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Labour pains

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Quill & Quire
June 2019
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Other Articles in this Issue


Quill and Quire
Transformative times
ON MAY 1, protestors in more than 20 Ontario cities
FRONTMATTER
Wild, wild country
Award-winning writer Nancy Jo Cullen spins humour and family drama into her queer coming-of-age debut novel by sue carter
Rate expectations
Authors won’t always receive an appearance fee, but the conversation remains essential
In security
How urban libraries across the country are balancing the demand for safety with their users’ needs by susan peters
Sex and the cinema
Film scholars Matthew Hays and Thomas Waugh reflect on a decade celebrating an alternative LGBTQ canon
At the Centre of it all
Rose Vespa, a former children’s librarian, takes the mantle at the CCBC
FEATURES
Double impact
How Alix Ohlin’s lifelong passion for literature inspires her teaching and fuels her new novel, Dual Citizens
A reflection of affection
Meet three new faces of romance fiction who are cracking open the heart of the genre with their inclusive love stories
REVIEWS
Flights of fancy
Structurally innovative new books from David Szalay and Adam Foulds contain overlapping concerns
Coming of age and coming out
In her brave and sensitive memoir, Samra Habib writes about the
Urban malaise
Joe Berridge’s new book strikes an optimistic tone but ignores key realities about how postmodern cities function
BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
Where the grass is greener
A new batch of illustrated books help kids cope with jealousy, envy, and that desperate feeling of wanting what you cannot have
Shot through the heart
Mariko Tamaki and Rosemary Valero-O’Connell collaborate on a Californiacool graphic novel about falling for the wrong person
BOOK MAKING
Frisky business
How physicist Chris Ferrie is introducing an 80-year-old science puzzle to a new generation