Books

Books

Canadian authors, publisher nab big global prizes

Ben Sigurdson 4 minute read Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026

The 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.

Advertisement

Advertise With Us

Weather

Apr. 22, 6 PM: 19°c Cloudy with wind Apr. 23, 12 AM: 15°c Light rain with wind

Winnipeg MB

24°C, Cloudy

Full Forecast

Dawn Bowman Photography

Antonio Michael Downing

Dawn Bowman Photography
                                Antonio Michael Downing

Southern coming-of-age story next Free Press Book Club read

3 minute read Preview

Southern coming-of-age story next Free Press Book Club read

3 minute read Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026

The Free Press Book Club and McNally Robinson Booksellers are pleased to welcome Trinidadian-Canadian author and CBC Radio’s The Next Chapter host Antonio Michael Downing to the next virtual meeting on Tuesday, April 28 at 7 p.m. to read from and discuss his critically novel Black Cherokee.

In the opening chapters of Black Cherokee, published in 2025 by Scribner Canada, six-year-old Ophelia Blue Rivers struggles to understand her place. She is half-Black and half-Cherokee, growing up on the banks of the river Etsi in South Carolina in the 1990s.

Raised by her Grandma Blue, who is the former wife of a Cherokee chief and descendent of the Black Cherokee Freedmen, Ophelia’s world is full of conflict; her father isn’t around, her mother is dead, and in her town, a now-disbanded reserve, racism persists, leaving her feeling a true lack of belonging.

Once it is revealed the river in Etsi is essentially polluted to the point of becoming poisonous, Ophelia, now 12 years old, is sent off by Grandma Blue to live with her aunt for a chance at a better life. But this transition, too, is not exempt from conflict; her aunt is an alcoholic and the one “safe space” Ophelia finds is a Black evangelical church community, which turns out not to be so safe after all.

Read
Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026

Yellowstone National Park photo

In 1995, the Yellowstone Wolf Reintroduction Project brought wolves from Canada to Yellowstone National Park.

Yellowstone National Park photo
                                In 1995, the Yellowstone Wolf Reintroduction Project brought wolves from Canada to Yellowstone National Park.

Prolific park ranger shares his life story — including decades chronicling countless wolves

Reviewed by Julie Carl 4 minute read Preview

Prolific park ranger shares his life story — including decades chronicling countless wolves

Reviewed by Julie Carl 4 minute read Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026

I never much knew my grandfather. He was an ocean away, an urban kid from the mean streets of London’s East End. So he wouldn’t have had woodsy tales to tell.

But reading Rick McIntyre’s memoir My Life With Wolves feels exactly like I imagine it would be to sit at Granddad’s knee and hear tales of watching, studying and caring about the wolves of Yellowstone Park for more than 25 years. McIntyre’s voice is warm and gentle, the humble voice of a man who likely had to be convinced to write about his own life rather than his beloved wolves. Memoir this may be, but it is far more about the wolves than about McIntyre.

He is the author of the award-winning Alpha Wolves of Yellowstone book series for adults and the Chronicles of the Yellowstone Wolves book series for children (with co- author David A. Poulsen).

My Life With Wolves starts with sweet stories of his childhood in small-town Massachusetts, where he spent his time wandering the local woods, catching turtles to study and reading Jack London’s The Call of the Wild — clearly a naturalist in the making.

Read
Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026

Adam Lerner / MacArthur Foundation

As with his three previous novels, many of the details in Ben Lerner’s latest lean toward the autobiographical.

Adam Lerner / MacArthur Foundation
                                As with his three previous novels, many of the details in Ben Lerner’s latest lean toward the autobiographical.

Art, technology and memory converge in Lerner’s brief, insightful new novel

Reviewed by Sara Harms 5 minute read Preview

Art, technology and memory converge in Lerner’s brief, insightful new novel

Reviewed by Sara Harms 5 minute read Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026

Pulitzer Prize finalist Ben Lerner’s fourth novel, Transcription, is a compact and profound meditation on the nature of memory, mentorship and the making of fiction in the digital age.

Lerner is the author of several collections of poetry, including the National Book Award-nominated Angle of Yaw, as well as the non- fiction book-length essay, The Hatred of Poetry, in which the titular stance becomes the basis for the genre’s defence. He was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship Genius Grant in 2015.

