Books

Sheldon Oberman mentorship seeks emerging writers

Ben Sigurdson 3 minute read Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025

Up-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.

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Newman’s thriller plumbs new depths

David Pitt 4 minute read Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025

T.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

Reviewed by Nick Martin 5 minute read Preview

Cleeves’ Shetland copper is back, and in fine form, in new murder mystery

Reviewed by Nick Martin 5 minute read Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025

Just two magic words: Jimmy Perez.

Jimmy Perez, that iconic Shetland police detective, the stoic kindly Scot born on tiny Fair Isle and descended from shipwrecked Spanish sailors fleeing the destruction of the armada, missed by so many lo these seven years, is alive and well and still investigating murders.

We’ll pause while you try to pull yourself together.

When Ann Cleeves announced she was writing her final Shetland mystery seven years ago, some despairing readers undoubtedly feared Jimmy would die on the final page.

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Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025

The Killing Stones

The Killing Stones

Revisiting evangelical pop-culture ephemera melds careful critique with moving memoir

Reviewed by Laurence Broadhurst 4 minute read Preview

Revisiting evangelical pop-culture ephemera melds careful critique with moving memoir

Reviewed by Laurence Broadhurst 4 minute read Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025

This is not just a strikingly timely book, it is also a fascinating, funny, upsetting and, in the end, beautiful one.

What Joelle Kidd has done here is rather difficult to categorize.

At first blush — manifest immediately in that very carefully crafted subtitle — Jesusland presents itself as a memoir. Daughter of a Scottish father and a Mennonite mother, the millennial Kidd was initially raised in Eastern Europe, but her most formative years were spent in an evangelical Christian school in Manitoba. (She now lives in Toronto.)

Those years, squarely aligning with the aughts, are the focus of her unforgiving yet dear reflections here. We learn only sparsely of her family but deeply of her primary and secondary education, of her awkward immersion in early internet social worlds, of her earnest, thinking devotion to her “Purity culture” faith and of her personal and social awakenings as she grows into adulthood.

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Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025

Jon Owen photo

Jess Kidd’s debut book-length work of non-fiction chronicles her formative years spent in an evangelical Christian school in Manitoba.

Jon Owen photo
                                Jess Kidd’s debut book-length work of non-fiction chronicles her formative years spent in an evangelical Christian school in Manitoba.

Vivid, visceral horror story resonates

Reviewed by David Jón Fuller 4 minute read Preview

Vivid, visceral horror story resonates

Reviewed by David Jón Fuller 4 minute read Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025

Andrew Joseph White’s new horror novel isn’t for the faint of heart.

It opens with the main character, Crane, a non-verbal autistic trans man, being violently sexually assaulted by Levi, a dishonourably discharged soldier. Worse, it’s nothing new for their relationship.

As if that weren’t horrifying enough, the sentient worms they’ve surrendered control of their lives to want a baby to serve as a human host. And Crane is pregnant.

It’s not just worms — the “hive” is a collective of tiny insects and invertebrates operating cult-like human groups throughout America, and anyone who strays is brutally dealt with by enforcers like Levi. Crane’s attempt to transition after high school led him straight into the clutches of the hive in West Virginia, where he lives cut off from family and most friends.

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Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025

Protagonist perseveres in stellar slice-of-life graphic novel

Reviewed by Nyala Ali 4 minute read Preview

Protagonist perseveres in stellar slice-of-life graphic novel

Reviewed by Nyala Ali 4 minute read Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025

Lee Lai’s masterful follow up to 2021’s acclaimed Stone Fruit begins with an explosive scene, akin to the result of a loose cannon. The frenetic destruction presented in Cannon’s opening pages immediately invites assumptions about the kind of person who caused it.

But when introduced to the eponymous Cannon, it’s obvious that her nickname is ironic; her ability to keep a cool head and compassionate demeanour in stressful situations are her defining characteristics.

Nevertheless, even the most unflappable person may still hold long-simmering tensions underneath their calm exterior, the repercussions of which make up the brunt of this deftly layered slice-of-life graphic novel.

Cannon’s story is presented primarily in a sparse black-and-white palette, with four panels per page crafting a literal window into both her outer life and the way she compartmentalizes her feelings. Brief moments of solitude are dissociative; she listens to meditation podcasts while hustling to or from work, and imagines a flock of black birds taking over the room during extreme overwhelm.

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Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025

Literary scholar seeks coveted lost sonnet cycle in climate-ravaged England

Reviewed by Morley Walker 4 minute read Preview

Literary scholar seeks coveted lost sonnet cycle in climate-ravaged England

Reviewed by Morley Walker 4 minute read Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025

Part environmental dystopia, part literary mystery, Ian McEwan’s new effort highlights the veteran English novelist’s gift for clever plotting and gimmicky premises.

