Books

Books

Fantastical, moving graphic memoir explores addictions, organ procurement and more

Reviewed by Candida Rifkind 4 minute read Saturday, May. 30, 2026

At the heart of Mary Shelley’s 1818 classic Frankenstein and its many pop culture adaptations is the scene in the mad scientist’s lab where Victor Frankenstein, helped by a bolt of lightning, animates the grotesque figure made out of human and animal parts lying on his anatomy table.

As much as Shelley’s novel is a philosophical investigation into the desire of modern science to create new life, it is also a gruesome window into the clandestine European trade in graveyard and battlefield body snatching that fuelled early 19th-century anatomy research, medical training and public dissection theatres.

Whose bodies ended up on the slab to advance medical knowledge? As Montreal-based artist Arizona O’Neill explains in her captivating first graphic narrative, it was inevitably poor, racialized and criminalized bodies that were deemed appropriate for the indignities of public display and dissection in earlier periods.

But what about today? This is the central question driving the story of Opioids & Organs, O’Neill’s beautifully drawn story of coming to terms with her father’s untimely death due to a fentanyl overdose as well as the awful truth that Canada’s post-2015 opioid crisis has greatly increased the number of organs available for donation, mostly from otherwise healthy young men like her father.

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Books

New essay collection explores menace of far-right movements in Canada

Reviewed by Joseph Hnatiuk 4 minute read Preview

New essay collection explores menace of far-right movements in Canada

Reviewed by Joseph Hnatiuk 4 minute read Saturday, May. 30, 2026

“Democracy is at stake and Canada is not immune to its demise,” states Miriam Edelson, editor of this timely anthology, warning that right-wing extremism, energized by memes and trolls permeating digital spaces, is heralding social and political change and affecting how current generations view the slow, often cumbersome democratic process.

Edelson’s well-researched observations are supported by 18 different contributors comprised of an array of like-minded academics, researchers and concerned activists who collectively alert readers to the extremist messaging that is altering some long-standing expectations of responsible governance.

Edelson’s social activism was honed by personal experiences while living in Toronto and working with the Canadian labour movement, spawning a literary legacy of personal essays and commentaries published by the Toronto Star, Globe & Mail and Literary Review. Her earlier book, My Journey with Jake: A Memoir of Parenting and Disability (2000) remains a poignant reminder that society functions best when individuals share a common purpose of looking out for one another.

In a concise foreword to Confronting the Resurgent Right, University of Manitoba professor and award- winning Free Press columnist Niigaan Sinclair similarly reminds readers that “far right movements built on hate,” like those earlier thrust upon Indigenous people and still targeting Jews, Muslims and other identifiable groups, inexorably lead to “racism, violence, and genocide.”

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Saturday, May. 30, 2026

Books

Cinematic, dystopian YA romantasy series kicks off with the best kind of throwback vibes

Reviewed by Katrina Sklepowich 4 minute read Preview

Cinematic, dystopian YA romantasy series kicks off with the best kind of throwback vibes

Reviewed by Katrina Sklepowich 4 minute read Saturday, May. 30, 2026

Millennials, we are so back. From iconic fashion and celebrity comebacks to Laguna Beach cast reunions and blockbuster sequels, the early 2000s are trending.

And riding this wave of early aughts nostalgia is Booktok-famous Winnipeg author Nisha J. Tuli, who has penned the perfect homage to dystopian young adult (YA) fiction with her new romantasy, Storm Breaker.

The perfect comfort read for a generation raised on one unprecedented calamity after another, and an excellent introduction to the next generation of dystopian YA lovers, Storm Breaker follows a familiar formula: strong female heroine with a secret power, school trials, love triangles, forbidden romance and a system that is built on a lie.

What more could one ask for? Tuli has crafted a world that isn’t just reminiscent of the genre, but true to it in every way. And yet it works without feeling clichéd.

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Saturday, May. 30, 2026

Books

Antisemitism’s recent rise a vast, well-funded campaign

Reviewed by Bill Rambo 4 minute read Preview

Antisemitism’s recent rise a vast, well-funded campaign

Reviewed by Bill Rambo 4 minute read Saturday, May. 30, 2026

Does a shadowy web of influence, supported by wealth and global fealty to a controlling religious group, exist? Are people and communities being influenced by a malign cabal sowing polarization and hatred?

Does a hidden hand control economies, media and political engagement of many, wide-ranging others?

