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Biblioasis

June 17, 2019 by Trevor J. Adams

Ten years ago, I had the strange privilege of co-authoring Atlantic Canada’s 100 Greatest Books. My co-author and I, with the enthusiasm of men who do not realize they’ve bitten off far more than easily chewed, surveyed CanLit insiders and fans. There were 716 responses, nominating 2,048 books. From that, we winnowed a top 100 list.

(No Great Mischief was number one, if you don’t have your copy handy).

Debate began as soon as our project rolled off the press. Why aren’t there more Newfoundland books? Why didn’t you include my book? What do you guys have against poetry? Anne of Green Gables is number two? Really? And so on.

I learned more than I ever thought possible about the wealth of Atlantic Canadian literature. After the book was published and the hubbub was behind me, I thought: “I don’t want to ever read another Atlantic Canadian book and I never want to do that again.”

But great Atlantic Canadian books just keep coming. So, 10 years later, I’m again pondering the East Coast’s best books.

There is no particular methodology behind this list. I polled a few librarians, teachers, authors and editors (not 716 of them), but these are my subjective, opinionated picks.

What strikes me is how a great writing culture has, despite relentless economic pressure and competition from around the globe, gotten greater, with a more diverse array of talents. There are more women and writers of colour in the mix than a decade ago. It’s exciting to see writers who weren’t on my radar (sometimes because they were still in high school) now topping the list.

What Boys Like
Amy Jones
Biblioasis

It wasn’t her first book, but with this collection of short stories, many first discovered Halifax’s Amy Jones as an inventive writer, both technically proficient and artful. Her characters are authentically flawed, real and knowable. The 15 worlds she creates feel lived in. One senses lives that were going on before the reader joined, continuing after the reader leaves.

 

Generations Re-Merging
shalan joudry

Gaspereau Press

Canada is enjoying an explosion of Indigenous arts unseen since the first European settlers arrived here. This list could have just as easily been about the 10 best Indigenous books of the last decade. Few books reflect that as well as joudry’s debut collection of poetry. Exploring Mi’kmaw heritage, culture and tradition, she offers deeply personal poems speaking to her own experiences and far broader, universal issues. “Healing to both author and reader, and an offering for many generations to come,” writes reviewer Shannon Webb-Campbell in Room. 

 

Light Lifting 
Alexander MacLeod

Biblioasis.   

Cape Breton’s Alistair MacLeod (quite legitimately) dominated this discussion a decade ago, so the part of me that likes historical symmetry is pleased to place his son on this list. Yet Alexander MacLeod would belong here even if his father’s name were John Smith. Shortlisted for the 2010 Giller Prize, this short-story collection reveals a writer whose talent exceeds his legacy, rising above the expectations his famous father inevitably created. Raw emotions and vivid personalities dominate.

 

Come, Thou Tortoise
Jessica Grant
Vintage Canada  

Debut books seem to keep coming up on this list. (Which is about the most hopeful thing I can imagine for Atlantic Canadian literature). With brisk, breathlessly paced writing, Jessica Grant crafts a quirky world where even the most briefly passing-through characters have something pithy and wise to contribute. In creative-writing programs all over the country, young talents are furrowing their brows, trying to figure out how to write with such creative economy.

 

Indian School Road 
Chris Benjamin
Nimbus Publishing

Canadians like to imagine themselves as compassionate and gentle, without the racial strife that periodically roils over our American neighbour. So Canada’s post-colonization history is tough to reconcile. Most feign ignorance (“Their lives are so much better now.”) put it in the past tense (“That’s ancient history.”) With this searing look at the legacy of the residential-school system and its still-resonating consequences, Chris Benjamin makes either escape impossible. Read this book and it’s impossible to deny what our ancestors did, or our obligation to make it right.

 

The Golden Boy
Grant Matheson
Acorn Press

Write personally and honestly and you can’t go far wrong, say writing coaches around the world. And with this ruthlessly honest recollection of his life as a drug-addicted doctor, PEI’s Grant Matheson shows the simple wisdom of that advice. He describes how he became hooked, his fall from grace when his addiction led to professional malpractice, his struggles to get clean. It could be the lurid stuff of any number of autobiographies, yet his simple honesty gives readers the chance to understand and see the realities of drug addiction, and how its horrors aren’t confined to certain neighbourhoods or economic classes. 

 

Hot, Wet and Shaking
Kaleigh Trace 
Invisible Publishing

Kaleigh Trace describes herself as a “disabled, queer, feminist sex educator,” which would seem to put her in a category all her own as a writer. Only she doesn’t accept that notion. Instead, she writes a powerful and personal story about her own sexuality, what she’s discovered about herself and other people. National Post reviewer Stacey May Fowles sums up: “It is accessible to anyone who has struggled and faced confusion on the path to pleasure… so basically, everyone.”

 

Folk 
Jacob McArthur Mooney 
McClelland & Stewart

As our civilization is ever more atomized from a collective to a gathering of self-interested individuals, it’s fascinating to see a poet of Jacob McArthur Mooney’s talent explore, with wry humour and tender insights, our evolving idea of community. Most captivating is “Folk 1,” about the crash of Swissair 111, bringing international tragedy to a rural Nova Scotian fishing village. Two decades later, its effects linger in intangible ways, better understood after reading this book. 

 

Africville
Shauntay Grant
Anansi/Groundwood

A decade ago when pondering Atlantic Canada’s greatest books, we gave books for kids little consideration. It wasn’t deliberate; there were few on our radar, perhaps because we hadn’t seen books like Africville. With warmth and tenderness that makes the heart ache, Grant writes a lyrical homage to a lost community. Aimed at younger readers but captivating to all, she makes readers yearn to visit the now razed community. Evoking nostalgia for what we destroyed, she makes it clear why the razing of Africvilles remains an open wound.

 

outskirts
Sue Goyette
Brick Books

While young and emerging writers dominate much of this list, one can’t overlook the ongoing work of long-established talents like Sue Goyette. For more than three decades, she’s been writing poetry and meditations tightly linked to the East Coast, and specifically Nova Scotia. There’s her deep connection to the natural world, and more than that: “Firmly rooted in Nova Scotia’s natural environment and culture, the poems in Outskirts feel quite at home in my urban prairie setting. As I feel in Gus’s Pub,” says a review in Prairie Fire. You’ll find those qualities in any Goyette collection, but if you’re only reading one, this is it. An accomplished artist at the top of her game, helping us discover ourselves and our place.

 

Trevor J Adams is editor of Halifax Magazine and senior editor with Metro Guide Publishing. He wrote Long Shots: The Curious Story of the Four Maritime Teams that Played for the Stanley Cup and coauthored Atlantic Canada’s 100 Greatest Books and Today’s Joe Howe.

