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  • av Jason Guriel
    165,-

    A love story about fandom, an ode to music snobs, and a time-tripping work of speculative fiction-in verse.

  • - Among the Volunteers and Refugees on Lesvos
    av Steven Heighton
    185

    A poet's firsthand account of a month volunteering on the frontlines of the Syrian refugee crisis.

  • av Cynthia Flood
    178

  • av Zachariah Wells
    215

    "e;A poet of direct speech and muscular lexicon."e;Quill & QuireNimbly slipping between personae, masks, and moods, the prosody-driven poems of Sum weigh the volatility and mutability of the self against the forces of habit, instinct, and urge. With homages to Hopkins, Graves, Wislawa Szymborska, Paul Muldoon, and more, and in allusion-dappled, playfully sprung stanzas, this third book from poet and critic Zachariah Wells both wears its influences openly and spins a sound texture all its own, in a collection far greater than its parts.Zachariah Wells is the author of two collections of poetry and a book of criticism (Career Limiting Moves, 2014).

  • av Robert Melancon
    215

    Telephone wires, dark as a line in a schoolboy's notebook against the dawn; paint flakes from houses drifting down like dust; the hulking shadow of a desk that emerges, stock-still as a cow, in the moment of waking. Join poet Robert Melanon for a quiet celebration of his city, its inhabitants, and the language that gives it life.From "e;Eden"e;:You go forth drunk onthe multitudes, drunkon everything, whilethe lampposts sprinklenodding streets with stars.Robert Melanon, former poetry columnist for Le Devoir is a recipient of the Governor General's Award, the Prix Victor-Barbeau, and the Prix Alain-Grandbois.

  • av Ray Smith
    215

    First published in 1969, Ray Smith's Cape Breton is the Thought-Control Centre of Canada remains as refreshing, innovative and important today as it has in every previous incarnation. Sophisticated, playful, crafted, sly, self-referential and extremely funny, it marks the beginning of a long and important, if unfortunately under appreciated, career by one of Canada's best humorists and innovative story-tellers.

  • av Kevin Lambert
    169

    Reveling in its own perversity, this horror tale accuses suburban Quebec of abusing and murdering its children-then takes revenge.

  • - A Journey Across the Americas in Search of My Mennonite Identity
    av Cameron Dueck
    185

    Cameron Dueck takes a motorcycle trip through Manitoba and Latin America in search of isolated enclaves of extreme Mennonites-and himself.

  • av Alex Pugsley
    178

    First in a series of five autobiographical novels, Aubrey McKee is a coming-of-age story for the '80s generation.

  • - A Book About Being Alive
    av Ray Robertson
    167

    A radical revaluation of how contemporary society perceives death-and an argument for how it can make us happy.

  • av Jorge Carrion
    179

    A history of bookshops, an autobiography of a reader, a travelogue, a love letter-and, most urgently, a manifesto.

  • av William Toffan
    175

    The true story of North America's first known spree killer, written by a veteran of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

  • - A True Tale of Friendship
    av Anita Lahey
    219

    In this intimate portrait of a friendship between two young women, Lahey reflects on cancer and coming of age.

  • - A Ghost Story for Christmas
    av R.H. Malden
    99

    Halloween might seem like the spookiest time of year, but Charles Dickens and other great ghost story writers felt otherwise!

  • av Norm Sibum
    175,-

    Norm Sibum's poems are field notes from the end of empire, a satirist's barbs, verse letters from a poet to his enemies and friends.

  •  
    178

    A must-read for anyone with a stake in contemporary Canadian literature, or with curiosity about poetry on the world stage.

  • av David Bergen
    166,99

    An assured collection of short stories and a novella about faith, doubt, and grace.

  • av Pauline Holdstock
    166,99

    After spending a night with his mother's dead body, a six-year-old boy stows away on an ocean liner.

  • av Shane Neilson
    185

    Poems mapping the many contours of history-political, social, personal, and spiritual-and considering the ways we shape and are shaped by the land.

  • av Bob Duff
    355,-

    Gordie Howe, Steve Yzerman, Sergei Fedorov, Nicklas Lidstrom, Ted Lindsay, and Brendan Shanahan. Bob Duff's 50 Greatest Red Wings is the definitive list of Hockeytown's heroes. Including members of the famous Production Line and The Red Army, 50 Greatest Red Wings features full statistics and in-depth player analysis. With rarely seen photos and astonishing anecdotes, this book is essential to any hockey collection.Bob Duff has covered the NHL since 1988 and is a contributor to the Hockey News. Duff's other book credits include Marcel Pronovost, The China Wall: The Timeless Legend of Johnny Bower, and The Hockey Hall of Fame Book of Goalies.

  • av Martha Wilson
    149

    A debut collection from a powerful new literary voice chronicling the intersection of politics and daily lives.

  • av Kathy Page
    166,99

    A neglected teenage girl connects with an older sectarian woman who reveals a secret that precipitates a devastating series of events.

