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Portal 2020 Front Cover Sneak Peek
Featured photo: I.Botha, Unsplash
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Journey: Celebrating the Journey Prize
Journey: Celebrating the Journey Prize Edited by Alexander MacLeod and Souvankham ThammavongsaMcClelland & Stewart, 2024368 pagesISBN: 9780771007439$38.00Reviewed by Flynn Connolly Sifton How can three and a half decades’ worth of prizewinners be reduced to one book? In the case of Journey: Celebrating the Journey Prize, Alexander MacLeod and Souvankham Thammavongsa acknowledge that “there is no possibility for critical consensus” as they harvest 31 exemplary selections from the wealth of past winners and nominees. The editors selected stories for their ability to surprise, take risks, and to be powerful. It is a refreshing change from more standard criteria. While it is occasionally uneven, and its title is less-than-imaginitive, Journey is a…
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Losing Languages
Losing Languages By Paige PierceBlurb, 2025158 pagesISBN: 9798331170066$26.99Reviewed by Emily Brandstaetter Losing Languages by Paige Pierce is a poetry collection about loss, grief, and the relentlessness of love. The book is divided into three sections: “All that I have lost,” “All that I have loved,” and “All that I have learned.” It moves from the immediate aftermath of loss or trauma and a vocabulary of mourning, to the many faces of love, to conclude with revelations about self-discovery and hope. The book is dedicated to Pierce’s late grandmother and shares fond memories she cherishes beyond the ache and sorrow: “the shadow of your essence.” Pierce’s graceful imagery explores…
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Encrypted
Encrypted by Arleen ParéPoetryCaitlin Press, May 202583 pagesISBN 9781773861647$20.00Reviewed by Elke Sorensen Arleen Paré’s 10th poetry collection, Encrypted, details her 19-year-old grandson’s bouts with severe depression, anxiety, and a video-game addiction after he moved into her basement in September 2020 to study Computer Science. Due to his mental health challenges, Paré’s grandson dropped out of university. Paré turned to poetry to write poems to him, about him, and for him and others fighting similar battles. The collection, which is referred to as one long poem in the acknowledgements, is strung together by epigraphs from Samuel Taylor Coleridge and his work The Rime of The Ancient Mariner. The epigraphs work…
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November, November
November, NovemberBy Isabella WangPoetryHarbour Publishing, 2025103 pagesISBN: 9780889714847$19.95Reviewed by Bri Hepner November, November is a meditative collection of poetry that addresses grief, memory, mortality, and poetic inheritance. Many of the poems read like intimate and confessional letters to lost poets and mourning friends. The point of view moves from personal suffering to collective loss, at once contemplative and vulnerable. The book is structured over several “passages” spanning Novembers that chart the death of a mentor poet, Phyllis Webb, the authors cancer diagnosis and treatment, and her recovery and reflection. Webb writes that “poetry isn’t / just in the song of the grieving / but right now it sings /…
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Elements of Indigenous Style, 2nd ed.
Elements of Indigenous Style, 2nd ed.By Gregory Younging and Warren CariouBrush Education, January 2025NonfictionISBN 9781550599459256 Pages$27.95Reviewed by Masha Zhaksybek Brush Education published a second edition of Elements of Indigenous Style a year after Gregory Younging passed away and the first edition’s release in 2018. Lead editor Warren Cariou, who had worked with Younging on the first edition, revised with contributing editors Deanna Reder, Lorena Sekwan Fontaine, and Jordan Abel, but split the guide into two “conversations,” preserving Younging’s original work while adding new and relevant material. The guide’s chapters have clear subheadings, which makes the text very accessible, and specific elements easy to find. Some sections focus more on the…
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The Witch of Willow Sound
The Witch of Willow SoundVanessa F. PenneyFictionECW Press, 2025320 pagesISBN: 9781770418424$19.95Reviewed by Bailey Bellosillo Vanessa F. Penney’s debut novel The Witch of Willow Sound is billed as an East Coast feminist gothic and follows Phaedra Luck as she traces the disappearance of her estranged Aunt Madeline, rumoured to be a witch by the locals of Grand Tea, Nova Scotia who blame her for their every misfortune—including an impending hurricane. Phaedra (Fade) returns to the lonely forest of Willow Sound where she discovers the “fairy tale” cottage of her youth has turned into a nightmare, empty and rotting. The ominous smell of something burnt hangs in the air. Fade conducts her…
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Heliotropia
Manahil BandukwalaPoetryBrick Books, 202499 pagesISBN: 9781771316347$23.95Reviewed by Tara Wohlleben Heliotropia is Manahil Bandukwala’s second book of poetry, exploring love, distance, and home across five sections. While heliotropism describes how plants move in relation to the sun, Bandukwala explores how we move in relation to love. In the preface to the book, the poem “Season of Sunflowers” introduces the importance of patience: “how precious seconds are, and thirds, and//fourths, and so on. There is rarely lasting love/in a first.” The first section covers “Seventeen Months of Distance” with one poem per month, each with an epigraph related to love, longing, or distance. Here we live in “This universe where fear collides/with…
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Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Faeries
Heather FawcettFictionLittle Brown, 2023315 pagesISBN: 9780356519142$19.00Reviewed by Zoe Chong Heather Fawcett dazzles readers in her first installment of the Emily Wilde series, a fantastical story following professor Wendell Bambleby and Emily, a researcher, on a mission to document elusive faerie populations around the world. Emily’s research is recounted in detailed journal entries that blend history and whimsy to great effect. Emily travels to Ljosland, Norway from London in the fall of 1909, adapting to a rural environment as she gets closer to learning the secrets of the Hidden Ones. What are these elusive residents hiding? More importantly, why did her academic rival, the charmingly infuriating Wendell Bambleby, follow her…
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Deep Cuts
Holly BrickleyDoubleday Canada, 2025288 pagesISBN: 9780593799086$28.00Reviewed by Jennavieve Strub “Music was the only thing that made me feel like I was living in my own life,” says Percy Marks, a passionate music enthusiast, and Joe Morrow, an aspiring songwriter, who met at UC Berkeley in 2000. Their chance encounter sparks a creative partnership that explores talent, obsession, and the need to be heard. Deep Cuts is a love letter to music. Structured like a mixtape, each chapter is named after a different track. The opening chapter, “Sara Smile,” refers to a song by Hall and Oates, and establishes the initial dynamic between Percy and Joe. When Joe asks…
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A Broken Blade (The Halfling Saga)
Melissa BlairUnion Square & Co., 2021435 pagesISBN: 9781454947875$23.99Reviewed by Grace Penner Melissa Blair’s debut novel transports us into the land of Elverath where Elves, Mortals, Halflings, and Dark Fae live in reluctant harmony. Keera Kingsown is an alleged Halfling and the King’s Blade, his finest assassin, who ensures order in the kingdom. “I had long ago accepted that I would never know my true lineage. The only reason I had taken into the Order at all, the only proof I had of my Mortal lineage, was my blood. Its amber color was the sign of Halflings. The mixed breeds of Elves and men.” King Aemon, and his two sons, Prince…