Filed Under: Lists Tagged With: 10 Best Atlantic Canadian Books Since Atlantic Canada's 100 Greatest Books, Acorn Press, Africville, Amy Jones, Atlantic Canada's 100 Greatest Books, Atlantic Canadian books, Biblioasis, Brick Books, Chris Benjamin, Come Thou Tortoise, Folk, Gaspereau Press, Generations Re-merging, Grant Matheson, Groundwood, Hot Wet and Shaking, House of Anansi Press, Indian School Road: Legacies of the Shubenacadie Residential School, Invisible Publishing, Jacob McArthur Mooney, Jessica Grant, Kaleigh Trace, McClelland & Stewart, Nimbus Publishing, Outskirts, Shalan Joudry, Shauntay Grant, Sue Goyette, The Golden Boy, Trevor J Adams, Vintage Canada, What Boys Like

November 8, 2018 by Carla Gunn

The Year of No Summer
Rachel Lebowitz
Biblioasis

The Luminous Sea
Melissa Barbeau
Breakwater Books

The Rest Is Silence
Scott Fotheringham
Goose Lane Editions

Amphibian
Carla Gunn
Coach House Books

“Inspiration sometimes comes straight out of facts,” says Nova Scotia author Rachel Lebowitz in her Biblioasis interview for her linked lyric essay collection, The Year of No Summer. “I read about birds falling dead from the skies and I knew I had to write about that.” (The facts as I write this: oil tanker protesters are dangling from the Ironworkers Memorial bridge in Vancouver, the Rusty Patched Bumblebee is now an endangered species, and the headlines scream “Red Hot Planet: All-time heat records have been set all over the world.”)

Much environmentally themed creative literature arises from real-life events. The year following the eruption of Indonesia’s Mount Tambora on April 10, 1815, for instance, is what inspired Lebowitz’s collection. She weaves prose with direct quotations from historical documents, novels, poetry, myths and parables, and in doing so provides a darkly fascinating account of how people responded to global weather disruption, disease and famine. Whereas we may take amusement in apocalyptic films and movies, during this particular summer not so long ago, many believed the world was ending.

Along with “acts of God,” though, today’s writers have a broad array of human-caused environmental crises from which to choose. These, of course, have provided fodder for contemporary apocalyptic and dystopian fiction, such as Margaret Atwood’s MaddAddam trilogy. The magnitude and complexity of environmental problems and conflicts loom large, and with the pace of destruction ramping up, writers can’t help but reflect this in their fiction.

Take, for example, plastic. There is a constant stream of news stories about the negative impacts of this impervious stuff. In the recent novel, The Luminous Sea, a story of a sea creature and the conflict over her fate (which can be read, I think, as an environmental allegory, with the sea creature emblematic of nature), Newfoundland author Melissa Barbeau draws our attention to the way plastic has changed the landscape:

“Broken bottles transformed into sea glass. Boats rotted into the grass, ropes disintegrated in the water. Now you have all this plastic everywhere and it’s getting harder and harder to disappear us…We’ve finally found the way to immortality, found a way to keep company with everything ancient down there, and it’s through trash.”

In The Rest is Silence, a 2012 novel by Nova Scotia author Scott Fotheringham, plastic is central. In the very near future scientists have discovered a bacterium that breaks it down and effectively recycles it—but these bacteria are released into the ecosystem with dramatic unintended consequences for humans.

And plastic inspired my own eco-novel, Amphibian. When my son was nine and biking along the trails near our home, he suddenly hit the brakes, jumped off his bike, hurled it aside and raced toward a plastic bag that was floating across the path. “Don’t people know sea turtles choke on this stuff?” he screamed, shaking the bag in his clenched fist.

Anxiety (do you see what I see?)

As you might expect with “crisis” fiction, anxiety is palpable. In The Rest is Silence, Benny experiences increasing frustration by what she sees as inaction on environmental issues. In The Luminous Sea, Vivienne is deeply disturbed by the callous treatment of the sentient sea creature her supervisors refer to as “the specimen.” And in Amphibian, nine-year-old Phin is overwhelmed by anxiety in response to the destruction of the natural world.

Although one reader told me that by page 30 she experienced so much anxiety that she hurled Amphibian at the wall (which struck me at the time as odd as I thought I had written a funny novel), if you’re among the one third of pre-teens who believes the Earth won’t be around by the time you’re an adult, crisis fiction may simply be imitating what you already know—and you find comfort in the knowledge that others know it too.

As Scott Fotheringham puts it, “Environmental fiction offers some solace to know that there are others out there who care about the world. Isn’t that one of the most beautiful things about fiction—that we get to not feel so alone?”

“He suddenly hit the brakes, jumped off his bike, hurled it aside and sprinted toward a plastic bag floating across the path. “Don’t people know sea turtles choke on this stuff?”

Despair (processing, processing)

In Amphibian Phin created stories to help make sense of and cope with dark realities. In The Year of No Summer Lebowitz highlights the parables, fables and myths we humans created to weave meaning into our lives and to

which we return for comfort. We need stories to help us process our experiences.

Dystopian environmental fiction, like The Rest is Silence, may be of particular importance to us collectively as it introduces scenarios that we can imagine (and may already have imagined) happening. Since we humans are horrible at responding to events that we perceive as far off in the distance, this sort of fiction elicits the sense of urgency that we need to feel before we act. Many environmental advocacy groups are aware of this and craft messages to overcome the problem of temporality.

In particular, I am reminded of a climate change public service announcement from about a decade ago: “Climate change? That won’t affect me,” says a man standing on railway tracks. Suddenly he steps off the tracks and his young daughter takes his place as a train comes hurtling toward her.

Moreover, although set in different times, The Year of No Summer and the Rest is Silence both prompt us to explore how people respond to a crisis that has already occurred or is in the process of occurring, and then to use these stories to project ourselves into the future. After relating the horror of the sinking of the ship, Medusa, in the summer of 1816 and what hunger incited the surviving crew members to do, Lebowitz muses about the future: “I’d like to think it takes thirty days, not two, for us to bite.”

For some, fiction with such severe themes may be too intense. For others, it helps them prepare psychologically for possibilities. I have a friend who may or may not have inherited a fatal disease. She has envisioned what the future may hold and has mentally worked through various options. This exercise has, to a certain extent, relieved some of the anxiety. For many, a sense of predictability—even when what’s predicted is horrific—is better than unpredictability.

Love (break it to me gently)

For some readers, however, more of a “Love not Loss” theme may be most palatable. In fact, in recent years some organizations, such as the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), advise that environmental organizations move away from fact-based campaigns that emphasize death and destruction and instead toward messages that draw attention to the beauty and value in our natural world. The idea is that we will want to protect what we love.

Deep love and respect for the natural world are reflected in many Atlantic Canadian works of fiction. Along with descriptions of seasons, flora and fauna—which pepper Fotheringham’s The Rest is Silence—New Brunswick author Beth Powning’s beautiful prose springs to mind.

Whether the intention is to encourage a deeper affinity with our natural worlds, this perhaps is a consequence, especially if the prose evokes the reader’s own memories and love for natural areas.

When it comes to what dosage and intensity is best suited to which reader, the jury is still out. I’m reminded of a cartoon I show in my psychology classes when we talk about therapies and how there needs to be a level of “readiness” before clients can accept insights: Kermit the Frog is seated in his doctor’s office and is about to be shown an X-ray of his spine, revealing a human hand that extends right up to the base of his skull.

“Sit down,” says the doctor, “what I am about to tell you may come as a huge surprise.”

From US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Coral Kingdom Collection, taken at the Gulf of Aqaba, Red Sea, by Ben Mierement

Heartless (I really don’t care, do u?)

Recently Rebecca Solnit, in a Literary Hub article titled “Not Caring is a Political Art Form,” argued that many of the crises we face—gun violence, climate change, agendas of the “alt right”—are all “exercises in not feeling and not connecting,” or what she calls the ideology of disconnection.