His fiction tends to the autobiographical. Like Lerner, Adam Gordon — the narrator of his trilogy Leaving the Atocha Station, 10:04 and The Topeka School — was born in Topeka, Kansas in 1979, was a brilliant high school debater, lived in Madrid on scholarship and becomes a Brooklyn-based writer and poet who attains great literary and academic success.

Lerner’s collaborations with artists include The Polish Rider with Anna Ostoya, which incorporates a short story of the same name by Lerner published in the New Yorker, and The Snows of Venice with Alexander Kluge, the German filmmaker and author who died earlier this year and who some critics pinpoint as the inspiration for the mentor figure of Thomas in Transcription.

Read
Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026

David Kotsibie photo

Glenn Dixon’s new novel is set in a world beyond human control, with the all-connected Grid inexorably limiting people’s freedoms.

David Kotsibie photo
                                Glenn Dixon’s new novel is set in a world beyond human control, with the all-connected Grid inexorably limiting people’s freedoms.

In a future of restricted freedoms, sentient appliances offer insight into the human condition

Reviewed by David Jón Fuller 4 minute read Preview

In a future of restricted freedoms, sentient appliances offer insight into the human condition

Reviewed by David Jón Fuller 4 minute read Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026

If you’ve always believed your vacuum cleaner has your best interests at heart, you’ll enjoy Glenn Dixon’s new novel about sentient household devices.

A former high school English teacher and musician, Dixon’s previous books include memoir (Juliet’s Answer), musicology (Tripping the World Fantastic), travel/linguistics (Pilgrim in the Palace of Words) and his debut novel, Bootleg Stardust. He’s also written for National Geographic, Psychology Today, the Walrus and the Globe and Mail.

As such, it’s not surprising he can write a captivating lede: “There was a time, not so long ago, when refrigerators could not dream and vacuum cleaners could not weep.”

The Infinite Sadness of Small Machines focuses initially on the growing awareness of said vacuum, akin to a Roomba, which talks to the other smart appliances in the home of the elderly Harold and Edie. Desiring a name, the vacuum is inspired after hearing Harold, a retired English teacher, reading to his bedridden wife Edie from his first-edition To Kill A Mockingbird.

Read
Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026

Mikaela MacKenzie / Free Press files

In an act of literary alchemy, Margaret Sweatman’s lyrical, whimsical prose transforms what could have been a hard-boiled thriller into a meditation on greed.

Mikaela MacKenzie / Free Press files
                                In an act of literary alchemy, Margaret Sweatman’s lyrical, whimsical prose transforms what could have been a hard-boiled thriller into a meditation on greed.

Sweatman’s riveting literary eco-thriller a timely warning in uncertain times

Reviewed by Kathryne Cardwell 3 minute read Preview

Sweatman’s riveting literary eco-thriller a timely warning in uncertain times

Reviewed by Kathryne Cardwell 3 minute read Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026

The seventh novel from Winnipegger Margaret Sweatman is partly a literary thriller and entirely a condemnation of capitalism and environmental abuse.

The former longtime literature and creative writing instructor at University of Winnipeg, Sweatman debuted as a novelist in 1992 with Fox.

A work of historical fiction, Fox explores social injustice and the experiences of women during the 1919 Winnipeg General Strike.

Sweatman takes on similar themes in Night Birds, sharply criticizing wealth inequality, global capitalism and environmental exploitation, contrasted with the importance of art and human connection.

Read
Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026

Turtles’ roles in ecosystem crucial

Harriet Zaidman 4 minute read Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026

Sea 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.

● ● ●

Definitely Thriving

Definitely Thriving

Stepping out of comfort zone comes with positives, pitfalls

Reviewed by Lindsay McKnight 3 minute read Preview

Stepping out of comfort zone comes with positives, pitfalls

Reviewed by Lindsay McKnight 3 minute read Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026

The pressure to be successful (or appear so) in today’s society is all too real. A few minutes online will show you that your job isn’t making you enough money, your house isn’t perfectly curated and you don’t have a million followers.

In her new novel Definitely Thriving, Kerry Clare asks us to redefine what “thriving” actually means — or, more specifically, what else it could mean.

