CA
  
You are currently viewing the Canada version of the site.
Would you like to switch to your local site?
14 MIN READ TIME

National hopes

LAST YEAR, around this time – like so many Canadian publishers and organizations – Quill & Quire’s staff sat around a table discussing options for our sesquicentennial coverage. Should we dedicate an issue to Canada’s 150th? Commit to monthly coverage? Organize an event? Create a list of the top 150 CanLit books of all time?

As July 1 approaches, it is becoming more apparent that even the concept of Canada 150 is fraught with problems. In light of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, the idea of celebrating 1867, Canadian Confederation, and colonialism feels miscalculated. On the other hand, outside of the pomp and fireworks, the anniversary is also drawing attention to longstanding issues, and leading to some bloody smart art and writing. Cree visual artist Kent Monkman used Canada’s sesquicentennial as a launching point for his powerful exhibition, Shame and Prejudice: A Story of Resilience, while it also served as the inspiration for Michif artist Christi Belcourt’s #Resist150 project.

Ultimately, Q&Q decided not to pursue any specific coverage of the anniversary, but rather maintain our focus, as we always have, on Canadian publishing, authors, and books. Yet when I look through this issue, I see pockets of writing that reflect on what it means to be Canadian right now – and where our country may be heading. There’s Tara Henley’s profile of Ahmad Danny Ramadan – a former Syrian refugee, who has become a well-know gay-rights activist and author in Vancouver – launching his first English-language novel (p. 6). On page 10, Eman Bare takes a look at Salaam Reads, Simon & Schuster’s new children’s imprint for Muslim stories, and its first YA author, S.K. Ali, who hopes to shed light on the complexities of Muslim identity. I also spoke to many publishers and booksellers across the country for my story about how cuts to local newspaper books coverage can affect sales (p. 7), and was reminded once again how vast this country is, the challenges of marketing regional titles, and the impossibility of a homogenous books culture ever existing. I also had the pleasure of speaking to several Canadian food writers about national identity through the cookbooks we love and the food we consume (hint: we’re not too fussy about celebrity chefs), and about the enduring legacy of Catharine Parr Traill’s The Female Emigrant’s Guide (starting p. 14).

Read the complete article and many more in this issue of Quill & Quire
Purchase options below
If you own the issue, Login to read the full article now.
Single Digital Issue June 2017
 
$6.99 / issue
This issue and other back issues are not included in a new subscription. Subscriptions include the latest regular issue and new issues released during your subscription. Quill & Quire

This article is from...


View Issues
Quill & Quire
June 2017
VIEW IN STORE

Other Articles in this Issue


Contributors
Contributors
Chelsee Ivan was born and raised in a rural town in
FRONTMATTER
Narrative shift
Ahmad Danny Ramadan’s English-language debut challenges readers’ perspectives of the refugee experience
The numbers game
Do local bestseller lists help sell regional titles?
Great expectations
Once the joy of being published fades, the challenge of growing as an author begins
Deals
Highlights from Quill & Quire’s daily online reports
Mirror images
Simon & Schuster sheds light on the complexities of Muslim identity for young readers with its new imprint, Salaam Reads
On the road
After three tries, a Canadian indie band’s tour diaries finally yielded a book, writes
FEATURES
Beyond the butter tart
Canadian food writing has come into its own, despite the lack of a homegrown Anthony Bourdain or Ruth Reichl. Three authors share their insights into the country’s culinary prose
Traill guides
A new edition of The Female Emigrant’s Guide provides modern cooks with deeper historic context and kitchen-friendly recipes
Genuine article
Author and illustrator Debbie Ridpath Ohi’s books are a perfect reflection of her big-hearted personality
Books for Young people Fall preview 2017
Books for Young People Fall Preview
Orca Book Publishers has tagged Speaking Our Truth:
Picture this
Mac Barnett and Jon Klassen’s The Wolf, The Duck, and
Graphic content
It looks like fall will be a strong season for graphica
International
Runny Babbit Returns (HarperCollins) is a collection
BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
Coast to coast
Two fun books – one fiction, one non-fiction – give young readers a sense of their country’s geography
Fallible fables
A pair of nature-themed picture books don’t quite live up their potential
Skipped a generation
The loving relationship between a teen and her grandmother are at the heart of Allan Stratton’s riveting YA novel
Nothing but blue skies
Veronika Martenova Charles transforms her immigration to a new country into a fairy tale, complete with happily ever after
Kiss and tell
Two novels present teen girls setting out on journeys to discover their sexual identities
REVIEWS
The storyteller
Ahmad Danny Ramadan’s first novel examines issues of pain and masculinity arising out of the ongoing Syrian conflict
Tilting at windmills
Pasha Malla returns with a flawed – but very funny – sophomore novel
One step forward, two steps back
Cory Doctorow’s latest novel offers a flawed version of utopia that erases anyone not comfortably middle class
Where the heart is
Sharon Butala’s new book charts her path out of grief following the death of her husband
Playing chicken
Peter Unwin attempts something rare in modern CanLit: a flat-out, corrosive satire
BOOK MAKING
Brewing up business
House of Anansi toasts 50 years of publishing with a custom beer