Many novels, including environmentally themed fiction, explore how injustice is facilitated by callousness. Some bring attention to how this enables the destructive corporate mindset of “progress” at any cost, which often involves the exploitation of “others”—whether those others be humans, animals or the natural environment. Lebowitz references multiple historical examples of cruelty in the Year Of No Summer, such as in the early rubber industry:

“You walk more than twenty miles to the European agents, who weigh the rubber. You are paid with a piece of cloth, a handful of beads, a few spoonfuls of salt. You skirt this spot here where Rene de Permetier has all his bushes and trees cut down around his house, so he can sit on the porch and use passerby as target practice.”

In The Luminous Sea, Vivienne’s supervisor warns her that her efforts to blow the whistle on an act that reflects an astounding callousness (that parallels the treatment of the sea creature pivotal to the story) will be futile:

“Telling anyone else about this will not make things better for you. Your story will be like one of those dolphins…This dolphin swam right into the beach where all those Spring Breakers were getting pissed, and someone spotted it and hauled it in and everyone had a picture with it, everyone got a selfie, and rubbed their tits on it, and the next thing they knew it was dead. Mauled to death.”

By focusing on injustice and the heartlessness that so frequently underlies it, environmental fiction can be emancipatory. It prompts us to examine both the individual and systemic variables at play and consider where we stand—and perhaps collectively emboldens us to take a stand.

Empathy (walk with me)

The poet Theodore Roethke wrote, “I learn by going where I have to go.” You can exchange “going” for “feeling” and it also holds true.

In contrast, psychology literature is full of examples of what people do when they can no longer consciously experience emotion: nothing. The Year of No Summer, The Luminous Sea, The Rest is Silence and Amphibian all evoke big doses of emotion: anger, sadness, curiosity, disappointment and joy, albeit in different proportions. One emotion they are all effective in eliciting, though, is empathy. And when it comes to environmental issues, this may be the most important of them all.

Researchers are attempting to tease out the relationship between fiction and empathy. In one experiment, participants read literary fiction, genre fiction, nonfiction or nothing, and only literary fiction had the effect of markedly increasing levels of empathy. Another study found that those who read fictional scenarios about an individual dramatically impacted by climate change spent more time afterward reading educational materials about climate change and voluntarily took this material home.

“We’ve finally found the way to immortality, found a way to keep company with everything ancient down there, and it’s through trash.” -Melissa Barbeau in The Luminous Sea

Action (a kick in the pants)

Does the empathy elicited by fiction inspire action on environmental issues? To attempt to answer this, let’s return to plastic.

Many of us know that straws and other plastic waste are negatively impacting wildlife. We’ve read the statistics—like how over 100 million marine animals die each year due to plastic debris. We know all of this but we don’t feel it. However, when a straw is lodged up sea turtle’s nostril and there’s a video documenting this poor creature’s plight, well, we’re suddenly mobilized.

Why? The simple explanation is the psychological finding that when something horrible impacts many lives we care less about it than when it affects few lives, but the deeper explanation may be that when something is personal and woven into a narrative, it engages our emotions and not just our minds. That individual sea turtle’s struggle makes it relatable (imagine a straw stuck up your dog’s nose, or your own) and children take up the cause.

In a similar, albeit more horrific vein, the image of the body of a little Syrian boy washed up on shore saw donations to the Swedish Red Cross jumped from $8,000 over a period of months to $430,000 in just a few weeks.

One of the powers of fiction is that, like real-life stories, it draws us into a personal narrative. Stories engage the heart and this is key to motivating us to act. Although it’s anecdotal, readers of Amphibian wrote to tell me that Phin’s struggle changed the way they viewed animals and that this was in turn influencing their product choices.

I am reminded of a parable: a starfish is washed up on shore and a young boy throws it back into the ocean. An old man scoffs, “But there are thousands of dying starfish, what difference does it make?”

The boy replies, “It made a difference to that one.”

California Clear-cutting photo by Tomas Sennett, US Environmental Protection Agency

Hope (storying a way forward)

In order to act, people need to feel that what they do will have an impact. But when the scale of disaster looms large, we feel helpless and are often thus paralyzed. “What’s the point?” we think.

We may look to God for meaning and direction, or to those we believe have more knowledge than we do. “If there is wisdom, it’s nothing I know. It’s all just birds and storms and hauntings. We look behind and scoff, as if those ahead weren’t doing the same,” writes Lebowitz.

These days we turn to science and government for reassurance that something effective can and will be done. But when these institutions fail to give us the reassurance we seek, we end up feeling frustrated and disillusioned. This is what happens to Bennie in The Rest is Silence: “What was needed was rapid planetary triage. Throwing a spanner in the gears was the obvious means of disabling the machine that continued to spew all over the planet.”

How do we collectively overcome feelings of futility? That’s an open question. Recently, however, I came across an exciting project funded by The Trudeau Foundation called Storying Climate Change. Headed by York University professor Catriona Sandilands, the goal of this project is for writers, artists, activists and academics to work together and produce a collection of stories that the group can use as a vehicle to engage the public and start meaningful conversations.

In this collection, I anticipate that we will see protagonists who choose to act and for whom these actions have consequences that are positive and affirming. Turning pessimism into optimism is not a one-dose cure, but the more we are exposed to these stories, the more they will seep into our collective consciousness, perhaps inspiring us to respond to the very real threats facing us.

Adaptation (“Those who cannot change their minds cannot change anything” -George Bernard Shaw)

We hear a lot these days about physical adaptation to climate change, like using scarce water resources more efficiently, but I would argue that psychological adaptation is just as important. This sort of adaptation takes many forms and can be fostered through reading environmentally themed fiction in all its variety.

We relate to the anxiety and frustration experienced by Benny in The Rest is Silence and we feel not so alone. We witness Vivienne in The Luminous Sea respond to injustice and we are prompted to consider how individual acts are important. Through reading fiction like The Year of No Summer, we come to a deeper understanding that both continuity and transformation are imbedded in the human experience, and in doing so we ourselves are transformed.

Filed Under: # 87 Fall 2018, Editions, Features, Fiction, Poetry Tagged With: Adaptation, Amphibian, Anxiety, Biblioasis, Breakwater Books, Carla Gunn, climate change, Coach House Books, Deforestation, ecology, environment, essays, fiction, Goose Lane Editions, Hope, Melissa Barbeau, mount tambora, New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, Oceans, plastic, Poetry, pollution, prose, Psychology, Rachel Lebowitz, Scott Fotheringham, The Luminous Sea, The Rest is Silence, The Year of No Summer, theme, Turtles, Wildlife

February 27, 2018 by Chris Benjamin

Toward the end of the calendar year, Biblioasis released its Best Canadian Stories 2017 collection, edited by short fiction tsar John Metcalf. With the title, the pedigree and Metcalf’s explicit indications that good work is objectively hard to find (“It was sometimes impossible to find ten good stories in the magazines in a given year”), one comes to such a book with high expectations.

The results are solid. But as with most short story collections, some of the stories were thrilling while others passed me by without great titillation. Perhaps the quality of a story is more subjective than an editor might think. Having said that, it’s not hard to understand why any given story was selected. Metcalf has sought out stories with “sparkling language [and] glorious rhetoric.” For the most part he’s succeeded.

