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Christopher Paul Curtis

I always wanted to write about slavery”,says Christopher Paul Curtis. “But I like writing in the first person and when I thought about what a slave has been through, I couldn’t imagine it. What it takes to think of yourself as subhuman, as an animal. And how if you wanted your kids to survive you have to teach them that they are subhuman, too.”

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Quill & Quire
March 2018
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Contributors
Contributors
Erica Mojzes is a rights seller, copy editor, and writer
Editor’s note
Safety in page numbers
In December, The New Yorker published the short story
Frontmatter
Echo beach
For her latest novel, Amber Dawn brings the supernatural to her sleepy hometown
Give it away now
Goodreads imposes fees on its long-running free giveaways program
loan stars
Each month, Canadian library staff vote for their favourite upcoming books, via BookNet Canada’s Loan Stars readersadvisory program and the Canadian Urban Libraries Council.
Cinema vérité
Getting a film option is great, but don’t count on the movie actually getting made
Powerhouse poet
If her Instagram fanbase is any indication, Najwa Zebian could be the next Rupi Kaur
News round-up
women authors offer financial support, services to
Personal essay
We do not live in a post-truth world, but one that needs science more than ever, writes
Benefiting diversity
Artists with disabilities can apply for arts grants without fear thanks to changes to the Ontario Disability Support Program
FEATURES
Kidlit spotlight
Newfoundland’s Marnie Parsons finds inspiration in her town’s sheep population and the 18th-century astronomer Edmund Halley
out of the shadows
First-time author and illustrator Nancy Vo stakes her claim with an Old West picture-book trilogy
lit from within
Adam Garnet Jones adapts his award-winning film into a YA novel with universal appeal
Seraphina’s sister
Bestselling author Rachel Hartman on how her quasi-evangelical upbringing led her to create her imperfect heroine
Throwing the book at bullies
Looking to children’s authors to change the schoolyard status quo
Books for Young People
Do you see what i see?
Jillian Tamaki’s debut picture book will make children and parents question preconceived notions of colours
Going back to Jeddah
Toronto author Tanaz Bhathena evokes the Saudi Arabia of her childhood in an impressive and dramatic debut
Holocaust companions
New books about women who helped each other in prison camps work well together
Bring on the light
The sun and the moon spark imagination in two gorgeously illustrated books
southern discomfort
Christopher Paul Curtis returns to the themes of slavery and the Canadian promise of freedom in his latest Buxton book
Reviews
In the same boat
Sharon Bala’s debut novel addresses thorny questions about multiculturalism, empathy, and power
Without a paddle
Kim Fu’s sophomore novel is a story of survival and a work of piercing psychological acuity
Civilization’s discontents
Daemon Fairless examines the impulses and provocations – both social and individual – that prompt men to violence
Opposing views
Story collections from Djamila Ibrahim and Johanna Skibsrud allow readers to see both sides of various situations
law and order
Elaine Craig examines critical deficiencies in the way Canada’s legal system addresses sexual assault trials
Book making
Battling giants
Biblioasis’s chapbook takedown of “hypermarket”Amazon is a true David-and-Goliath tale