Canadian author, lawyer, commentator, political consultant and punk musician Warren Kinsella believes this to be the case, detailing it in his newest book, which is sure to be controversial. But the cabal in question (spoiler!) is not the Jews, but Iran.

Kinsella has published both fiction and non-fiction about Canadian connections in politics, extremism and punk rock, including 1997’s Web of Hate: Inside Canada’s Far Right Network.

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Saturday, May. 30, 2026

Books

Creepy apartment exudes grim vibes in dreamy ‘mommy horror’ debut

Reviewed by Keith Cadieux 4 minute read Preview

Creepy apartment exudes grim vibes in dreamy ‘mommy horror’ debut

Reviewed by Keith Cadieux 4 minute read Saturday, May. 30, 2026

With horror becoming one of the most popular and celebrated genres in literature and film, it continues to spawn an ever-growing list of subgenres. These offshoots into specific topics or themes have always been there, but with growing popularity they’re now recognizable by readers who aren’t necessarily genre diehards.

One subgenre on the rise is “mommy horror,” stories which examine the sometimes fraught and strained relationships between mothers and their children, or the distressing and gory experience of birth itself.

It is this subgenre that Vancouver-based Liverpudlian writer and editor Emma Cleary explores in her debut novel Afterbirth.

Twenty-something Brooke is struggling to find her place. After teaching English in Japan for a couple of years and a romance that ended very badly, she is forced to move back in with her parents in England.

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Saturday, May. 30, 2026

Books

Gaston’s American road trip offers insight into bond between father and sons

Reviewed by Neil Besner 5 minute read Preview

Gaston’s American road trip offers insight into bond between father and sons

Reviewed by Neil Besner 5 minute read Saturday, May. 30, 2026

Spying on America is prolific and award award-winning writer Bill Gaston’s second memoir and 20th book — he has 15 novels as well as books of short stories, a play and a book of poems to his name.

The reward that this decades-long apprenticeship bestows is, first and last, the pure pleasure of reading Gaston’s supple, apparently effortless prose — evidence, maybe, of what Canadian poet Al Purdy referred to in a related register as “the crafte so longe to lerne.”

The book’s explicit subject is timely and engaging: as the title signals (as well as the 12-page “Epilogue: Spying on America from the Rearview” — more on this later), this is a covert operation for Gaston and his two adult sons, who embark on an 11-day drive in a rented muscle car from near Vancouver into the U.S. and back.

Their purpose and destination? To explore their ancestry: Gaston’s great-great-grandparents are none other than George B. Gaston and Maria Gaston, key American figures in the history of the underground railroad.

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Saturday, May. 30, 2026

Books

Vermette lands on poetry prize short list

Ben Sigurdson 4 minute read Saturday, May. 30, 2026

Winnipeg Michif poet katherena vermette is a finalist for one of this year’s prizes from the League of Canadian Poets.

Vermette’s collection Procession, published by House of Anansi in 2025, is among the contenders for the Pat Lowther award for a book of poetry by a woman.

The winner of each of the three prizes wins $2,000, with an online reading taking place Tuesday at 7 p.m. and the winners announced Wednesday. For a list of finalists and more infomation on viewing the online reading, see poets.ca/shortlist-2026.

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Books

Questions of healing, chronic pain explored

melanie brannagan frederiksen 4 minute read Saturday, May. 30, 2026

In her latest book, Save Your Prayers — Send Money (Talonbooks, 107 pages, $20), Jónína Kirton writes a layered, lyric map of chronic illness, race and the pitfalls of New Age avenues to healing.

While these poems and prose pieces are rooted in Kirton’s own family and history, she draws on these experiences to express solidarity with others, namely with other people with chronic illness and their caregivers, as well as the Palestinian survivors of genocide in Gaza.

In the cost of living, Kirton enumerates the costs of chronic illness: “chronic pain = more pain,” she writes, “shall we begin at the bottom/ work our way up …// these feet weren’t made for walking/ fallen arches arthritis in big toes/ orthotics: $530 plus.”

Each of the listed costs, not covered by public health insurance, adds an increasing burden on those with chronic illnesses. Coupled with the attitude of, “If you can’t afford the treatments, there is disdain,” Kirton makes the argument that “we need practical support, not prayers or suggestions shouted from the safety of the shore.