Of particular interest to Atlantic Canadian readers may be the fact that six of the fourteen stories are from our people, including stories by Halifax and Fredericton’s Lisa Alward, Brooklyn Nova Scotia’s Martha Wilson, Newfoundland’s Lisa Moore, Halifax’s Alex Pugsley, Mahone Bay’s Beverly Shaw and Halifax’s David Huebert, who lives in Windsor now but we’ll still claim him as our own. Six of fourteen in a national collection is punching way beyond our weight, so back pats to us. What interests me, and perhaps what gives these stories much more than a regional appeal, is that they don’t deal with stereotypically Atlantic themes (you know, the fishing and the lighthouses, not that there’s anything wrong with that). They deal with more universal interests like aging love; pet ownership; the ethics of competitive salesmanship; the mess and blood of sex, birth and dying; like, partying teenaged-girl angst (okay that one is neither east coast nor universal); and the tendency of loneliness to ruin solitude. The setting may be Atlantic but rarely is it that obvious or important. This is not to say stories clearly set on the crags of Peggy’s Cove or the streets of St. John’s can’t have universal appeal. They often do. But the Atlantic Canadian stories selected here are clearly contemporary.

There are two that particularly stand out: Huebert’s “Suture” and Moore’s “The Shoe Emporium.” Moore is a veteran novelist and short story writer, author of seven books and multi award winner. Huebert is the new kid on the block, winner of last year’s CBC short story contest and already acclaimed for his first collection, Peninsula Sinking. “The Shoe Emporium” comes on at a frenetic pace, but Moore never loses control of it. It’s just three diverse employees selling shoes in a mall, each trying to win a trip to Toronto by outselling the others. She masterfully twists the tropes of her characters, the charismatic sleaze, push-too-hard Type A and the hapless mourner. In a confined space there’s tension and resentment and sex and jealousy, with a surprise at the end. I was dizzy with it.

“Suture” is actually the final third of the long titular story from Peninsula Sinking, about three phases in a young man’s life, and his maturation from a guy who does crazy stunts to get attention from the cool kids to someone who, full of regrets and hopes, grapples with highly evolved intellectual and ethical conundrums and finds safety only in love. It stands just fine on its own and opens with this enticement: “Imagine it’s you facing the loss of the still-ripening cherries between your legs.” This story is very much set in the Halifax of the 90s (“swimming [in the harbour] among the tiny jellyfish and the tampon applicators”) to today. Huebert proves himself a wizard with figurative, sensual writing, layering bizarre images with tricky turns of phrase. The ultimate insight is not so new, but we are reminded that “there were palm trees on Antarctica once.” Anything can happen.

Indeed, that is the joy of a short story, its ability to surprise us in such a short space. It can be thrilling, as are several of the stories in this collection.

Best Canadian Stories 2017
Edited by John Metcalf
Biblioasis

Filed Under: Fiction, Reviews Tagged With: Alex Pugsley, Best Canadian Stories, Best Canadian Stories 2017, Best of, Beverly Shaw, Biblioasis, CBC, Contemporary, David Huebert, John Metcalf, Lisa Alward, Lisa Moore, Love, Martha Wilson, Peninsula Sinking, short fiction, short stories

January 12, 2018 by Donald Calabrese

Drawing from a deep well of momentum, David Huebert lands his first collection of short stories Peninsula Sinking and solidifies his reputation as one of Canada’s most promising literary talents. Launched by the success of his poetry collection We Are No Longer the Smart Kids in Class, David Huebert’s first full-length prose effort undulates between the fierce, ubiquitous magnetism of Nova Scotian home life and the surprisingly moving power of the mundane. In Peninsula Sinking, Huebert’s characters walk into disjointed moments of memory and solitude finding ephemeral but meaningful clarity.

In these stories, Huebert, as deftly as any writer ever has, cuts the thinnest slivers of consciousness. His finest moments are quick snatches of a personal archive coalescing into single contemporaneous thoughts. Huebert experiments with how the loudest part of our interiority–the part that sounds like words and voice–is a crust on the yawning and often disturbing bog of memory. These explorations are not Proust’s madeleines. They come at us jarringly and unwanted in the form of dog erections, botched self-botoxing and Perrier rings on the coffee table. Huebert skewers cross sections of grief, shame and desire, puts focus on disconnection and threads together the ineffable moments in a singular patchwork.

Each of the eight stories in Peninsula Sinking proposes a familiar animal to accompany epiphany. In “Maxi,” a prison guard commits suicide by boa constrictor in a silent intimacy reserved for the best French New Wave. The 2016 CBC Short Story Prize winning “Enigma” descends into the mutual oblivion of a woman and her euthanized horse. “Drift,” the collection’s simplest and most gripping achievement, is an unadorned picture of one story from the 1992 Westray Mine disaster that begins with a pork tenderloin as its “recently growing, twitching” analogue. Elsewhere, dreams of neutered dogs and distant whale songs reverberate in the understated everyday of parents, siblings and lovers. Huebert’s animals work well: not just clever mirrors held up to his characters’ raging animality, but as new and sparklingly clear lenses with which to sketch their souls. With a tendency toward language that cascades rather than propels, Peninsula Sinking is a wonderful high point in a new and bright career.

Peninsula Sinking
David Huebert
Biblioasis

Filed Under: Fiction, Reviews, Web exclusives Tagged With: animals, Biblioasis, CBC Short Story Contest, contest winners, David Huebert, environment, fiction, Nova Scotia, short fiction

November 20, 2017 by Chris Benjamin

Betrayal of Trust
Joel Zemel
New World Publishing

Zemel’s first book, Scapegoat, explored the inquiry following the Halifax Explosion that scapegoated Acting Commander F Evan Wyatt and shed new light on the causes of the Disaster, becoming the first Atlantic Canadian book to win a John Lyman Award. Zemel’s follow up digs deeper into Wyatt’s life and the navy’s failure to protect him. #History

Tappan Adney and the Heritage of the St. John River Valley
Keith Helmuth
Chapel Street Editions

Tappan Adney first met Peter Joe and saw him building a Wolastoqiyik (Maliseet) birch-bark canoe in 1887 and began documenting how they were made, and building one-fifth-scale models using traditional materials gathered from the forest, making a significant contribution to the preservation of an Indigenous tradition. #History

400 Years in 365 Days
Leo Deveau
Formac Publishing

This is a celebration of all things Nova Scotia, condensed into bite-sized morsels and representing varied communities. It sings the songs of prominent Nova Scotians current and past, including Alexander Graham Bell, Carrie Best, Sam Langford, Viola Desmond, Rita MacNeil, Anna Leonowens, Alden Nowlan, Anne Murray, The Rankins, El Jones and George Elliott Clarke. #History

Big Business and Hitler
Jacques R Pauwels
Lorimer Publishing

In Nazi Germany, the re-arming of the deflated nation meant big bucks for multinational corporations. Pauwels lays bare the links between Hitler and companies including GM, IBM, Ford, Standard Oil and others, and how these connections kept America from joining the Allied Forces earlier, extending the war and holocaust. #History

Wartime
Edward Butts
Lorimer Publishing

Award-winning historian Edward Butts takes us back via news clippings, letters home from overseas and cinematic newsreels, as jubilant Europe-bound boys turned into casualties and lost promise as the Canadian government took desperate measures to enlist fresh recruits, by force if necessary. Ordinary Canadians struggled to make sense of a war without evident logic. #History

