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Stephanie Domet

December 1, 2016 by Carolyn Guy

The latest issue of Atlantic Books Today is a “robust and diverse conversation” about Atlantic Canadian books and what they say about our culture, politics, economy and societies

abt82-webcoverOn the eve of Atlantic Books Today’s 25th anniversary, the magazine for book readers has transformed itself into a more content-rich source of entertainment and knowledge.

The new managing editor, Chris Benjamin, has led a process involving everyone at the magazine – writers, photographers, cover artist, designer, production and admin people – to create a book magazine with greater depth, “a robust and diverse conversation” as one early reader has put it.

The goal is to initiate a serious, engaging dialogue about the books written and published by Atlantic Canadians – and there are 117 of them mentioned in the new issue – with more in-depth essays and reviews focused not on the mere availability of these books, but rather their significance in our social, economic and political culture as a region.

“We wanted something meatier,” says editor Chris Benjamin. “The short reviews of the past gave a taste of the book but didn’t give a sense of the weight of it, what it had to say about us as a people and place.”

With the new approach, it was imperative that in addition to working with high-quality freelance journalists, the magazine needed to recruit writers with specific areas of expertise to offer relevant insights into particular books.

For example, former Art Gallery of Nova Scotia director Ray Cronin wrote a feature essay on the life and work of under-appreciated New Brunswick artist Lucy Jarvis. Former CBC host of the East Coast Music Hour and Mainstreet Stephanie Domet wrote about the surprising strength of musical icon Rita MacNeil, and interviewed her drummer. Renowned political cartoonist Michael de Adder wrote a profile of bestselling cartoonist Kate Beaton, a successor of his as cartoon editor at The Argosy, Mount Allison’s student newspaper. Seasoned crime reporter Ryan Van Horne presents new insights on the overturned conviction of Dennis Oland.

And in a new column, Author to Author, one bestselling Newfoundland author, Lisa Moore, interviews another, Donna Morrissey, about her latest novel. Mi’kmaq writer and academic Marie Battiste, winner of a National Aboriginal Achievement Award, writes about how centuries-old, hidden-away documents, the treaties, can lead Canada and Indigenous Peoples toward reconciliation. In a news feature, seasoned freelance journalist Phil Moscovitch compares Newfoundland’s drastic library cuts with New Brunswick’s funding for increased library hours. And St. John’s author Michelle Butler Hallett explores feminism in the historical fiction of Ami McKay.

Mental health advocate Laura Burke provides an essay on the how literature brings uncommon wisdom to young readers about surviving mental illness, based on a new book by Prince Edward Island filmmaker Harmony Wagner. And former Islander Ryan O’Connor takes a long view – about 5,000 years – of the history of PEI.

Each of these essays is centred around one or more new Atlantic Canadian books. Rather than merely announce and promote the books, this new approach gives every book the weight of analysis a writer or artist deserves, contextualizing the work and considering its significance to who we are as Atlantic Canadians.

Accompanying the new content is a new look, headlined by our cover artist, Emma FitzGerald, author of the bestselling Hand Drawn Halifax. The challenge was to blend Emma’s blissful hand-drawn image of a reader enjoying a bubble bath surrounded by stacks of books into a new brand focused on serious book love. The magazine’s designer, Joseph Muise, took a whimsical, half-coloured illustration (which corresponded to the lead story about the adult-colouring-book craze, written by children’s book illustrator Tamara Thiébeaux Heikalo) and created a cleaner, more professional look for the publication.

Atlantic Books Today began publication with two issues in 1992, with support from the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency and the Canada Council for the Arts, eventually becoming a quarterly publication. It is now published by the Atlantic Publishers Marketing Association (APMA).

The latest issue is being distributed in bookstores, cafes and newspapers across the region (Globe and Mail, Truro Daily News, Metro News, Lighthouse Now, PEI Guardian, Cape Breton Post, The Coast, The Register/Advertiser, Telegram, Western Star, Telegraph Journal, Times Transcript, The Gleaner and others). You can also read it online at https://issuu.com/atlanticbookstoday/docs/abt82-digital.

https://atlanticbooks.ca/atlantic-canadas-leading-voice-on-books-has-reinvented-itself/

Filed Under: #82 Winter 2016, Features Tagged With: Donna Morrissey, Emma Fitzgerald, Kate Beaton, Lisa Moore, Lucy Jarvis, Marie Battiste, meta, Michael de Adder, Ray Cronin, Stephanie Domet, Tamara Thiebeaux-Heikalo

June 15, 2016 by Lauren d'Entremont

hands playing a piano

Whether you’re tone-deaf, a talented instrumentalist, or somewhere in between, these Atlantic Canadian books about music and musicians will get you in tune with our rich musical heritage and culture.

