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12 MIN READ TIME

The eyes have it

BY SERAH - MARIE McMAHON

PICTURE BOOK

We Found a Hat

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SEPTEMBER 2016
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Contributors
Contributors
Stefanie Neves photographed Kevin Patterson for this month’s cover and
Editor’s note
Cultural representation
WHEN JUSTIN TRUDEAU won the federal election in October, the
FRONTMATTER
Clarity of purpose
Before she was a published novelist, Jen Sookfong Lee worked
The view from the Fringe
IT BEGAN, in one respect, because a poet was in
Best of times, Worst of times
Amazon.ca named Vancouver as the Canadian city that most loves
Stop procrastinating and get writing
I read a lot. I think being familiar with other
Reliable narrator
VLADIMIR NABOKOV’S 1955 novel Lolita is, arguably, one of the
Bibliophiles abuzz
IN THE neighbourhood of Old Ottawa South, Black Squirrel Books
Outside the box
“You have to shed your academic personality,” the literary agent
FEATURES
Silently or loud
Austin Clarke never considered himself part of the CanLit firmament
On the edge
Over a body of work that moves from non-fiction to
Book mobile
Mega booksellers, whether online or brick-and-mortar, dominate the literary retail
REVIEWS
Human traffic
AS ENGROSSING as any thriller, Anosh Irani’s fourth novel offers
Trudeaumania: The Rise to Power of Pierre Elliott Trudeau
SCREAMING GIRLS, flashing lights, and a dazzling smile. These are
One Soldier: A Canadian Soldier‘s Fight Against the Islamic State
“ISIS HAS been able to maraud across Syria and Iraq
Three Years with the Rat
JAY HOSKING has an interesting CV for a novelist, with
Waiting for the Cyclone
ACCORDING TO the publisher’s copy accompanying Leesa Dean’s debut story
Hunger games
EMMA DONOGHUE’S latest novel thrusts us back into a small,
Hidden treasure
ANDRÉ ALEXIS’S new novel – Book 3 in a projected
Blood of Extraction: Canadian Imperialism in Latin America
DESPITE A recent change in government and the widespread “Canada
The Fatalists
MOST EVERYONE has experienced the aggravation of temporarily losing cellphone
The Revenge of Analog: Real Things and Why They Matter
AT ONE point in The Revenge of Analog: Real Things
The Memory Illusion: Why You May Not Be Who You Think You Are
POPULAR SCIENCE books that focus on the workings of the
The Dependent: A Memoir of Marriage and the Military
In The Dependent, Danielle Daniel shares the interconnected stories of
Short takes
WITH The Path of Most Resistance, his first new collection
Home and away
THE FIRST work of fiction by Chinese writer Xue Yiwei
Mad Enchantment: Claude Monet and the Painting of the Water Lilies
IN THE spring of 1914, Georges Clemenceau – journalist, republican,
Five Roses
READERS FAMILIAR with Miriam Toews’s earnest rendering of suicide’s complexities
Tales from the blue line
Leonard “Red” Kelly with L. Waxy Gregoire and David M
All the Things We Leave Behind
RIEL NASON’S All the Things We Leave Behind is a
The Couple Next Door
THE JULY/AUGUST issue of The Atlantic features a long essay
BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
The Griffin of Darkwood
THE GRIFFIN OF DARKWOOD is an exciting, fanciful story filled
A Squiggly Story
A YOUNG wannabe author is coached by his more literate
King Baby
CANADIAN CARTOONING superstar Kate Beaton follows up her stellar kidlit
Once in a Town Called Moth
A NOVEL about a 14-year-old girl plucked from her strict
A Boy Named Queen
TEN-YEAR-OLD Evelyn’s life has always had a sameness about it:
Pandas on the Eastside
NEVER UNDERESTIMATE the power of goodness to overcome that which
Pride and prejudice
RESPECT IS the dominant theme that runs through Girl Mans
Making it Right: Building Peace, Settling Conflict
IN HER latest book, Vancouver author Marilee Peters looks closely
Rise up
FORTY YEARS after the June 16, 1976, Soweto Student Uprising
Aluta
GUELPH, ONTARIO, author Adwoa Badoe takes readers to her native
Temper, temper
NAUGHTINESS IS the lifeblood of the comic middle-grade novel, but
BOOK MAKING
Supporting characters
LAST YEAR, the University of Regina Press launched a series