Develop or Perish
Gerhard P Bassler
Flanker

Develop or Perish is an illustrated companion to Gerhard P Bassler’s Escape Hatch, an in-depth examination of Smallwood’s Newfoundland industrialization effort, which drew in 17 new industries and more than 1,000 new immigrants in the 1950s and 60a. Images are provided from immigrants of the era. #History

Death at the Harbourview Cafe
Fred Humber
Flanker

Fred Humber plays the role of true-crime sleuth in uncovering details of foul play and disaster the night of Nov 6, 1958 in Botwood, Newfoundland, and the gruesome events that rocked the nation, ending three lives, destroying a Chinese-Canadian-owned business and creating long-term disorder for those who attended the scene. #History

Reconciliation Manifesto
Arthur Manuel and Grand Chief Ronald Derrickson
Lorimer Publishing

Non-Indigenous Canadians: prepare to have your assumptions about Canada’s relationship with Indigenous Peoples challenged. Manuel and Derrickson show that governments are attempting to reconcile without addressing the very colonial structures that have long framed an attack on Indigenous Peoples, and highlight what is really required for true reconciliation.

Smaller Hours
Kevin Shaw
icehouse poetry

Kevin Shaw’s poems escort us back through #history to observe the archaic and gain insight into today’s condition through a celebrated cast of characters living ordinary lives, Ovid at the laundromat for example, the illusive innovators our City Halls wish to entice, all to the anachronistic beat of cinema and music.

Lost in September
Kathleen Winter
Alfred A Knopff Canada

Fiction fans rejoice, there’s a new Kathleen Winter on the shelves. Her last novel, Annabel, was a finalist for everything including the Giller, Governor General’s Award and Writers’ Trust prize. Here she dives deep into broad themes of PTSD, war, homelessness, heroism and how we interpret #history.

Peninsula Sinking
David Huebert
Biblioasis

Huebert first captured the public imagination when “Enigma,” his short story about a woman grieving the death of her horse, won the CBC short story contest in 2016. His debut collection features Maritimers “marooned on the shores of being.” One of the many striking features of his work is his respect for the relations between humans and other animals.

Beachbound
Junie Coffey
Thomas Allen & Son

In the second in the Pineapple Cay series, her sequel to 2015’s Sunbaked, New Brunswick’s Junie Coffey offers up a well-written attempted-murder mystery full of adventure with a little bit of romance. It’s a fun, engaging read and a great story with unexpected depth and insight.

The Kingdom of No Worries
Philip Roy
Ronsdale Press

Philip Roy continues creating fiction for young readers that plays on youthful desires for freedom, adventure and independence while exploring the sophisticated responsibilities and challenges of adulthood. Here, three friends set out to create a Utopic independent society but find themselves inextricably linked to other communities.

Camped Out
Daphne Greer
Orca

In this sequel to Maxed Out, Max once again finds himself under the stress of caring for his autistic brother, Duncan. Young readers are once again along for an emotional journey, with laughs and cries along the way and much scene stealing by the ever-observant Duncan. 

Plank’s Law
Lesley Choyce
Orca

Teenaged Trevor has Huntington’s disease and has a year to live when he meets potty-mouthed old Plank, whose philosophy is simple: just live. Their meeting inspires Trevor to improve his bucket list and get busy. This is a funny, fast-paced story with fascinating, quirky characters and an underlying theme as relevant to the living as to the dying.

Jumped In
William Kowalski
Orca

This is the story of a bright young man spending much of his energy avoiding the violence of a street gang in his neighbourhood. It’s a quick read with potent themes around race and class, and it serves as a reminder that not every childhood is lived in safe quarters.

Deer Island Mystery
Don Kelly
Chocolate River Publishing

This is a page-turner for young readers and it’s a joy to read quietly or aloud. Children will be compelled by the adventures of Jamie and friends as they follow the mystery of Captain Nehemiah Butler’s lost treasure. It may even make them eager to start their own heritage projects and learn more about orienteering.

The Gravel Pit Kids
Geraldine Ryan-Lush
Black Rose Writing

This is a beautifully written story of a friendship between two preteen boys in a small Newfoundland town. The setting is well enough rendered that it remains an important presence throughout. The boys’ bond is strong enough to endure significant differences in class and circumstance and the disapproving eyes of surrounding adults.

Filed Under: # 85 Winter 2017, Editions, Features Tagged With: Arthur Manuel, Biblioasis, Chapel Street Editions, Chocolate River Publishing, Christmas Gifts, Daphne Greer, David Huebert, Don Kelly, Editor's Picks, Edward Butts, Flanker Press, Formac Publishing, Fred Humber, Geraldine Ryan-Lush, Gerhard P. Bassler, Grand Chief Ronald Derrickson, Halifax Explosion, icehouse poetry, Jacques Pauwels, Joel Zemel, Junie Coffey, Kathleen Winter, Keith Helmuth, Kevin Shaw, Leo Deveau, Lesley Choyce, Lorimer Publishing, New Brunswick, New World Publishing, Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, Orca Book Publishers, Philip Roy, Ronsdale Press, Thomas Allen Son, William Kowalski, Winter

April 7, 2017 by Katie Short

The Atlantic Books Awards Society have announced their shortlist for the 2017 awards. The 22 titles  are some of the finest to come out of the Atlantic provinces in the past year. Each category, ranging from children’s literature to scholarly writing, has three nominees.

The Awards will be given out in Paul O’Regan Hall, Halifax Central Library, on Thursday, May 18 at 7:00 p.m.

The full list of nominees is below:

Alistair MacLeod Prize for Short Fiction
Bad Things Happen by Kris Bertin (Biblioasis)
Four-Letter Words by Chad Pelley (Breakwater Books)
Willem de Kooning’s Paintbrush by Kerry Lee Powell (HarperCollins Canada)

Ann Connor Brimer Award for Children’s Literature
Into the Wasteland by Lesley Choyce (Red Deer Press)
Flannery by Lisa Moore (Groundwood Books)
Rain Shadow by Valerie Sherrard (Fitzhenry & Whiteside)

Atlantic Book Award for Scholarly Writing, Sponsored by Marquis Book Printing
Brand Command: Canadian Politics and Democracy in the Age of Message Control by Alex Marland (University of British Columbia Press)
The Vigilant Eye: Policing in Canada from 1867 to 9/11 by Greg Marquis (Fernwood Publishing)
Notes from a Feminist Killjoy: Essays on Everyday Life by Erin Wunker (Bookthug)

Robbie Robertson Dartmouth Book Award (Non-fiction), Presented by the Kiwanis Club of Dartmouth
Sable Island in Black and White by Jill Martin Bouteillier (Nimbus Publishing)
Written in the Ruins: Cape Breton Island’s Second Pre-Columbian Chinese Settlement by Paul Chiasson (Dundurn Press)
Viola Desmond’s Canada: A History of Blacks and Racial Segregation in the Promised Land by Graham Reynolds with Wanda Robson (Fernwood Publishing)

Democracy 250 Atlantic Book Award for Historical Writing
Sable Island in Black and White by Jill Martin Bouteillier (Nimbus Publishing)
New London: The Lost Dream by John Cousins (Island Studies Press)
Conflicted Colony: Critical Episodes in Nineteenth Century Newfoundland and Labrador by Kurt Korneski (McGill-Queen’s University Press)

