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Highlighting the dark

WHEN, IN 2009, TORONTO author-illustrator Willow Dawson read that 500 lost fairy tales had been discovered in a German archive, she felt an immediate sense of intrigue and connection. Dating back 150 years, the stories were by Franz Xaver von Schönwerth, a contemporary of the Grimm Brothers, whose tales Dawson had grown up reading. “I decided that I really wanted to do something with [von Schönwerth’s stories] but didn’t know what it would look like at that time,” she says.

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Quill & Quire
May 2018
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Altri articoli in questo numero


Quill and Quire
Contributors
Wenting Li is an illustrator in Toronto. Her work is
Money talks
Old ways of thinking won’t increase diversity in the publishing industry
FRONTMATTER
Perchance to dream
The process of writing her debut novel forced Sarah Selecky to examine the way she approached her craft
Taken for granted
Canada Council changes mean authors are having to apply for their own writer-in-residence funding
Out of touch
If you’re going to have a contact page on your author website, you should probably respond to your fans
Fantasy team
The magic realism and rich world of Eden Robinson’s Trickster trilogy make it the perfect fit for a TV series adaptation
Behind the zines
Koyama Press gives celebrated Toronto artist Fiona Smyth her first retrospective collection
Hometown heroes
The University of Guelph honours the Bookshelf’s Barb and Doug Minett
Gathering place
Vancouver’s Massy Books is both welcomed and welcoming
War Stories
Collaborating on a young Syrian refugee’s story proved educational for both of us, writes
FEATURES
Eastern promises
As it celebrates its 40th anniversary, Halifax’s Nimbus Publishing has ambitious plans for the future
Tricks of the trade
Fernwood Publishing looks to expand its audience beyond academia
On the town
Lexicon Books co-owner Alice Burdick shares insight into running an indie bookstore on Nova Scotia’s stunning South Shore
Salary Survey
The good, the bad, and the hopeful
Same old story
A lack of disabled writers and insufficient industry representation are nothing new,writes
Value proposition
LÉONICKA VALCIUS on reaching non-white audiences within the confines of an old publishing system
REVIEWS
Boys to men
Two books confront changing understandings of masculinity.
The destroyer of worlds
Aaron Tucker’s debut novel is a fictionalized biography of the man known as the “father of the atomic bomb”
Unsettling the literary canon
Cherokee scholar and writer Daniel Heath Justice provides an overview of Indigenous literary traditions in Canada
Secrets and lies
New thrillers from Amy Stuart and Catherine McKenzie focus on characters who have quite a bit to hide
To serve and protect
Former Toronto Police Services Board chair Alok Mukherjee delivers a critique of police and politicians who protect their own
Democratic deficits
Nik Nanos and Gwynne Dyer examine current threats to estern liberal democracies
BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
Meet bully b.
In this powerful illustrated story the narrator finds ways to make peace with a schoolyard tormentor
Space matters
New books for budding astronauts look at the past, present, and future of off-earth exploration
The case of the middle-grade mind readers
Strong family relationships are at the heart of two novels about teen clairvoyants
Anger and forgiveness
Monique Gray Smith and Richard Van Camp come together for a flipbook about residential schools, history, and reconciliation
There will be blood
Arthur Slade brings his piano-wire precision to the story of a one-handed fugitive up againsta magical, merciless queen