Biography/Autobiography

Where I Belong Alan Doyle Great Big SeaWhere I Belong: Small Town to Great Big Sea by Alan Doyle
From the lead singer of the band Great Big Sea comes a lyrical and captivating musical memoir about growing up in the tiny fishing village of Petty Harbour, Newfoundland, and then taking to the world stage.

Nowhere With You: The East Coast Anthems of Joel Plaskett, The Emergency and Thrush Hermit by Josh O’Kane
A celebration of beloved Canadian folk and rock icon Joel Plaskett, featuring dozens of original interviews and exclusive photos.

Fiction

Fallsy Downsies coverFallsy Downsies by Stephanie Domet
Fallsy Downsies is a novel about aging, art, celebrity, and modern Canadian culture, told through the lens of Lansing Meadows, the godfather of Canadian folk music.

Music in the Dark by Anthony Sherwood
In Prohibition-era Montreal when alcohol, drugs and jazz music ruled, Taylor Williams is a young black musician struggling to find fame in the Montreal Harlem District amid gangsters, racism and bootleggers.

Memoir & History

The History of Canadian Rock’N’Roll by Bob Mersereau
The history of Canadian rock and roll is a lively, entertaining, and largely untold tale. Bob Mersereau presents a streamlined, informative trip through the country’s rich history and depth of talent, from the 1950s to today,

I Owe It All to Rock & Roll (and the CBC) by Frank Cameron
In this hilarious and insightful memoir, Frank Cameron takes readers from his childhood to his professional days at CHNS and then the CBC and on to his present life, hosting a show at Seaside FM.

10 Nights Without Sleep10 Nights Without Sleep: Cape Breton’s Celtic Colours International Festival by Dave Mahalik
Vivid tales of concerts, parties, and the musicians who play past dawn fill this insider’s account of the music festival that brings the best of Cape Breton and international Celtic musicians and their fans to Cape Breton Island each autumn.

Filed Under: Lists, Web exclusives Tagged With: 10 Nights Without Sleep, Alan Doyle, Anthony Sherwood, Backbeat Books, Bob Mersereau, Breton Books, Dave Mahalik, Doubleday Canada, ECW Press, Fallsy Downsies, Frank Cameron, I Owe It All to Rock & Roll (and the CBC), Invisible Publishing, Josh O'Kane, music, Music in the Dark, musicians, Nowhere With You: The East Coast Anthems of Joel Plaskett, Pottersfield Press, Stephanie Domet, The History of Canadian Rock ‘N’ Roll, Where I Belong

June 18, 2015 by Kim Hart Macneill

…

Atlantic Canada’s literary community and the public came together at the Alderney Landing Theatre to celebrate the best books of the last year at the 2015 Atlantic Books Awards gala on May 14th

Together the eight awards recognize the best creators and publishers in the region, but each celebrates a different genre or aspect of book publishing.

The Margaret and John Savage First Book Award, for example, celebrates an author’s initial published work. Atlantic Book Awards Society president Heather MacKenzie was thrilled to see that this particular award received more than 30 entries this year.“There’s a huge talent pool of young and emerging writers. These first books were of really high quality. That bodes really well that these are the people we’re going to see keep publishing and creating work down the road,” she said.

Author and journalist Linden MacIntyre took home the Jim Connors Dartmouth Book Award (Fiction) for Punishment.

“Where I grew up there was one way to gain the positive approval of adults: to be able to play a fiddle or tell a story,” he joked. “You could be the biggest reprobate in the place, but if you could play the fiddle or tell a story, or do both, you were welcome in the kitchen. So I, lacking the discipline or the talent to play the fiddle, figured I’m gonna start telling stories because, by God, that’s one way of getting to the Atlantic Book Awards,” he said.

Joseph Muise is a Halifax-based freelance print designer, translator, and ebook developer and the art director of Atlantic Books Today. A graduate of the Oxford International Centre for Publishing Studies, his work has appeared in the New Internationalist magazine and various books published in Canada and the United Kingdom. 