Books

Spring readings aplenty ahead of summer lull

Ben Sigurdson 4 minute read Saturday, May. 23, 2026

The summer months may be relatively quiet for book launches and related events, but this coming week sees a raft of author events taking place.

McNally Robinson Booksellers’ Grant Park location welcomes Australian author Janey Stone to the bookstore tonight at 7 p.m. for the launch of The Radical Jewish Tradition: Revolutionaries, Resistance Fighters and Firebrands, which she co-authored with Donny Gluckstein.

The event, co-presented by the Winnipeg chapters of the United Jewish People’s Order and Independent Jewish Voices, will see Stone speak about the book (published May 19 by Verso Books) before being joined in conversation by Winnipeg authors Harriet Zaidman and Tami Gadir.

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Books

Mystery, history collide in Hogtown whodunit

Reviewed by Susan Huebert 3 minute read Preview

Mystery, history collide in Hogtown whodunit

Reviewed by Susan Huebert 3 minute read Saturday, May. 23, 2026

World events and the lives of ordinary people, while seemingly separate, sometimes intersect in unexpected ways. The assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. becomes part of a Toronto private investigator’s life in Opposite Sully’s Gym by Alexis Stefanovich-Thomson, as the author imagines the ordinary people who might have been affected by the aftermath of that crime.

Stefanovich-Thomson has written several books in the Patrick Bird series, including The Road to Heaven, which was nominated for an Edgar Award. The Toronto author has also won the Black Orchid Novella Award and the Crime Writers of Canada Best Crime Novella Award.

Opposite Sully’s Gym begins with two men sitting in a car, waiting for King’s assassin, James Earl Ray, and discussing the best way to hide him in Toronto. From that introduction, the novel moves to the life and troubles of Patrick, an unemployed private detective. When a tenant from his mother-in-law’s rooming house goes missing, the man’s parents hire Patrick to find him.

Through his investigations, Patrick learns about the lives of the other tenants, while also trying to find new ways of engaging with his pregnant wife, Rose. Eventually he discovers one of the tenants who stayed for a few weeks at the rooming house was James Earl Ray, Martin Luther King Jr.’s notorious killer. He also finds the murdered tenant’s killer, bringing an end to his own initial inquiries. Although the solution to the mystery prompts a new tragedy, Patrick gains new insights into life in the process.

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Saturday, May. 23, 2026

Books

Manitoba’s newspapers portrayed province as rife with untamed potential — to the detriment of the Indigenous community

Reviewed by Matt Henderson 5 minute read Preview

Manitoba’s newspapers portrayed province as rife with untamed potential — to the detriment of the Indigenous community

Reviewed by Matt Henderson 5 minute read Saturday, May. 23, 2026

Historian Howard Zinn once compared the historian’s perspective to that of the mapmaker. We have the human tendency to see the world from our point of view, regardless of our best intentions and feigned attempts at objectivity.

Such is the same for newspapers, both historically and in their present form. Newspapers carry with them a certain perspective — a leaning of sorts that is inherent and molded in the perspective of owners, editorial boards and journalists themselves.

You can’t be neutral on a moving train, as Zinn would argue.

In the 19th century, however, newspapers notoriously and explicitly saw the world and tried to shape it from the perspective and agenda of its owners. George Brown’s Globe in Upper Canada, for example, was a classic example of a partisan media that used its platform to undermine rivals, the French and various governments.

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Saturday, May. 23, 2026

Books

Canadian-born former first lady of Iceland’s memoir leads with candour and charm

Reviewed by David Jón Fuller 4 minute read Preview

Canadian-born former first lady of Iceland’s memoir leads with candour and charm

Reviewed by David Jón Fuller 4 minute read Saturday, May. 23, 2026

Fans of mystery novelist Eliza Reid get a look behind the curtain in her new memoir about serving as forsetafrú (“wife of the president,” translated as “first lady”) in Iceland. But although written with candour, with many endearing anecdotes, readers hoping for a deeper look will be disappointed.

Reid, who grew up on a hobby farm near Ottawa and later travelled extensively, is the author of both non-fiction (Secrets of the Sprakkar: Iceland’s Extraordinary Women and How They Are Changing the World) and fiction. Her debut novel, Death on the Island, a gripping, claustrophobic murder mystery that leans into the isolation of Iceland’s turbulent weather, was an international bestseller.

She wrote both books while parenting four children along with her husband Guðni Th. Jóhannesson, who was elected president of Iceland in 2016 and served until 2024.