His 19th novel, What We Can Know, is mid-range McEwan. It is more ambitious than such trifles as 2016’s Nutshell and 2019’s Machines Like Me, but not as satisfying as 2001’s Atonement or his most recent effort, 2022’s Lessons, which might stand as the most humane book of his 50-year career.

Like many McEwan novels, it searches for common ground between C.P. Snow’s two cultures, the sciences and humanities. Think of 2005’s Saturday, in which the brain surgeon protagonist repels home invaders by reciting poetry at them.

This time we are in England in the year 2119. The narrator is Thomas Metcalfe, an Oxford literary scholar in his early 40s.

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Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025

What We Can Know

What We Can Know

Follett’s epic Stonehenge origin story stands tall

Reviewed by Kathryne Cardwell 3 minute read Preview

Follett’s epic Stonehenge origin story stands tall

Reviewed by Kathryne Cardwell 3 minute read Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025

Welsh author Ken Follett’s latest work of historical fiction is, shall we say, monumental in scope.

Follett is best-known for his 1989 epic novel The Pillars of the Earth, historical fiction set in 12th-century England. The book centres around the building of a Gothic-style cathedral in a remote English community.

Similarly, Circle of Days tells the story of prehistoric peoples building the famed Stonehenge monument.

Readers may be reminded of Jean M. Auel’s Clan of the Cave Bear series, which also examines themes of community, family, survival and even romance among prehistoric humans.

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Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025

Circle of Days

Circle of Days

Pioneering scientist’s climate legacy tainted

Reviewed by Douglas J. Johnston 4 minute read Preview

Pioneering scientist’s climate legacy tainted

Reviewed by Douglas J. Johnston 4 minute read Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025

The evidence is overwhelming: global warming is real, rapid and human-induced.

Only the occupier of the White House and his sycophant appointees remain in denial of what the guy who’s the subject of this book forecast.

James Lovelock is best known in climatological circles as the father of Gaia — the theory that life on Earth and its biological systems functions as a single, self-regulating entity.

Named after a Greek goddess, it holds that our home planet is a living organism and that human activity can’t be divorced from the interplay of life in all its forms — including, and especially, Earth’s atmosphere.

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Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025

The Many Lives of James Lovelock

The Many Lives of James Lovelock

Friendship, rebellion run through Korean historical fiction

Reviewed by Susan Huebert 3 minute read Preview

Friendship, rebellion run through Korean historical fiction

Reviewed by Susan Huebert 3 minute read Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025

Hardship and crises can break people — or they can inspire new ideas and unexpected relationships, possibly even prompting entirely different ways of dealing with friends, family and strangers.

For Kim Na-Young and the other characters in Ann Y. K. Choi’s novel All Things Under the Moon, circumstances that threaten to destroy communities and people can combine to produce a new kind of understanding and determination.

Choi is an author and educator originally from Chung-Ju, South Korea. Her earlier novel, 2016’s Kay’s Lucky Coin Variety, was shortlisted for the Toronto Book Award. In 2017, she received the Culture Award from the Korean Canadian Heritage Awards Committee for her work in promoting Korean culture in Canada. She currently teaches creative writing at the University of Toronto.

All Things Under the Moon begins in 1924 Korea, when the people of Na-Young’s village have been living at a distance from a harsh Japanese occupation. When Na-Young’s father decides to marry her off to a man she has never met, she persuades her best friend, Yeon-Soo, to flee with her for a better life elsewhere. A violent encounter with Japanese soldiers convinces them to end their mutual escape, with Na-Young returning home to marriage but Yeon-Soo continuing her journey without her friend.

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Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025

All Things Under the Moon

All Things Under the Moon

Powerful poets featured at trio of launches

Ben Sigurdson 4 minute read Saturday, Sep. 27, 2025

Poetry 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

melanie brannagan frederiksen 4 minute read Saturday, Sep. 27, 2025

Throughout 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

Reviewed by Keith Cadieux 4 minute read Preview

Generations haunted by traumas of the past in Lee’s chilling new novel

Reviewed by Keith Cadieux 4 minute read Saturday, Sep. 27, 2025

Author Jen Sookfong Lee, a B.C.-based acquisitions editor with ECW Press and author of the bestselling essay collection Superfan: How Pop Culture Broke My Heart, returns with her first novel since 2016’s The Conjoined in The Hunger We Pass Down, an eerie, claustrophobic exploration of generational trauma experienced by a family of Chinese-Canadian women.

Alice lives in Vancouver. She is divorced with two kids, struggles to keep up with her online boutique cloth diaper service and drinks a lot to cope with her stress. Despite her inability to keep everything afloat and as her pressures continue to mount, Alice awakens one morning to find all her chores are taken care of — the dishes washed, the meals prepped, her orders packed and neatly waiting for pick up on the porch. While she tries to rationalize that she is doing it all in her sleep or while blackout drunk, this explanation doesn’t stand up to scrutiny. But Alice is so exhausted that she’s willing to simply accept the help, no matter the source.