Filed Under: #78 Summer 2015, Features Tagged With: Alderney Landing Theatre, Ann Connor Brimer Award for Children’s Literature, Annick Press, APMA, Atlantic Book Award for Scholarly Writing, Atlantic Book Awards, Atlantic Publishers Marketing Association’s Best Atlantic-Published Book Award, Boulder Publications, Chef Mark McCrowe, cookbook, Creative Book Publishing, Dartmouth Book Awards, Democracy 250 Atlantic Book Award for Historical Writing, Eating Habits of the Chronically Lonesome, Equal as Citizens: The Tumultous and Troubled Idea of a Great Canadian Idea, Fire in the Belly How Purdy Crawford rescued Canada and changed the way we do business, Formac Publishing Ltd., Gordon Pitts, Island Kitchen: An Ode to Newfoundland, Jenny Higgins, Jim Connors Dartmouth Book Award (Fiction), Lillian Shepherd Award, Linden MacIntyre, Megan Gail Coles, Music is for Everyone, Nimbus Publishing, novel, Paul Robinson, Perished: The 1914 Newfoundland Sealing Disaster, Punishment, Random House Canada, Richard Starr, Sasha Okshevsky, Sharon E McKay, short stories, Stephanie Domet, Sydney Smith, The End of the Line, The Robbie Robertson Dartmouth Book Award (Non-Fiction)

May 19, 2015 by Atlantic Books Today

The winners of the 2015 Atlantic Book Awards were announced Thursday night in a ceremony held at the Alderney Landing Theatre in Dartmouth, NS. CBC Radio’s Stephanie Domet hosted the sold-out event, with books representing the wide range of literary works being produced in Atlantic Canada—from illustrated cookbooks to evocative novels.

The second Atlantic Book Awards Pioneer Award was given to Dartmouth, NS resident Paul Robinson for his longstanding contribution to writing and publishing in the region, and throughout Canada. Paul Robinson has been a driving force in the celebration of writing and writers, with a 35 year involvement in publishing in Atlantic Canada. His passionate championship of Nova Scotian and Atlantic writers led to the creation of the Dartmouth Book Awards in 1988 as the first municipal literary award east of Montreal and a precursor to the Atlantic Book Awards. Paul was the founding chair of the Dartmouth Book Awards and the Dartmouth Student Writing Awards and served as chair for 25 years. The Pioneer Award is given as a lifetime achievement award recognizing an individual’s exceptional contribution to the literary arts in Atlantic Canada.

The eight award-winning books, publishers and authors/illustrators are:

1.  Ann Connor Brimer Award for Children’s Literature
The End of the Line, by Sharon E. McKay, published by Annick Press Ltd.

Island Kitchen NEW2.  Atlantic Publishers Marketing Association’s Best Atlantic-Published Book Award, Sponsored by Friesens Corporation
Creative Book Publishing for Island Kitchen:  An Ode to Newfoundland by Chef Mark McCrowe with Sasha Okshevsky

3.  Atlantic Book Award for Scholarly Writing, Sponsored by Marquis Book Printing
Equal as Citizens:  The Tumultuous and Troubled History of a Great Canadian Idea by Richard Starr, published by Formac Publishing Company Ltd.

4.  The Robbie Robertson Dartmouth Book Award (Non-Fiction), Presented by the Kiwanis Club of Dartmouth
Fire in the Belly:  How Purdy Crawford rescued Canada, and changed the way we do business by Gordon Pitts, published by Nimbus Publishing

5.  Democracy 250 Atlantic Book Award for Historical Writing
Perished:  The 1914 Newfoundland Sealing Disaster, by Jenny Higgins, published by Boulder Publications

Music is for Everyone6.  Jim Connors Dartmouth Book Award (Fiction), presented by BoyneClarke LLP
Punishment, by Linden MacIntyre, published by Random House Canada

7.  Lillian Shepherd Award for Excellence in Illustration
Sydney Smith for Music is for Everyone, written by Jill Barber, published by Nimbus Publishing

8.  Margaret and John Savage First Book Award, Sponsored by Collins Barrow LLP, Weed Man Maritimes, Heritage House Law Office, I Love Renovations and the family of John and Margaret Savage
Eating Habits of the Chronically Lonesome: stories by Megan Gail Coles, published by Creative Book Publishing

About the Awards:

Ann Connor Brimer Award for Children’s Literature
The impetus for this $2,000 award came from the late Ann Connor Brimer who was a strong advocate of Canadian children’s literature and saw the need to recognize and encourage children’s writers in Atlantic Canada.