  • - Essays on Literary Form
    av Douglas Glover
    169

    A practical and illuminating collection of essays on writing and reading fiction, focusing on the relationship between form and theme.

  • av Elise Levine
    149

    An A.V. Club Book to Read for June 2019In moments of exile and self-exile, exodus and return, Elise Levine's uncanny narratives lay bare the secret grammar of their characters' psyches. An ill-tempered divinity-school candidate refuses to minister to a dying man's wife; a couple fails to connect as they tour an ersatz cave in the south of France; holy women grieve in medieval England, and a pregnant runaway hitches a ride with a Church leader of dubious intentions. Propelled by their longing for pasts that no longer exist, these reluctant Adams and contemporary Eves confront the unspoken, the maligned, the abject aspects of their inner geographies, mining them for gems that glint and scatter in the light. Uncompromising and honest, lyrical and wry, This Wicked Tongue dares to tell the truth about the places we have come from and the new ones we might find.

  • av David Huebert
    159,-

    Winner of the 2018 Jim Connors Dartmouth Book Award for Fiction Runner-Up for the 2017 Danuta Gleed Literary AwardShortlisted for the 2018 Alastair MacLeod Prize for Short FictionIn Peninsula Sinking, David Huebert brings readers an assortment of Maritimers caught between the places they love and the siren call of elsewhere. From submarine officers to prison guards, oil refinery workers to academics, each character in these stories struggles to find some balance of spiritual and emotional grace in the world increasingly on the precipice of ruin. Peninsula Sinking offers up eight urgent and electric meditations on the mysteries of death and life, of grief and love, and never shies away from the joy and horror of our submerging world.

  • av Kris Bertin
    165,-

    The characters in Bad Things Happen professors, janitors, webcam models, small-time criminals are between things. Between jobs and marriages, states of sobriety, joy and anguish; between who they are and who they want to be. Kris Bertin's unforgettable debut introduces us to people at the tenuous moment before everything in their lives change, for better or worse.

  • av Kevin Hardcastle
    159,-

    A feared cage fighter in Mixed Martial Arts, Daniel is closing in on greatness-until an injury derails his career. Out of work in his country hometown, Daniel slips into the underworld, moonlighting as muscle for a childhood-friend-turned-mid-level-gangster. While his wife works nights and his twelve-year-old daughter gets into scraps of her own, Daniel tries to escape and build a nobler life for his family-but he sinks deeper into a violent, unpredictable world, soon sparking a conflict that can only be settled in blood.Written with equal parts tenderness and horror, In the Cage weaves together a grittily masterful tale of violence, family, and resilience as Kevin Hardcastle penetrates what it means to survive in the rural underclass.

  • - 1917-18 and the Birth of the NHL
    av Bob Duff
    167

    The National Hockey League is celebrating its hundredth anniversary in 2017-2018-but Bob Duff's The First Season reveals how close the league came to folding in its very first year. Set against the turmoil of the Great War and born out of a ruse to rid the league of reviled Toronto owner Eddie Livingstone, the new league suffered from a series of crises: from a shortfall of quality players due to military conscription, to rival leagues and divided fan loyalties, to the burning down of the Montreal Arena that was home ice to two teams. But despite all this, the league survived-and became the worldwide standard for competitive hockey.With chapters devoted to the first-ever NHL playoffs and Stanley Cup championships, in addition to team and player profiles and vintage black and white photos, Duff's The First Season is essential reading for every hockey fan, providing real insight about the first generation of hockey heroes.

  • av Noah Wareness
    165,-

    As the sickly boy dreams in bed, the shadows beneath his parlor curtain are stirring, taking shapes inexpressible even in a child's dreams. "e;Real keeps us silent,"e; argues the taxidermied rabbit to the young air-rifle that shot it dead. "e;Real keeps us still. You must never ask anyone if they are Real."e;For exactly as long as history, a secret peace has bound the human and inanimate worlds. But the stories of the other world are pushing into our own, and that peace will be tested tonight...In this collection of twenty-six poems and the unbelievably weird happenings that link them, Noah Wareness steals electricity from nihilistic horror fiction and shaggy late-night cartoons to create a landscape of profound loss, vertigo and wonder.

  • av Robyn Sarah
    176,99

    Winner of the 2015 Governor General's Award for PoetryWinner of the 2015 Canadian Jewish Literary Award for PoetryIn My Shoes are Killing Me, poet Robyn Sarah reflects on the passing of time, the fleetingness of dreams, and the bittersweet pleasure of thinking on the "e;hazardous . . . treasurehouse"e; that is the past. Natural, musical, meditative, warm, and unexpectedly funny, this is a restorative and moving collection from one of Canada's most well-regarded poets.Robyn Sarah is the author of nine previous collections. Ten of her poems have appeared on The Writer's Almanac, and her work has been anthologized in Garrison Keillor's Good Poems for Hard Times (2005), The Norton Anthology of Poetry (2005), and The Bedford Introduction to Literature (2001).

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