The novel moves through several different time periods, the earliest of which is Japanese-occupied Hong Kong in 1938. Thirteen-year-old Gigi is terrified of the mansion called Nam Koo Terrace. Rumors claim the daughter of a wealthy silk merchant hanged herself inside to avoid being married off to secure her father’s business.

One day on her way home from school, Gigi gathers her courage to look at the house as she passes and is grabbed from behind, a bag pulled over her head. Taken inside, she learns the true horrors of the house; Gigi is only the latest to be kidnapped and forced to serve as a comfort woman for the Japanese soldiers in the occupied city.

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Saturday, Sep. 27, 2025

Kyrani Kanavaros photo

Jen Sookfong Lee’s seven books include the 2016 novel The Conjoined and her bestselling essay collection Superfan: How Pop Culture Broke My Heart.

Kyrani Kanavaros photo
                                Jen Sookfong Lee’s seven books include the 2016 novel The Conjoined and her bestselling essay collection Superfan: How Pop Culture Broke My Heart.

Female primatologists prove pivotal to progress in their field

Reviewed by Julie Kentner 4 minute read Preview

Female primatologists prove pivotal to progress in their field

Reviewed by Julie Kentner 4 minute read Saturday, Sep. 27, 2025

Some are world famous — Jane Goodall, Biruté Gladikas and Dian Fossey, for example. Others are scientifically famous, such as Jeanne Altmann, Alison Jolly or Linda Fedigan. But all these women, and many others, were part of a transformation in the 1960s and ‘70s, blazing a scientific trail in jungles around the world to learn more about our closest relatives.

In Sisters of the Jungle: The Trailblazing Women Who Shaped the Study of Wild Primates, Canadian primatologist Keriann McGoogan offers a compelling tribute to the women who revolutionized the study of primates.

Blending memoir, biography and scientific history, McGoogan charts a lineage of female primatologists whose work has shaped both the discipline and its public perception.

McGoogan herself is an “accidental scientist,” having switched from English to primatology during her undergraduate studies.

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Saturday, Sep. 27, 2025

Fernando Turmo / Jane Goodall Institute

Many primatologists, such as Jane Goodall, become conservationists by necessity, confronting the effects of habitat loss and the pet trade on primate populations.

Fernando Turmo / Jane Goodall Institute
                                Many primatologists, such as Jane Goodall, become conservationists by necessity, confronting the effects of habitat loss and the pet trade on primate populations.

Clutches of religious indoctrination leads to fraught mother-daughter relationship

Reviewed by Jen Zoratti 3 minute read Preview

Clutches of religious indoctrination leads to fraught mother-daughter relationship

Reviewed by Jen Zoratti 3 minute read Saturday, Sep. 27, 2025

For much of her life, Tamara Jong was a Jehovah’s Witness.

Its strictness and structure gave the Montreal-born writer a sense of belonging, meaning and, perhaps most powerfully, stability — things her chaotic, alcoholic mother who raised her in religion and her distant (and eventually absent) father could not offer her.

But as she got older, religion stopped being a comfort. It had become a cage.

In Wordly Girls, her striking debut memoir-in-essays, Jong unpacks her indoctrination and subsequent disillusionment with the religion that formed so much of her identity — as well as her adult struggles with depression, infertility and estrangement — with remarkable vulnerability.

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Saturday, Sep. 27, 2025

Lebanese mother and son’s account offers poignant, heartbreaking prose — with a healthy does of riotous fun

Reviewed by Sara Harms 4 minute read Preview

Lebanese mother and son’s account offers poignant, heartbreaking prose — with a healthy does of riotous fun

Reviewed by Sara Harms 4 minute read Saturday, Sep. 27, 2025

Rabih Alameddine returns to Beirut, Lebanon as the volatile, beloved setting and muse for his new novel, the enticingly titled The True True Story of Raja the Gullible (and His Mother).

This is the eighth work of fiction by the PEN/Faulkner Award-winning author of The Wrong End of the Telescope and the National Book Award finalist An Unnecessary Woman. (Alameddine has once again made the National Book Award long list for Raja the Gullible.)

The Jordan-born author and painter divides his time between the United States and Lebanon — or, according to his fun bio, between his living room and his bedroom. In 2025, he received the LGBTQ Bill Whitehead Award for Lifetime Achievement.

Narrated in the voice of Raja, an irreverent, gay philosophy teacher, this contemporary tale spans the decades of Raja’s life into his 60s, as well as that of his unforgettable and equally irreverent octogenarian mother.

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Saturday, Sep. 27, 2025

Oliver Wasow photo

The ebullience that runs through Rabih Alameddine’s new novel is matched only, perhaps, by his tremendous author photo.

Oliver Wasow photo
                                The ebullience that runs through Rabih Alameddine’s new novel is matched only, perhaps, by his tremendous author photo.

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