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Outskirts

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

February 5, 2015 by Kim Hart Macneill

The Word On The Street Festival is a celebration of reading and writing. Among the book lovers who flock to the festival, there are also lots of people with the desire to be published who attend. Writers with laboured-over manuscripts at home in their desk drawers, or great book ideas that have yet to be written.

Pitch the Publisher offers these aspiring writers the unique opportunity to present their ides to a panel of publishers. Every year writers across the region bravely submit their work to the Atlantic Writing Competition and this year’s winners are being awarded their prizes at the festival’s opening ceremonies.

There is no doubt that literary talent in Atlantic Canada blossoms year round. Here, some of our pros impart a little sought-after wisdom all writers should heed:

Valerie_Sherrard (1)Valerie Sherrard, The Glory Wind (Fitzhenry & Whiteside)

What wisdom have you learned from your trade?
More than anything, I believe I’ve learned patience. It’s tempting to nudge a story along when it isn’t moving forward the way I’d like it to, but I’ve found that waiting until it’s ready always serves the story best.

What advice can you offer to aspiring authors?
Read. Read more. Read, read, read.

Who are the ones to watch, up and coming writers from Atlantic Canada?
There are many gifted Maritime authors in the field of children’s and young adult books. I wouldn’t dare try to list them as I know I would leave out someone deserving.

Your recommended read at the moment:
A Hare in the Elephant’s Trunk by Jan L. Coates

Read a review of Valerie Sherrard’s Rainshadow

Photo credit: David Parker
Photo credit: David Parker

Stephens Gerard Malone, Big Town: A Novel of Africville (Nimbus Publishing)

What wisdom have you learned from your trade?
Every time you open a book, you meet someone who writes better than you.

What advice can you offer to aspiring authors?
Read. Read. Read. Write. Write. Write. Cliché, I know, but everything else is either expensive, unnecessary or distracting.

Who are the ones to watch, up and coming writers from Atlantic Canada?
I heard Keir Lowther read at the Writers’ Federation of Nova Scotia Mentorship Program a few years back. His novel Dirty Bird coming from Tightrope Books is one to watch. I was also privy to hear Stephanie Domet read from her followup to Homing. Can’t wait. And if you thought Sue Goyette‘s poems in Outskirts were wonderful, she has something coming from Gaspereau that is going to blow your mind!

Your recommended read at the moment:
Incidents in the Life of Markus Paul by David Adams Richards

Steve.vernon.lgSteve Vernon, Sinking Deeper (Nimbus Publishing)

What wisdom have you learned from your trade?
Never be afraid to leap. In 2004, when I pitched my first ghost story collection, Haunted Harbours, at the very first Pitch the Publisher session I was actually terrified. I was certain that I would be booed from the stage. Now while boos and terror are a natural state of being for a ghost story collector such as myself – feeling frightened at this point of time was not. Fortunately, I refused to let the fear get the better of me. I cinched my belt tight around my gutline, pasted a grin to my be-bearded visage, leaped up from my chair and made my best pitch. As a result of that pitch Haunted Harbours was one of the first books to actually be published as a result of the Pitch the Publisher program. My entire life changed as a result of the release of this collection. I became a maritime author and achieved the modest degree of success that I now enjoy.

What advice can you offer to aspiring authors?
Read and feed your imagination constantly. Write like your fingers were on fire. Listen to your editors. Don’t be afraid to change. Every word you write is not sacred. Read some more. Write some more. Keep on going. Never quit. And like I said – leap!

Who are the ones to watch, up and coming writers from Atlantic Canada?
I love the work of Jill Maclean (The Nine Lives of Travis Keating). As for up and coming writers you definitely want to watch for Jo Ann Yhard (The Fossil Hunters of Sydney Mines), Richard Rudnicki (Viola Desmond Won’t Be Budged), and a writer I just recently heard at a local literary reading and who has just won first place in the Young Adult – Juvenile Novel category of the Writer’s Federation of Nova Scotia’s 34th Annual Atlantic Writing Competition – Kat Kruger, with her as-yet unpublished novel The Night Has Teeth.