APMA Best Atlantic-Published Book Award, Sponsored by Friesens Corporation
The Atlantic Publishers Marketing Association’s award for Best Atlantic-Published Book recognizes publishing companies and their hardworking professionals who bring out new books each season. Each year, the Atlantic Canadian publisher of the printed book which best exemplifies publishing activity in Atlantic Canada receives the award. The Atlantic Publishers Marketing Association Best Atlantic-Published Book Awards has been generously sponsored for the tenth year by Friesens Corporation.  The prize of $4,000 is shared between the winning publishing firm ($3,000) and the book’s author ($1,000).

Atlantic Book Award for Scholarly Writing, Sponsored by Marquis Book Printing
Presented for the first time in 2013 by the Atlantic Book Awards Society.

The Robbie Robertson Dartmouth Book Award (Non-Fiction), Presented by the Kiwanis Club of Dartmouth
The Dartmouth Book Awards were established in 1989 by then mayor of Dartmouth, Dr. John Savage. The annual awards for fiction and non-fiction, valued at $2,500 each, honour the best books published the previous year in celebration of Nova Scotia and its people.

Democracy 250 Atlantic Book Award for Historical Writing
The Atlantic Book Awards Society created the Atlantic Book Award for Historical Writing and received an endowment from the Democracy 250 committee to fund the $2,000 annual prize for an outstanding work of non-fiction that promotes awareness of, and appreciation for, an aspect of the history of the Atlantic Provinces.

Jim Connors Dartmouth Book Award (Fiction), presented by Boyne Clarke
The Jim Connors Dartmouth Book Award for fiction is sponsored by Boyne Clarke Barristers and Solicitors. Dartmouth lawyer and activist Jim Connors was a volunteer juror of the fiction entries from the outset of the annual competitions until his death in 2008.

Lillian Shepherd Award for Excellence in Illustration
Lillian Shepherd was a long-time buyer for the now-closed independent bookstore, The Book Room in Halifax. This award was established by her many friends to applaud the book that combines Lillian’s love for illustrated children’s books and her affinity for locally produced work.  The award that bears her name is sponsored by the Atlantic Independent Booksellers’ Association and the Atlantic Provinces Publishers’ Representatives.

Margaret and John Savage First Book Award
The Margaret and John Savage First Book Award, presented for the first time in 2003 with a value of $1,500, recognizes the best first book of fiction or non-fiction published in the previous year by an Atlantic writer. The Award, now valued at $2,500, is sponsored by Collins Barrow LLP, Weed Man Maritimes, Heritage House Law Office, I Love Renovations and the family of John and Margaret Savage.

About the Atlantic Book Awards Society
The Board of the non-profit Atlantic Book Awards Society (ABAS) is made up of representatives of the Atlantic Canadian book and writing community. The 2015 Atlantic Book Awards and Festival gratefully acknowledges the support of the Canada Book Fund of the Department of Canadian Heritage, the Nova Scotia Department of Communities, Culture and Heritage, Halifax Public Libraries and the sponsorship of Chapters/Indigo/Coles and the Atlantic Publishers Marketing Association/Atlantic Books Today.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Ann Connor Brimer Award for Children’s Literature, Annick Press, APMA, Atlantic Book Award for Scholarly Writing, Atlantic Book Awards, Atlantic Publishers Marketing Association’s Best Atlantic-Published Book Award, Boulder Publications, Chef Mark McCrowe, cookbook, Creative Book Publishing, Dartmouth Book Awards, Democracy 250 Atlantic Book Award for Historical Writing, Eating Habits of the Chronically Lonesome, Equal as Citizens: The Tumultous and Troubled Idea of a Great Canadian Idea, Fire in the Belly How Purdy Crawford rescued Canada and changed the way we do business, Formac Publishing Ltd., Gordon Pitts, Island Kitchen: An Ode to Newfoundland, Jenny Higgins, Jim Connors Dartmouth Book Award (Fiction), Lillian Shepherd Award, Linden MacIntyre, Megan Gail Coles, Music is for Everyone, Newfoundland and Labrador, Nimbus Publishing, Nova Scotia, novel, Paul Robinson, Perished: The 1914 Newfoundland Sealing Disaster, Prince Edward Island, Punishment, Random House Canada, Richard Starr, Sasha Okshevsky, Sharon E McKay, short stories, Stephanie Domet, Sydney Smith, The End of the Line, The Robbie Robertson Dartmouth Book Award (Non-Fiction)

April 2, 2015 by Ryan Turner

Atlantic Book Awards

Editor’s note: Are you excited for the 2015 Atlantic Book Awards? The short list will be unveiled on April 7 at the Halifax Central Library. The event will feature readings by authors Jon Tattrie, Valerie Compton, Alexander MacLeod and Ami McKay. Learn more here. In the meantime, please enjoy this story from the archives about the 2008 Atlantic Book Awards. Maybe you’ll even find a gem of a book you missed the first time around.