Jim Connors Dartmouth Book Award (Fiction), presented by Boyne Clarke LLP
Advocate by Darren Greer (Cormorant Books)
Disposable Souls by Phonse Jessome (Nimbus Publishing/Vagrant Press)
The Clay Girl by Heather Tucker (ECW Press)

Lillian Shepherd Memorial Award for Excellence in Illustration
Histoire de Galet by Marie Cadieux and illustrated by François Dimberton (Bouton d’or Acadie)
The Snow Knows by Jennifer McGrath and illustrated by Josée Bisaillon (Nimbus Publishing)
Sky Pig by Jan L. Coates and illustrated by Suzanne Del Rizzo (Pajama Press)

Margaret and John Savage First Book Award, sponsored by Collins Barrow LLP, Weed Man Maritimes, and the family of John and Margaret Savage
Turmoil, as Usual: Politics in Newfoundland and Labrador and the road to the 2015 Election by James McLeod (Creative Book Publishing)
I’m Not What I Seem: The many stories of Rita MacNeil’s life by Charlie Rhindress (Formac Publishing)
Notes from a Feminist Killjoy: Essays on Everyday Life by Erin Wunker (Bookthug)

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Alex Marland, Atlantic Book Awards, Biblioasis, BookThug, Bouton d’or Acadie, Breakwater Books, Chad Pelley, Charlie Rhindress, Cormorant Books, Creative Book Publishing, Darren Greeg, Dundurn Press, ECW Press, Erin Wunker, Fernwood Publishing, Fitzhenry & Whiteside, Formac Publishing, Francois Dimberton, Graham Reynolds, Greg Marquis, Groundwood Books, HarperCollins Canada, Heather Tucker, Island Studies Press, James McLeod, Jan L Coates, Jennifer McGrath, Jill Martin Bouteillier, John Cousins, Josée Bisaillon, Kerry-Lee Powell, kris bertin, Kurt Korneski, Lesley Choyce, Lisa Moore, Marie Cadieux, Nimbus Publish, Pajama Press, Paul Chiasson, Phone Jessome, Red Deer Press, Suzanne Del Rizzo, University of British Columbia Press, Vagrant Press, Valerie Sherrard, Wanda Robson

April 26, 2016 by Lee Thompson

Kerry-Lee Powell

Kerry-Lee Powell’s debut short story collection is about art, reality, the primacy of vision, and identity

Kerry-Lee Powell is a poet and short story writer in Moncton, New Brunswick, who just launched her first collection of short stories, Willem de Kooning’s Paintbrush. She received a Pushcart Prize special mention for her fiction in 2015 and her debut collection of poetry, Inheritance, was nominated for the 2015 Gerald Lampert Memorial Award. Atlantic Books Today had a chance to learn more about the author’s “rapid” rise to success, her latest work and her focus on both poetry and prose.

Your bio shows a bit of a wandering past; how did you end up in Moncton and how has being in Moncton helped or hindered your progress as a writer?

We moved to Moncton because of my partner’s business. I was writing scientific abstracts for the International Atomic Energy Agency at the time and could work from anywhere. My company subsequently lost their contract in Harper’s big reshuffle of scientific resources, and I was then unemployed in a town where I knew basically nobody. I suddenly had a lot of free time on my hands.

I had been writing fiction and poetry on the side, but I was devastated at losing my job, actually crying about it one night, and my partner very kindly went out and bought me a bottle of wine and said something along the lines of “this is the best thing that’s ever happened to you, because now you can just do your real writing.”

I tried to honour his kindness to me by taking myself seriously, showing up at the page, sending stuff out to magazines and competitions, applying for residencies and grants. It was really that moment of taking myself seriously because someone believed in me that got me where I am with my work today. But it wasn’t easy; I had walked away from an earlier writing career because I couldn’t cope with the sense of vulnerability and rejection. It’s a tough business!

Willem de Kooning’s Paintbrush is your fiction debut, but not your first book, as your poetry collection Inheritance came out recently as well. Were you writing fiction and poetry at the same time or do you need to focus exclusively on one?

I’m a very sound-oriented poet, and I think some lines attract me or strike me as belonging more to a poem. A short story tends to develop thematically with me, or as a problem that needs to be solved using a narrative. But really I just feel my way around with lines at first.

Does your ‘poetry mind’ fight your ‘fiction mind’ over great ideas?

I wrote a book of poems related to my father’s death, and it’s not a subject that I really wanted to explore in fiction. I wonder if it’s because I secretly feel that poetry is a “higher form” the way people discern between “Tragedy” and “Comedy.” I could probably have written a prose account of my father’s suicide, but I can’t imagine any of my short stories as poems.

To some, you seem to have come out of nowhere, picking up prize after prize in a very short period of time (Malahat’s Far Horizons, the WFNB’s Alfred G. Bailey Award, The Boston Review Short Fiction Prize etc), and now two books. Nothing happens overnight. In reality, how long a struggle has it been?

As I mentioned earlier, I started out publishing when I was in my twenties, and then gave up after a fairly serious rejection. I was living in the UK at the time, Faber and Faber had been considering me for their first fiction series and I went out and got drunk with sailors (really!) on the day that rejection letter finally came, after a year or so of deliberation.

I turned my back on writing, but it always ate at my conscience and slowly, poem by poem, story by story, crept back into my life. I would write pieces and not send them away, and so I had a bit of a stockpile of work in the beginning that won awards and found its way into magazines like The Spectator and The Boston Review, which makes it look like I had an easy time of it. In fact I’d been struggling for years with a sense of shame and a crippling lack of confidence.

There’s a vivid reality to your stories and it’s no coincidence the book’s title references such an intense, deeply emotional painter. Do the visual arts greatly influence your approaches to writing?

Willem de Kooning's PaintbrushThe book is about being an artist, writer or painter or otherwise, and the ways in which our worlds are created.

I wanted to say this morning to someone questioning me that it’s a book about reality. It seemed an absurdly general response but I think the book does attempt to ask questions about what constitutes reality.

There’s quite a lot of trauma and violence in this book and I suppose some of the questions that I pose surround issues related to creating works of violence, the kind of amorality that we confront with visual works and the primacy of vision in our lived experience.

There are also quite a few characters who struggle with their identity and who have substance abuse problems. Bars are very interesting settings – full of people who don masks, slip in and out of loosely inhabited identities, and for whom identity is often problematic or fractured, whose vision of themselves and others is blurred.

I find this, as a writer, extremely interesting.

What are you working on now?

I am writing a novel about a tall ship!

Filed Under: Features, Web exclusives Tagged With: Biblioasis, book launch, fiction, Gerald Lampert Memorial Award, Harper Collins Canada, Inheritance, Kerry-Lee Powell, Moncton, New Brunswick, Poetry, Pushcart Prize, short stories, Willem de Kooning's Paintbrush

April 11, 2016 by Chris Benjamin

Kris Bertin’s debut collections of short stories, Bad Things Happen, has a lot of layers.

On the surface, these stories of labourers (drivers, garbage collectors, a janitor, a thief, con artists, drug dealers and an exterminator, among others) look at how people behave when things fall apart. When they jump on or fall off the wagon, when they make an unethical choice, when they fall for the wrong person or lose someone.

Digging a little, the stories are about the delicate balances we strike, the values or assumptions we base them on and the way any shift forces us to reevaluate. Sometimes we make compromises to alleviate our suffering and that can hurt us worse in the long-term.

