Canadian fiction

  • Joe Pete

    Creator

    McCulloch, Ian

    Abstract

    A multi-generational story of loss, war, community, survival, perseverance, and renewal. Joe Pete and her cousin Simon will find more than they anticipated buried beneath the snow as they search for her missing father. Their journey will unlock the ancestors and spirits embedded in the present who call back to a past marked by war and kinship, by conflict and wisdom that continue to contour their trajectory towards the future.

    Audience
    Adult**
    Publisher (Source)

    Sudbury, Ontario

    Latitude 46 Publishing

    Non spécifié
  • A season in Chezgh'un

    Creator

    McLeod, Darrel J.

    Abstract

    A subversive novel by acclaimed Cree author Darrel J. McLeod, infused with the contradictory triumph and pain of finding conventional success in a world that feels alien. James, a talented and conflicted Cree man from a tiny settlement in Northern Alberta, has settled into a comfortable middle-class life in Kitsilano, a trendy neighborhood of Vancouver.

    Audience
    Adult**
    Publisher (Source)

    Madeira Park, BC

    Douglas & McIntyre

    Non spécifié
  • Empty spaces

    Creator

    Abel, Jordan

    Abstract

    Jordan Abel's extraordinary new book and debut work of fiction, Empty Spaces, grows out of his groundbreaking visual expression in NISHGA. That book integrated descriptions of the landscape from James Fenimore Cooper's settler classic The Last of the Mohicans into visual compositions. In Empty Spaces, Abel reinscribes those words on the page itself and in doing so subjects them to bold re-writings.

    Audience
    Adult**
    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    McClelland & Stewart

    Non spécifié
  • A grandmother begins the story

    Creator

    Porter, Michelle

    Abstract

    National Bestseller. Finalist for the 2023 Writers' Trust Atwood Gibson Fiction Prize. Five generations of Métis women argue, dance, struggle, laugh, love, and tell the stories that will sing their family, and perhaps the land itself, into healing in this brilliantly original debut novel. Carter is a young mother, recently separated. She is curious, angry, and on a quest to find out what the heritage she only learned of in her teens truly means.

    Audience
    Adult**
    Publisher (Source)

    New York

    Viking

    Non spécifié
  • Hold your tongue

    Creator

    Tétreault, Matthew

    Abstract

    Upon learning his great-uncle Alfred has suffered a stroke, Richard sets out for Ste. Anne, in southeastern Manitoba, to find his father and tell him the news. Waylaid by memories of his stalled romance, tales of run-ins with local Mennonites, his job working a honey wagon, and struck by visions of Métis history and secrets of his family's past, Richard confronts his desires to leave town, even as he learns to embrace his heritage. Evoking an oral storytelling epic that weaves together one family's complex history, Hold Your Tongue asks what it means to be Métis and francophone.

    Audience
    Adult**
    Publisher (Source)

    [Calgary, Alberta]

    NeWest Press

    Non spécifié
  • The orenda

    Creator

    Boyden, Joseph

    Abstract

    An epic story of first contact between radically different worlds, steeped in the natural beauty and brutality of our country's formative years.

    Non spécifié
  • The night ocean

    Creator

    Farge, Paul La.

    Abstract

    From the award-winning author and New Yorker contributor, a riveting novel about secrets and scandals, psychiatry and pulp fiction, inspired by the lives of H.P. Lovecraft and his circle. Marina Willett, M.D., has a problem. Her husband, Charlie, has become obsessed with H.P. Lovecraft, in particular with one episode in the legendary horror writer's life: In the summer of 1934, the "old gent" lived for two months with a gay teenage fan named Robert Barlow, at Barlow's family home in central Florida.

    Non spécifié
  • A superior man

    Creator

    Yee, Paul

    Abstract

    For more than thirty years, Paul Yee has written about his Chinese-Canadian heritage in award-winning books for young readers as well as adult non-fiction. Here, in his first work of fiction for adults, he takes us on a harrowing journey into a milestone event of Canadian history: the use of Chinese coolies to help build the Canadian Pacific Railway in British Columbia in hazardous conditions.

    Non spécifié