Your recommended read at the moment:
I’ve got over a dozen books of research material for my next collection heaped and teetering upon my desk – so I’m afraid my reading time is limited. However, the last couple of books that both curled my toes and knocked my socks off were Don Aker‘s The First Stone and Gary D. Schmidt’s The Wednesday Wars.

Master storyteller Steve Vernon shares his scariest stories yet

Sheree Fitch PortraitSheree Fitch, Pluto’s Ghost (Random House)

What wisdom have you learned from your trade?
A book (good or bad or mediocre—it’s pretty subjective) gets born if and when it’s meant to be born. A book can’t be a book unless it’s read. Writers need readers. We make the book together along with a whole team of people: publishers, editors, graphic artists or illustrators, typesetters, book reps, publicists, booksellers, etc. in between. In other words, it takes a scribe and a tribe to make a book. Readers co-create “the book.”

What advice can you offer to aspiring authors?
Keep on keeping on. Nevah surrendah. It takes a lot of faith in the work to keep going in the face of rejection. It’s not about you, not really. Stamina and patience required. You are the listener, the scribe in service to the story. Keep asking: what means excellence?

Who are the ones to watch, up and coming writers from Atlantic Canada?
Every writer who is writing, regardless of age, and how many books under the belt is up and coming. But to name a name right now: I love Kate Inglis‘s work –in her Dread Crew books but also her take on the world in her blog. I look forward to her book. It will be a gift. Also, I just read a manuscript by an old friend _____ (secret for now) that blew me away. A cross between Toni Morrison and Alice Walker. It’s at a publisher now. I’m hoping to hear she’ll be published. Soon. Knock your socks off writing and a story from our region that’s not been told. Exciting.

Your recommended read at the moment:
Um… Pluto’s Ghost. Seriously, adult fiction: The Atlantic Canadian book that had the most impact on me is The Quilt by Donna Smythe. My own current reading list features Great Village by Mary Rose Donnelly. Brilliant. Y/A: The Year Mrs. Montague Cried by Susan White. Heart-wrenching. Picture Book: The City Speaks in Drums by Shauntay Grant and Susan Tooke, illustrator. Non –fiction: Sailor’s Hope by Rusty Bitterman, The Gift of Loss by Paula Simon. Poetry: Is by Anne Simpson, At First, Lonely by Tanya Davis.

Read Sheree Fitch’s Proust Questionnaire

Sue-Goyette-1024x768Sue Goyette, Outskirts (Brick Books)

What wisdom have you learned from your trade?
That the actual writing is the most important and rewarding part of the process—that first collision with invention, imagination, curiosity and silence has an undeniable vitality that is like a vitamin boost and leaves me feeling way more fortified than anything else.

What advice can you offer to aspiring authors?
I think anyone starting out has a great sense of purpose and intent that can sometimes transform into impatience and frustration if their writing gets stalled or is rejected, so the best advice I can offer is to know, if you’re a writer, that you’re in it for the long haul and the pace of that takes some getting used to. And all you have to do right now is to write and read (like mad).

Who are the ones to watch, up and coming writers from Atlantic Canada?
I’m excited about a lot of up and coming writers here, especially in Halifax. I’ve been teaching in the Creative Writing Program at Dalhousie University and am continually blown away by the vitality of the young writers emerging there. I also work at the Writers’ Federation of Nova Scotia and our Mentorship Program works with new writers on their book length manuscripts and every one of our mentored writers are writers to watch our for.

Your recommended read at the moment:
I’m not sure I should recommend it because I still haven’t read it, but I’m looking forward to reading Swamplandia by Karen Russell. The main character swims with alligators and knows how to tape their mouths shut. This, for me, is reason enough to read it.