Clare is the Toronto author of three previous novels and a blog entitled Pickle Me This. Her essays have been nominated for the National Magazine Award, and she is the editor of the literary website 49th Shelf and the book The M Word: Conversations About Motherhood.

At first glance, Clemence Lathbury is definitely not thriving. She’s self- sabotaged herself out of her marriage, and is now residing in a run-down studio flat with a hot plate instead of a stove — a glorified “nun’s cell,” as she puts it. She’s also out of work.

Read
Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026

Buffalo Lessons

Buffalo Lessons

Banff bison brought back from the brink of extinction

Reviewed by Barry Craig 3 minute read Preview

Banff bison brought back from the brink of extinction

Reviewed by Barry Craig 3 minute read Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026

There were some in Winnipeg who swear they saw buffalo roaming their city streets during the memorable 1966 blizzard in March that smothered both cars and commuters and brought everything to a snow-filled standstill.

What they really saw in the blizzard were police officers in their marvellous 11-kilogram buffalo coats helping people survive. (If police were chasing someone on foot, they’d throw off the coat and let somebody return it for a finder’s fee. Winnipeg Police stopped using buffalo coats in the early 1970s.)

This anecdote isn’t in Karsten Heuer’s Buffalo Lessons, but it helps illustrate our kinship with a wild animal that used to carpet the Canadian Prairies, as lovingly described by Heuer in the saga of an animal that covered much of North America, like wall-to-wall shag carpet, until early settlers from Europe just about wiped all of them out. They were as close to extinction as the carrier pigeon.

Buffalo Lessons is the story of the relocation of plains bison to Banff National Park starting in 2017. Heuer, a conservationist, biologist, author and filmmaker, was head of the project. He died at age 56, shortly after finishing the manuscript.

Read
Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026

Served Him Right

Served Him Right

Family’s turbulent past haunts killer thriller

Reviewed by Rochelle Squires 3 minute read Preview

Family’s turbulent past haunts killer thriller

Reviewed by Rochelle Squires 3 minute read Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026

Family secrets, buried trauma and the alchemy of sisterhood serve up five-star thrills in prolific, bestselling author Lisa Unger’s latest novel Served Him Right.

Ana Blacksmith is the youngest of two sisters, raised by an aunt after domestic violence ripped their childhood apart, leaving their mother in jail and their father six feet under. Ana had to grow up fast, and quickly developed a penchant for the wrong kind of lover, along with an insatiable “dark appetite.”

But when her latest paramour is found dead, she becomes the primary suspect in his murder.

Could it be a case where Ana has followed too closely in her mother’s footsteps? Even she admits her scars have shaped similar tendencies.

Read
Saturday, Apr. 18, 2026

writes of spring 2026

10 minute read Friday, Apr. 17, 2026

David 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.

Supplied

Jon Klassen

Supplied
                                Jon Klassen

Winnipeg-born author-illustrator wins Swedish prize

1 minute read Preview

Winnipeg-born author-illustrator wins Swedish prize

1 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 15, 2026

Canadian picture book author-illustrator Jon Klassen has won the 2026 Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award, presented annually by the Swedish Arts Council and considered one of the richest literary prizes in the world.

The award — named after the late Swedish children’s author and is presented to “a person or organization for their outstanding contribution to children’s and young adult literature” — is worth five million Swedish krona, or about $749,000.

Klassen was born in Winnipeg, grew up in Niagara Falls, Ont., and now lives in Los Angeles and is the bestselling author/illustrator of I Want My Hat Back, This Is Not My Hat, The Skull, The Rock From the Sky and others. He has previously won the Caldecott and Kate Greenaway medals, and in 2018 was appointed to the Order of Canada.

The Swedish-based administrators of the prize and organizers of Italy’s Bologna Children’s Book Fair announced Klassen as the winner of the prize on April 14. Klassen will receive the award from Crown Princess Victoria of Sweden at a ceremony in Stockholm on May 25.

Read
Wednesday, Apr. 15, 2026

Tammy Zdunich photo

Yann Martel’s Son of Nobody was inspired in part by Homer’s The Iliad.

Tammy Zdunich photo
                                Yann Martel’s Son of Nobody was inspired in part by Homer’s The Iliad.