Take Chris, who appears in three of the ten stories. He falls for a bad girl, goes bad for her sake and his soul suffers immensely for it. In the end he finds peace in laying pests to bloody rest.

Bertin shows us fairly average people on their worst behaviour and adeptly layers parallel imagery. Most writers writing about garbage collectors would be satisfied with a brief examination of the contents of their characters’ loads. Bertin delves deeply into our lives’ detritus, “as if a person had been dissolved in the garbage bag and only their outermost layer remained.” He dreams up all kinds of twisted remnants of what could be ordinary lives.

When describing a philandering father figure who has an affair with a disabled woman just “to efface all prior hound-doggery,” Bertin shows us “a ramp, half-built…on one side of the house like a broken waterslide” when their relationship inevitably dissolves. The rebellious son “smokes cigarettes on it, dangles his legs over the edge.”

Drilling one more layer, Bad Things Happen is about how we learn to relate to the world and each other over time, with characters of all ages and phases as illustration. It’s about love, whether a mother (somewhat ineptly) nurturing her troubled son or two middle-aged lovers muddling through their parents’ more torrid love lives. “I get mad at him for getting mad and pretending he’s not. I do it by pretending I’m not.”

Exactly.

Bad Things Happen
by Kris Bertin
$19.95, paperback, 224 pp.
Biblioasis, February 2016

Filed Under: Fiction, Reviews Tagged With: bad things happen, Biblioasis, book review, Halifax, kris bertin, Nova Scotia, short fiction, short stories

April 5, 2016 by Atlantic Books

Kris BertinWriting is an act of translation for Kris Bertin, finding the words to show us his wildest images and stories

Kris Bertin, who grew up near Fredericton and works at Bearly’s House of Blues and Ribs in Halifax, wrote his first collection of stories, Bad Things Happen, over a seven-year period. The stories have often been described as gritty, and Quill & Quire described him as some kind of Alice Munro-Charles Bukowski hybrid, which is a mind-twisting image. But the most important thing about Bertin’s stories is that they mine deep into their character’s psyches as each one goes through some kind of personal hell, using fantastically descriptive language and images that stick. In this interview with Atlantic Books Today, Bertin reveals that the stories come easy, but the words are hard work:

Alexander MacLeod spoke glowingly of your imagery and unique use of language (e.g. “a man’s blonde toupee, wet and gleaming from the contents of a nearby plastic bottle of chicken stock”). How much of the imagery in the book is pure imagination and how much is inspired by the places you’ve been? 

I have plenty of hands-on experience with a lot of the things in Bad Things Happen – garbage and knick knacks and dead animals and very weird people – so the raw imagery comes from somewhere, but its application is always a more carefully considered process. If, however, I was confined to only conjuring images that were real, or that I had really experienced, writing would be much less rewarding. Most of these things – especially the really surreal apparitions – are imagined. I don’t know how exactly it breaks down, but a lot of it is imagined. As for where any of that stuff comes from, I don’t really know. Dreams? Intrusive thoughts? Sometimes I see or hear things that aren’t there. I’ve never been able to talk about this without sounding crazy.

A lot of these sentences flow as if effortlessly from the page. What kind of work goes into constructing them?

There are a lot of rewrites, certainly, but in trying to make short, simple sentences sound right, I read a lot of them out loud. That’s how I edit. I did that with these answers, even. MacLeod, who helped me edit this book, mostly pushed me towards clarity, getting me closer to what I intended to write. This is my central difficulty. Trying to get close, with words, to what I’m seeing in my head. I feel like there are a whole bunch of different types of writers – word people, idea people, character people, narrative people – and I’m an imagination person. I’m good at imagining a story, but writing doesn’t quite happen in tandem. It’s almost an act of translation for me.

A recurring theme in many of these stories seems to be work. The drudgery of (usually blue-collar, occasionally very shady) jobs but also the fascinating human encounters that happen in the service industries. How have your own experiences in labour and service jobs informed and inspired these characters? 

bearlys
Mural on Bearly’s House of Blues & Ribs, where Bertin works

I dropped out of university and have been paying for it – through a series of very shitty jobs – ever since. I’ve tended bar for the last seven years, but I’ve been a bouncer, a cook, a call-centre phone rep, a mover, a general labourer, a landscaper and lots of other stuff. I’ve worked alongside ex-cons, sheltered suburban wimps, depressed rural kids, old drunks and other mournful dropouts like myself. This list also describes a great many characters in the book.

I’m also interested in the social structure of jobs. There’s a lot about work in “The Narrow Passage” – the garbageman story – where one man slowly becomes another man’s superior simply by realizing their hierarchy is based on nothing. A lot about physical pain, too. There’s some more in “Girl On Fire Escape,” where the narrator has noticed the difference between the people in the dish pit and those up front, and how he knows he’s regarded as sub-human as a result. These things fascinate me.

So many of your characters seem to be in in-between spaces, recovering from something, tempted by something or dealing with things that might push them over the edge. It’s a scary place but for your characters it also seems freeing, like they can try anything during that phase. What brings about this fascination with slightly unhinged states? 

When you’re really stressed out, or on the brink of some breakdown, there’s something really liberating about it. The pressure we all face to be normal and healthy, to conform and achieve things, is significant. The thing about losing control is that as scary as it is, you can finally be yourself. In “Is Alive and Can Move,” the main character suffers from alcohol dementia and has struggled to stay clean, keep a job and remain sane. When finally he goes off the deep end, as scary as it is, there’s a kind of freedom there. It’s part of why giving up is so appealing, I think.

It’s sort of difficult to talk about this as if it’s central to my writing, because I’d argue it’s central to a lot of short fiction. A good story has stakes, and a story with very high stakes is often captivating. To me, a story is measurement of change. Having characters on the brink lets us chart some significant and surprising changes, whatever the outcome.

Some of these stories give a nice sense of resolution. One has four different endings! Others leave it more to the reader’s imagination. How do you know when a story is at its end?

In writing a story, I always have an ending in mind from the beginning, but it doesn’t always materialize. Sometimes I realize it doesn’t make sense for a character, or else, when I get there, the character does something completely different and it just works. In writing an ending, I truly believe that my job is to ask a question. Unless everyone’s dead at the end – which isn’t something I’m terribly interested in writing – a story is never over. I’m as interested in what happens on the page as what happens off. So for a lot of my stories, the question I’m asking is: what do you think happens next?

Some people don’t like that, and I get feedback from people who want to know everything that happens. It’s not a cheat, it’s a reflection of life – which, I’m sure you’ve noticed by now – just keeps going and going. When people ask for a neat and tidy ending, I tell them “sorry” and “too bad” and “that’s not what I’m interested in.”

You’re getting accolades from some literary bigwigs and I hear you have a couple novels on the go. What’s next for you?

I DO have some longer work I’ve been toiling away on for years, but it’s not ready to be seen. I have a couple novels, and a comic book, but for the time being, short fiction is my focus. I’ve signed on for another book of short stories with Biblioasis, so that’s what’s coming next.

