Books
Books
Canadian authors, publisher nab big global prizes
4 minute read Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026The international literary scene has been showering Canadian authors and publishers with love as of late.
Tundra Books, an imprint of Penguin Random House Canada, was named best publisher for the North America region at the Bologna Children’s Book Fair earlier this month.
The book fair, in conjunction with the Swedish government, also announced Winnipeg-born, L.A.-based author-illustrator Jon Klassen (This Is Not My Hat) as the recipient of the Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award for his work in children’s literature, a prize that comes with five million Swedish kronor (around $749,000).
Closer to home, two Canadian authors are among 223 recipients of 2026 Guggenheim fellowships based out of New York.
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Southern coming-of-age story next Free Press Book Club read
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026Prolific park ranger shares his life story — including decades chronicling countless wolves
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026Art, technology and memory converge in Lerner’s brief, insightful new novel
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026In a future of restricted freedoms, sentient appliances offer insight into the human condition
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026Sweatman’s riveting literary eco-thriller a timely warning in uncertain times
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026Turtles’ roles in ecosystem crucial
4 minute read Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026Sea turtles are an integral part of the ocean and shoreline ecosystem. Taking Turns with Turtles — A Rescue Story by Shari Becker (Groundwood, 36 pages, hardcover, $22) is an interesting, educational science picture book for children ages 3-6 about turtles that become cold-stunned when chilly fall weather hits too quickly along the east coast of the U.S.
Becker reminds us of the contributions turtles make to the ecosystem — they eat jellyfish, which protects fish populations, and their eggshells and waste fertilize beach plants, which prevents sand erosion. She also writes about the important role that dedicated volunteers play, nursing stranded turtles as they recover from their trauma and later returning them to the sea.
Brittany Lane’s pretty pastel watercolours show both detail and imagined underwater scenes.
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Stepping out of comfort zone comes with positives, pitfalls
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026Banff bison brought back from the brink of extinction
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026Family’s turbulent past haunts killer thriller
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026writes of spring 2026
10 minute read Friday, Apr. 17, 2026David Jón FullerIn the gapOn the icy shore of a glacier-scraped lakefir and jack pine crowd poplar and birch,roots grow no deeper than ancient rock allows,enough to obscure this life’s thinness —shallow soil accruing over centuries.
Beneath it, stone strata straddlingmultiple extinctions, outlasting them,which bore an Ice Age weight so heavythe old stone is still rebounding, eventhough all that’s left of the ice are lakes.
The Norse once thought:before people, or gods, there was ice.Frosty giants and an unformed earth,a middle-ground for those who would come later.But a spark was needed from a world of flame.
Now, in a still-cool springtime,we have worked such wicked wondersthe world changes again. Those giants of icelong-gone — while a hotter world breedsblackened forests. Rains are scant, lakelevels lower. After the fires,some may remain to remember,but far too much will burn.
Winnipeg-born author-illustrator wins Swedish prize
1 minute read Preview Wednesday, Apr. 15, 2026Parallel lines
6 minute read Preview Monday, Apr. 13, 2026Writing community rallies to relaunch book awards
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Apr. 11, 2026Manitoba Book Awards back for 2026
4 minute read Saturday, Apr. 11, 2026After a two-year hiatus, the Manitoba Book Awards are returning in 2026.
Founded in 1988, the awards were last presented in 2023, after a feasibility study that year recommended the awards, and the governing coalition made up of Plume Winnipeg, the Association of Manitoba Book Publishers, the Winnipeg Public Library and the Manitoba Writers’ Guild, be dissolved. An August 2024 announcement made the news official.
In an April 9 press release it was announced the returning 2026 Manitoba Book Awards will be run by an independent board of arts workers and writers including board president David A. Robertson as well as Rowan McCandless, Colleen Nelson, Chimwemwe Undi, Seyward Goodhand and others.
For 2026, three of the six returning awards will be funded by the Manitoba government — the Alexander Kennedy Isbister Award for Non-Fiction, the Margaret Laurence Fiction Award and the Prix Littéraire rue-Deschambault. The other three returning awards are the Carol Shields Winnipeg Book Award, the Eileen McTavish Sykes Award for Best First Book and the Lansdowne Prize for Poetry.
Deep dive into Royal couture reflects social, political context throughout first half of 20th century
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Apr. 11, 2026LOAD MORE BOOKS ARTICLES