Reid also co-founded the long-running Iceland Writers Retreat in 2014.

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Saturday, May. 23, 2026

Books

New in paper

2 minute read Preview

New in paper

2 minute read Saturday, May. 23, 2026

Endling: A Novel

By Maria Reva (Vintage, $24)

Reva’s debut novel follows a snail scientist and two other women in 2022 Ukraine who kidnap a group of bachelors looking for brides — just as Russia invades.

All the Parts We Exile: A Memoir

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Saturday, May. 23, 2026

Books

Longtime NHL official Bill McCreary recalls his legendary, hall of fame career

Reviewed by Barry Craig 6 minute read Preview

Longtime NHL official Bill McCreary recalls his legendary, hall of fame career

Reviewed by Barry Craig 6 minute read Saturday, May. 23, 2026

When the Winnipeg Jets hit the ice, they swan around with no sense of direction until a whistle reveals what they long to be — a staccato of aggression on the end of a stick.

And the person with the whistle who regulates this mayhem, who dresses in a black-and-white shirt with bright orange armbands, is a National Hockey League (NHL) referee, the zenith of officialdom on the ice in the world’s best hockey league.

Bill McCreary was one of those referees, and a very, very good one.

Stories from Ice Level by Rob Simpson and McCreary is the longtime referee’s recollections of the elite hockey world and his time in it as an official. It is a story that is insightful, fortuitous and humorous, and will inform and entertain even those who don’t know a puck from a kiss on the cheek.

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Saturday, May. 23, 2026

Books

In their travels, Zorn’s characters learn about the world — and themselves

Reviewed by Reinhold Kramer 4 minute read Preview

In their travels, Zorn’s characters learn about the world — and themselves

Reviewed by Reinhold Kramer 4 minute read Saturday, May. 23, 2026

Guanajuato, Mahdia, Vienna, Marrakesh: these are a few destinations that Alice Zorn’s stories visit in her collection Mind the Gap.

The Montreal author’s Colours in Her Hands — in which the attitudes of a woman with Down syndrome clash unpredictably against those of her care-giving brother — was arguably the best Canadian novel of 2024.

Zorn’s skill is apparent throughout the eight stories of Mind the Gap too, though less dramatically. Its characters travel. In Born – Died, Claudia, on the cusp of adulthood and against the feelings of her adoptive parents, travels to Guanajuato in Mexico to find out about her birth family and seek the reason behind her adoption. Instead, she finds her own gravestone.

Other stories include that of a formerly independent woman, Pia, who travels to Madia in Tunisia with her boyfriend Luc and the boyfriend’s 13-year-old unfriendly daughter Brigitte. Hearing the phrase “the socks… are dead” from her father’s mouth, Brigitte adopts it as an all-purpose reply to most questions. The potential is certainly there for a vacation from hell. In Zorn’s writing, the most intriguing aspects are the myriad forms of human conflict — in this case step-daughter/step-(what?) — and the potential ways in which the antagonists might rise above said conflict.

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Saturday, May. 23, 2026

Books

Sleuth locked in a safe makes for fun, familiar fodder

Reviewed by Laurence Broadhurst 5 minute read Preview

Sleuth locked in a safe makes for fun, familiar fodder

Reviewed by Laurence Broadhurst 5 minute read Saturday, May. 23, 2026

When does a really good gimmick become too fatigued to merit extension?

Already-prolific Australian author and comic Benjamin Stevenson is on a determined pursuit, it seems, to uncover the answer to this question, having churned out more than 1,200 pages in his suspect little quest.

First was 2022’s Everyone in My Family Has Killed Someone, a delightful meta-mystery romp that introduced us to lovable, flawed, goofy but brilliant Ernest Cunningham, full-time deliberate author and some-time accidental “detective.” Ern and his secretive family are on winter vacation. They’ve all done terrible things. Worse, seemingly inexplicably (but actually explicable), things keep happening to them.

The very busy sequel, Everyone on This Train Is a Suspect, followed fast and furious in 2023, announcing that a series (or gimmick) was perhaps indeed afoot. Train is functionally a moving locked-room mystery, here a mobile chamber full of — wait for it — mystery writers. You can guess: it is deeply, playfully mystery-meta once again. It is also breathlessly action-packed — downright draining, to be honest. Are we tired yet?

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Saturday, May. 23, 2026

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