I’ve been writing a lot of 10,000+ word stories, so I suspect when I put it all together, there’ll be less stories, but they’ll be longer. I like this idea because it offers something a little bit different than Bad Things Happen. I have a story about a cult-ish health guru who takes his wealthiest customers on a dangerous hike, a story about a woman obsessed with solving a mystery from 100 years ago – when a totally naked mute girl stumbled onto her family’s property and they took her in and raised her. There’s also “Cowan,” which was in The Walrus this fall, and a few others. All of it is quite different from this first book and has been really challenging. I’m really excited to put it all together and share it with all of you. I think you’ll like it.

Filed Under: Features, Q&A Tagged With: Biblioasis, fiction, Fredericton, Halifax, kris bertin, New Brunswick, novascotia, on writing, short fiction, work, writers on writing

September 16, 2015 by Kim Hart Macneill

Sambro Lighthouse Check out this lightbox with other coastal Images by Nashville Photographer, Dieter Spears, Owner of Inhaus Creative. [url=http://www.istockphoto.com/search/lightbox/1255006#1c52bfb0][img]http://dieterspears.com/istock/links/button_beach.jpg[/img][/url]

The last few weeks have been gang busters for Atlantic Canadian authors, and we couldn’t be more proud. Here’s a quick round up:

The Writers’ Trust of Canada announced today the five finalists for this year’s Hilary Weston Writers’ Trust Prize for Nonfiction, the richest annual literary award for a book of nonfiction published in Canada. Among them was Dean Jobb, author of Empire of Deception: From Chicago to Nova Scotia – The Incredible Story of a Master Swindler Who Seduced a City and Captivated a Nation (Harper Avenue). Also nominated was Halifax-born Douglas Coupland for Kitten Clone: Inside Alcatel-Lucent (Random House Canada).

Each finalist will receive $5,000. The prize winner will receive a total of $60,000. In a new twist, publishers and authors were invited to learn of their inclusion on the list by piecing together a jigsaw puzzle, which you can see here.

The prize is awarded for literary excellence in the category of nonfiction. Finalist works will demonstrate a distinctive voice, as well as a persuasive and compelling command of tone, narrative, style, and technique. The prize winner will be announced at a gala presentation in Toronto on October 6.

On September 9, the 2015 Scotiabank Giller Prize longlist was announced, and Halifax-raised author and journalist Russell Smith received a nod for his story collection Confidence.

The prize awards $100,000 annually to the author of the best Canadian novel or short story collection published in English and $10,000 to each of the finalists. The award is named in honour of the late literary journalist Doris Giller and was founded in 1994 by her husband, Toronto businessman Jack Rabinovitch. The shortlist will be published on October 5 and the winner will be announced on November 10.

On September 8, The Writers’ Trust of Canada announced “Five x Five,” a one-time program made possible by the RBC Emerging Artists Project that will distribute a total of $25,000 to Canadian writers in the developing stages of their careers. Five celebrated writers from across Canada, all past Writers’ Trust award honourees, have each selected one emerging writer of fiction or poetry who they feel has displayed the potential to enter Canada’s literary canon. The nominating writers are: Ken Babstock, Joseph Boyden, Michael Crummey, Esi Edugyan, and Madeleine Thien. The five writers they have selected will each receive $5,000. Amoung them was Megan Gail Coles whose story collection, Eating Habits of the Chronically Lonesome (Killick Press), won the 2014 BMO Winterset Award and the Margaret and John Savage First Book Award.

One September 4, Dr. Maura Hanrahan, author of  The Alphabet Fleet: The Pride of the Newfoundland Coastal Service, Domino: The Eskimo Coast Disaster, The Doryman, and Tsunami: The Newfoundland Tidal Wave Disaster, was presented with the Canadian Coast Guard Newfoundland Region Alumni Association’s Polaris Award today “in recognition of outstanding contributions to the presentation and public awareness of the marine heritage of the province of Newfoundland and Labrador.”

Given only every two to three years, the Polaris Award consists of a framed scroll for the recipient and a brass porthole in the recipient’s honour in the Canadian Coast Guard’s Southside Base in St. John’s. These portholes will eventually be displayed at Cape Spear.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: and Tsunami: The Newfoundland Tidal Wave Disaster, Biblioasis, Confidence, Dean Jobb, Domino: The Eskimo Coast Disaster, Eating Habits of the Chronically Lonesome, Empire of Deception: From Chicago to Nova Scotia - The Incredible Story of a Master Swindler Who Seduced a City and Captivated the Nation, Flanker Press, Halifax, HarperCollins, Hilary Weston Writers’ Trust Prize for Nonfiction, Killick Press, Maura Hanrahan, Megan Gail Coles, Michael Crummey, Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, Russell Smith, Scotiabank Giller Prize, The Alphabet Fleet: The Pride of the Newfoundland Coastal Service, The Doryman, Writers' Trust of Canada

February 17, 2015 by Heather Fegan

Kathleen Winter Freedom in american SongsThis collection of short stories is wide-ranging—in time, from the 1970s up to present day, in place, from Halifax to Newfoundland, Montreal, Florida and England, in gender and even points of view, between third-person and first. Reading it is like taking a whirlwind trip. We meet all kinds of characters from all kinds of places. They each paint a tender and eccentric vignette.

The theme of loneliness weaves through connecting the stories. Sometimes the loneliness is obvious and direct, as with Marianne, who we meet in part one of the book, “The Marianne Stories”, of which we get three. “It was like that with everything Marianne tried to do to help. She was not needed, not really in any way that might last.” She is hungry for fellowship and her soul-searching leads her to a Pentecostal Worship Centre. “The pastor was saying something about loneliness, and tears started running down Marianne’s face and made her furious with herself.”

Or as with the young Kerry, in the book’s title story, who loved “more than anything else in the world, singing harmony”, but with “the longing he had for a friend with whom to sing.” At other times the theme of loneliness is not so direct. It’s only at the end of the story, or on reflection even that we realize the character is longing for something else, something more, most often freedom. The protagonists in the stories are not all decent, honest and kind, but readers will find themselves sympathetic towards them nonetheless.

Part two contains 11 stories. The collection is so good you want to devour it all, and just keep turning the pages. But they are profound and thought-provoking stories, each worthy of reflection. You are better off taking your time, spreading them out and enjoying them.

With humour, Winter chronicles the everyday and the unusual. She presents us with mystery, intrigue and cliffhangers, as with Clare’s tribulation in “Anhinga”. She takes us vividly into the lives and places of others. We know just what a character old Madame DeLorimier has been her whole life when we meet her in “Madame Poirer’s Dog”. Then there is a lesson about growing old with a bittersweet tender moment when an old lady is brought back to her youth in “Flyaway”. “…the thought made something like childish joy spring up inside me for the first time since…”

Kathleen Winter is an award-winning writer, known for both her debut novel, the critically acclaimed Annabel and her first collection of short stories, boYs. Some stories in this second collection may be familiar to readers; earlier versions of some have appeared in other publications, The Walrus, The Pottersfield Portfolio, CBC’s Brief Encounters series, Rattling Books audio anthology Earlit Shorts and CNQ: Canadian Notes and Queries.

The Freedom in American Songs
By Kathleen Winter
$19.95, paperback, 168 pp.
Biblioasis, September 2014

Filed Under: Fiction, Reviews, Web exclusives Tagged With: Biblioasis, Freedom in American Songs, Halifax, Heather Fegan, Kathleen Winter, Nova Scotia, short stories

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We acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts and the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund for this project, as well as the Province of Nova Scotia’s Department of Communities, Culture and Heritage.

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