?
New titles aim to answer kids’ general science questions and offer lessons on animal and human behaviour, respectively
PICTURE BOOKS If I ping, will you pong?
New concept picture books teach children to be individuals while also considering the thoughts and feelings of others
BOOK MAKING
On the line
Depicting the 2011 Tohoku tsunami and the story of a phone booth that helped survivors deal with their grief fell to first-time picture-book illustrator Rachel Wada