Books
Sheldon Oberman mentorship seeks emerging writers
3 minute read Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025Up-and-coming writers have a chance to hone their craft under the watchful eyes of established authors as part of the Manitoba Writers’ Guild’s Sheldon Oberman Mentorship Program.
Named after the late children’s author and Guild founding member, the program pairs emerging authors in fiction, poetry, creative non-fiction and writing for children and young adults with mentors who will help with manuscript development self-editing, the writing process, publishing and more.
Past apprentices include a number of authors who have gone on to successful publishing careers, including John Elizabeth Stintzi, Hannah Green, Joelle Kidd and Zilla Jones.
The deadline for applications and to submit supporting materials for the next program, which runs from January-June 2026, is Nov. 30. For more information about the mentorship see wfp.to/oberman.
Advertisement
Newman’s thriller plumbs new depths
4 minute read Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025T.J. Newman’s 2021 novel Falling was a spectacular debut, a brilliantly constructed thriller set on board a commercial airliner en route to its destination.
Newman’s second novel, Drowning: The Rescue of Flight 1421 (Avid Reader Press, 352 pages, $15), is remarkably ambitious, for two reasons: it’s not a sequel, which means there’s an entirely new cast of characters, and it takes place underwater.
The setup: soon after takeoff, an Airbus A321 goes down in the Pacific Ocean. It comes to rest a few hundred metres below the surface, mostly intact. There are survivors, but they have a limited (and rapidly diminishing) supply of air.
Falling was a straight-up thriller, with a hero and a villain with an evil plan. Drowning is rather different. There’s no villain in the traditional bad-guy sense, and there are a lot of heroes: the men and women who have to create, essentially from scratch, a procedure for rescuing people from a submerged aircraft.
Cleeves’ Shetland copper is back, and in fine form, in new murder mystery
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025Revisiting evangelical pop-culture ephemera melds careful critique with moving memoir
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025Vivid, visceral horror story resonates
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025Protagonist perseveres in stellar slice-of-life graphic novel
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025Literary scholar seeks coveted lost sonnet cycle in climate-ravaged England
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025Follett’s epic Stonehenge origin story stands tall
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025Pioneering scientist’s climate legacy tainted
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025Friendship, rebellion run through Korean historical fiction
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025Powerful poets featured at trio of launches
4 minute read Saturday, Sep. 27, 2025Poetry fans have plenty to look forward to this week at McNally Robinson Booksellers’ Grant Park location, with a trio of launches highlighting a range of potent local poets.
Winnipeg members of the Land and Labour Poetry Collective launch I’ll Get Right On It: Poems on Working Life in the Climate Crisis at 7 p.m. tonight as part of Thin Air. A number of contributors, including Hanako Teranishi, Cole Osiowy, Marjorie Poor, Ron Romanowski and Myla Chartrand, will read at the event.
On Wednesday, Winnipeg poet and writer George Amabile launches his latest poetry collection, Seeing Things, at 7 p.m., where he’ll be joined by fellow scribe Kristian Enright. Amabile’s latest takes the reader on a journey through wonder, memory, grief and more.
Then on Thursday at 7 p.m., award-winning poet and novelist katherena vermette launches her latest collection of poems, Procession.
Belcourt insists on importance of sincerity
4 minute read Saturday, Sep. 27, 2025Throughout his latest collection, The Idea of an Entire Life (McClelland & Stewart, 80 pages, $25), Billy-Ray Belcourt returns to the idea that there is something radical in the confessional mode: “I believe in the magnificence of a lake in Northern Alberta// and the radical possibilities of telling strangers/ all my secrets.”
Contrary to the manner in which they are sometimes dismissed, sincerity, sentiment and confession are not mere exercises in solipsism or self-indulgence; rather, Belcourt uses these in the service of solidarity and justice. “What others call Sentimentality/ I call Refusing to Suffer Alone,” he writes in writes in Sentimentality.
While the collection insists on the importance of sincerity and personal experiences, Belcourt refuses to reify these. “The self emerges in/ the absence of better/ information,” he writes in Childhood Triptych.
From the start of the collection, Belcourt plays with the distance of autofiction and field notes to call the nature of selfhood into question and unsettle it, creating a tension that drives the collection.
Generations haunted by traumas of the past in Lee’s chilling new novel
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Sep. 27, 2025Female primatologists prove pivotal to progress in their field
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Sep. 27, 2025Clutches of religious indoctrination leads to fraught mother-daughter relationship
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Sep. 27, 2025Lebanese mother and son’s account offers poignant, heartbreaking prose — with a healthy does of riotous fun
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Sep. 27, 2025LOAD MORE