The nominees in the 2008 Atlantic Book Awards come from across the region and span genres, but one thing is clear: Atlantic Canada is a hotbed of literary talent

As the Atlantic Book Awards have grown in size and diversity over the past eight years, so too have the variety and quality of Atlantic Canadian writers. The ceremony has expanded since 2000 from a total of six awards in fiction, non-fiction, poetry and children’s literature to the 10 awards given out in 2008. To measure the quality, one simply has to look at the past nominees of the prestigious Thomas Head Raddall Award, presented annually to the best work of adult fiction by a writer from the Atlantic Provinces. With names like Wayne Johnston, David Adams Richards, Lisa Moore, Alistair MacLeod, Donna Morrissey and Kenneth J. Harvey, it’s an exciting time to be a reader –and a writer– in Atlantic Canada.

Jane Buss, Executive Director of the Writers’ Federation of Nova Scotia, believes the awards are a valuable way to celebrate writers, and to give great books another opportunity to be showcased and sold. “Their regional – rather than local or provincial – emphasis makes the awards relevant to a wider audience,” says Buss, and gives greater exposure to the authors. The award ceremony itself is only one element of the week-long Atlantic Book Festival, which also includes readings, workshops, tours, new-book launches, and children’s activities across Atlantic Canada.

All-our-wonder-unavengedSue Carter Flinn, arts editor of Halifax’s weekly alternative newspaper The Coast, notes the importance of the list’s diversity. Nominees range from Governor General’s award-winning poet Don Domanski’s All Our Wonder Unavenged to music journalist Bob Mersereau’s debut, The Top 100 Canadian Albums. Flinn says she “can’t imagine how much work went into compiling [The Top 100]. It certainly caused a lot of heated debate around The Coast office!”

Like any selection process, the Atlantic Book Awards are bound to cause some controversy. Flinn is surprised at the exclusion of Michael Winter’s The Architects Are Here and Brian Tucker’s first novel, Big White Knuckles, “A really strong debut by a new voice.” Perhaps it speaks to the quality of writing in the region that books such as these are left off, but most of all, Flinn is pleased to see Stephanie Domet’s Homing: the whole story (from the inside out) nominated for the Margaret and John Savage First Book Award: “I think it’s really important that the awards acknowledge young writers with contemporary stories, especially ones with identifiable Atlantic locations. It’s exciting for readers to recognize streets and landmarks.”

Halifax musician and writer Clary Croft also stresses the importance of geography. He calls Judith Meyrick’s Gracie The Public Gardens Duck “charming” and praises the illustrations of Richard Rudnicki. He believes “it is important for children to be able to read books set in a location or scenario they can understand. It’s all about telling our own story, and Maritimers and Newfoundlanders do that so well.”

Hunting HalifaxCroft also enjoyed Steven Laffoley’s Hunting Halifax: In Search of History, Mystery and Murder, nominated for the Booksellers’ Choice Award. “I devour small books written by local authors with a specific interest,” he says. “The Images of Our Past series by Nimbus is an excellent example of this. But, strangely for an author, I rarely buy books, and when given them, give most of them away after I read them. I know some people love having their books around them, but I like to get books moving and into as many hands as possible.” He calls Laffoley’s offering “quirky” and “certainly personal,” a quality in the writing that impressed him.

Heidi Hallett, owner of Frog Hollow Books in Park Lane Mall in Halifax, mentions Laffoley’s book as a staff favourite, saying “it takes readers on a dark and dirty trail through the streets and pubs of a Halifax in search of a 150-year-old murderer – the perfect book for a cold, winter night.”

Having organized launches for several books on the list, including Don Hannah’s Ragged Islands, Beatrice MacNeil’s Where White Horses Gallop, and Carol Bruneau’s Glass Voices, as well as Mersereau’s and Domet’s recent efforts, Hallett predicts that Carol Bruneau will take the Dartmouth Book Award for Fiction for her poignant depiction of a mother and family spanning more than 50 years in post-Explosion Halifax.