This article was originally published in the Fall 2011 issue of Atlantic Books Today

Filed Under: #67 Fall 2011, Features Tagged With: Big Town: A Novel of Africville, Brick Books, Fitzhenry & Whiteside, Nimbus Publishing, Outskirts, Penguin Random House, Pluto’s Ghost, Sheree Fitch, Sinking Deeper, Stephens Gerard Malone, Steve Vernon, Sue Goyette, The Glory Wind, Valerie Sherrard

January 13, 2015 by Atlantic Books Today

Sue Goyette’s poetry has appeared on the Toronto subway system, in wedding vows and spray-painted on a sidewalk. With three collections of poetry published, including the most recent tour de force Outskirts (Brick Books) she’s been nominated for several awards. Here, the Halifax poet contemplates misery, happiness and life as a…dancer?

What do you consider your best quality?

 My enthusiasm though it’s not always a good thing on the dance floor.

A quality you desire in a partner: 

A sense of humour and a sense of direction.

What do you appreciate most about your friends? 

That they’re willing to disagree with me, and that they laugh at the righoutskirts2-191x280t time.

Your worst quality:      

The dark side of my enthusiasm which can make me operatic or single-minded.

Your favourite occupation:

I really like being a poet.

 What is your idea of happiness?

August, my backyard and its trees, the tiny lights in them, friends, my record player and a good box of records.

Your idea of misery:       

Besides the obvious: hunger, poverty, war; the inability to do what I love, not being able to see my kids and step-kids and, way at the bottom of the list, mosquitos and tippy canoes.

If you could be someone else for a day who would it be?

I’d like to be a dancer in a Marie Chouinard choreographed performance with all of the physical strength and grace that would require. It would be amazing to feel that kind of leap and play and to be in a body that is capable of that. Or maybe a biologist working with packs of wolves and coyotes. It would be fascinating to be familiar with the habitats and habits of that kind of wilderness and to be able to track a pack through the woods.

Where you would most like to live?

Somewhere sustainable but urban, I like the energy of a well-run city. I was just in New York and it was pretty amazing. I like it here because the Atlantic keeps me humble.

Favourite colour:

Orange and raspberry next to each other.

Favourite Animal:

Wolves and foxes. (Owls, bats).

Your favourite poet(s):

There are so many poets who’ve been essential to me. Walt Whitman, Elizabeth Bishop, René Char, Rilke, Paul Celan, Saint Denys Garneau. More currently: Dean Young, C.D. Wright, Amy Gerstaler…

Favourite author(s):

Roch Carrier, Italo Calvino, Katherine Mansfield, William Faulkner.

Your favourite fictional heroes:

I still think of Hagar Shipley from Margaret Laurence’s The Stone Angel. Her spiciness and bewilderment in the face of aging still rings vivid and true and I read that book many years ago.

Your real life heroes:

The Dalai Lama, people who ride their bikes in Halifax, organic farmers, teachers, activists, artists, people who work with children or seniors, nurses, kids standing up for other kids, people who talk and listen to teenagers.

Your favourite food and drink:

Sweet potato tempura and udon noodles and I really like real lemonade though some days it’s a poutine and a Kilkenny.

What is your greatest fear?

Having a greatest fear is my greatest fear. The idea of a “greatest fear” totally freaks me out. I’d be on the look-out for its long shadow all the time, and it would be out there, like the ocean: skulking.

A natural talent you’d like to possess: 

I’d like to be able to sing. To really sing. But then I’d be unbearable, one big, constant Vegas act.

How you want to die:

Peacefully, elderly, surrounded by family and dear friends.

Your present state of mind:

I’m pretty relaxed and happy.

Favourite or personal motto:       

Goethe’s “Do not hurry, do not rest.”

This article was originally published in the Fall 2011 issue of Atlantic Books Today

Find more Proust Questionnaires here

Filed Under: #67 Fall 2011, Columns, Proust questionnaires Tagged With: Brick Books, Outskirts, Poetry, Sue Goyette

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