Parallel lines

Ben Sigurdson 6 minute read Preview

Parallel lines

Ben Sigurdson 6 minute read Monday, Apr. 13, 2026

It’s been 10 years since Yann Martel’s last book, The High Mountains of Portugal, hit bookstore shelves, and 25 since Life of Pi, his breakout novel which sold millions of copies and was made into an Oscar-winning film (and stage production). The Spanish-born, Saskatoon-based author’s new novel, Son of Nobody, which was published March 31, is just his fifth book since Life of Pi.

A new book by the 62-year-old Martel, in other words, is an event. In Winnipeg, that event takes place Sunday at 7 p.m. at McNally Robinson Booksellers’ Grant Park location, where Martel will read from and discuss Son of Nobody.

Martel’s latest offers two storylines sharing the pages, spanning continents and millennia but bound by the plight of its two main characters.

Harlow Donne is an academic from the Canadian Prairies who specializes in Greek translation and lands a scholarship at Oxford. He discovers an ancient text about a man named Psoas, a Greek foot soldier in the Trojan War (and constantly referred to as “son of nobody”), which he translates and names The Psoad. That epic poem takes up the top half of the pages of Martel’s latest.

Read
Monday, Apr. 13, 2026

MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS files

David A. Robertson is president of the new board for the revamped Manitoba Book Awards.

MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS files
                                David A. Robertson is president of the new board for the revamped Manitoba Book Awards.

Writing community rallies to relaunch book awards

Ben Sigurdson 3 minute read Preview

Writing community rallies to relaunch book awards

Ben Sigurdson 3 minute read Saturday, Apr. 11, 2026

A group of local authors and arts workers are behind the revival of the Manitoba Book Awards’ return.

On April 9, the group behind the scaled-back, revitalized literary awards — which had been dormant for two years — relaunched the awards website and issued a press release detailing the return of the prizes, six in all for the first year.

In 2023, a feasibility study concluded the awards, and the group administering the prizes, should be dissolved, and in August 2024 it was announced the awards would be shelved.

“The outcome of that review was that the previous model was no longer sustainable,” says author David A. Robertson, president of the new board of directors and winner of numerous Manitoba Book Awards.

Read
Saturday, Apr. 11, 2026

Manitoba Book Awards back for 2026

Ben Sigurdson 4 minute read Saturday, Apr. 11, 2026

After 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.

Canadian Press photo archive

In this 1951 photo, the Royal family (from left: Prince Charles, Queen Elizabeth, Princess Margaret, the Duke of Edinburgh, King George VI, Princess Elizabeth and Princess Anne pose for a photo.

Canadian Press photo archive
                                In this 1951 photo, the Royal family (from left: Prince Charles, Queen Elizabeth, Princess Margaret, the Duke of Edinburgh, King George VI, Princess Elizabeth and Princess Anne pose for a photo.

Deep dive into Royal couture reflects social, political context throughout first half of 20th century

Reviewed by GC Cabana-Coldwell 4 minute read Preview

Deep dive into Royal couture reflects social, political context throughout first half of 20th century

Reviewed by GC Cabana-Coldwell 4 minute read Saturday, Apr. 11, 2026

Once upon a time, British royals didn’t angst much about their raunchy misdeeds being headlined in the media. Any connection to questionable characters or inappropriate events was more likely dismissed, diminished or ignored by kowtowing newshounds. Publishers turning a blind eye to sketchy royal shenanigans was de rigueur, and everyone liked it that way.

Fast forward 80 years. Today, royal drama and sketchy miscues do the rounds on social media 24-7; it’s the sustenance that scandal-hungry consumers feast on and biographers happily cater to.

Case in point are two recent U.K. titles that became bestsellers weeks before a dustjacket even hit a bookstore: Tom Bower’s Betrayal: Power, Deceit & the Fight for the Future of the Royal Family, and Andrew Lownie’s Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York, a look at the pre-Epstein rise and smutty fall of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor (formerly Prince Andrew) and Sarah Ferguson.

Buried in the current nest of royal tell-alls is Fashioning the Crown: A Story of Power, Conflict and Couture, a serious, hefty book, recently launched with little fanfare and even less hype. And its author Justine Picardie isn’t nettled in the slightest about that.

Read
Saturday, Apr. 11, 2026

LOAD MORE BOOKS ARTICLES