“We had a packed house at Frog Hollow for Glass Voices,” explains Hallett. “We couldn’t have squeezed another body in there, and we sold out immediately after the reading. This book has been enormously popular with our customers, and for good reason: Carol’s writing is beautiful, and she has an amazing gift as a storyteller. Our secondary order was sold out with advance orders before it even got to the store, and some of our customers have been patiently waiting since before Christmas to buy copies from the second print run, as, much to our dismay, the book was no longer available from the publisher just before the holidays.”

As for the Thomas Head Raddall Award, Hallett says, “David Adams Richards is usually pretty hard to beat,” but adds that she was “very moved by Don Hannah’s clever and compassionate portrait of a woman in her eighties who revisits her past and questions where she came from during the final days of her life.”

St. John’s native Wanda Nolan, currently working on her Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing degree from the University of British Columbia, draws attention to the Raddall Award’s 2008 nominees focus on the past. “I find it interesting,” says Nolan, “that four of the novels have a historical context: Bruneau – the Halifax Explosion, MacNeil– the Second World War, Doucette – the Depression, while Morgan goes from the Second World War to the Beothuk, a century before, and to now. Even Hannah’s novel, although set today, is an investigation of the past.” She adds that these are all excellent writers with important stories to tell, but wonders where more modern Maritime stories are: “I know they’re out there.”

Homing Stephanie DometThe awards are not only an exciting time for readers and writers, but for publishers as well. Of the 30 nominated books, 17 are published in Atlantic Canada, which means Atlantic Canadian publishers are making great choices about the writers and subjects they’re publishing. Goose Lane Editions, Nimbus Publishing, and Cape Breton University Press lead the way with four nominations each. Halifax publisher Robbie MacGregor of fledging Invisible Press – less than two years old and already garnering rave reviews in the Globe and Mail and earning a nomination in this year’s First Book category for Domet’s Homing – says the people at Invisible are “serious about promoting new and emerging authors, about working with people from the region. It means a lot to know that the work and stories authors are producing are resonating with the folks where [they’re] from.”

 

Filed Under: #57 Spring 2008, Features Tagged With: Alistair MacLeod, All Our Wonder Unavenged, Atlantic Book Awards, Beatrice MacNeil, Bob Mersereau, Cape Breton University Press, Carol Bruneau, Clary Croft, David Adams Richards, Don Domanski, Don Hannah, Donna Morrissey, Glass Voices, Goose Lane Editions, Gracie The Public Gardens Duck, Homing, Hunting Halifax: In Search of History Mystery and Murder, Invisible Publishing, Judith Meyrick, Kenneth J. Harvey, Lisa Moore, Nimbus Publishing, Ragged Islands, Stephanie Domet, Steven Laffoley, Sue Carter Flinn, Top 100 Canadian Albums, Wayne Johnston, Where White Horses Gallop, Writers' Federation of Nova Scotia

July 21, 2014 by Darcy Rhyno

Fallsy Downsies coverThis road story about gruff, jaded and formerly famous folky Lansing Meadows on his last cross-Canada tour is Domet’s follow-up to her award-winning debut novel, Homing. Humourous and readable, Meadows’ story is unravelled by Evan Cornfield, who worships his hero while unwittingly ushering him out of the business. The relationship isn’t an easy one. “Lansing was a bull. Evan was a china shop.” In pursuit is young reporter Dacey Brown, on her own searching road tour.

Two, then three characters clatter in Evan’s Corolla from Nova Scotia toward Meadows’ lifetime achievement award in Winnipeg. They cross a country of crumbling union halls and urbanista restaurants—ground that’s shifted beneath the veteran musician. In Canada, celebrities are mortal, but this end-of-career scraping by is a gloomy commentary on the grim reality of life as a Canadian artist. As a sophomore effort, Fallsy Downsies falls short of Domet’s first finely crafted work of emotional subtlety, but it’s still an intimately drawn portrait and an important addition to the Canadian cultural imagination.

Fallsy Downsies
by Stephanie Domet
$19.95, paperback, 360 pp.
Invisible Publishing, October 2013
Reviewed from unbound galley

Filed Under: #73 Fall 2013, Fiction, Reviews Tagged With: Fallsy Downsies, Halifax, Invisible Publishing, Nova Scotia, Stephanie Domet

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