Books

30 Canadian books to read in winter 2025

Cozy up with a great Canadian book during the cold and dark winter season. Check out this list of 30 buzzworthy Canadian titles to read right now!

Cozy up with a great Canadian book during the cold and dark winter season. Check out this list of 30 buzzworthy Canadian titles, featuring books ranging from fiction to poetry to nonfiction to comics! 

Dandelion by Jamie Chai Yun Liew

The book's author, a woman with long dark hair wearing glasses and the book cover featuring a drawing of a long haired woman running towards dandelions.
Dandelion is a book by Jamie Chai Yun Liew. (Kenya-Jade Pinto, Arsenal Pulp Press)

Dandelion is a novel about family secrets, migration, isolation, motherhood and mental illness. When Lily was a child, her mother, Swee Hua, walked away from the family and was never heard from again. After becoming a new mother herself, Lily is obsessed with discovering what happened to Swee Hua. She recalls growing up in a British Columbia mining town where there were only a handful of Asian families and how Swee Hua longed to return to Brunei. Eventually, a clue leads Lily to southeast Asia to find out the truth about her mother. 

Dandelion will be championed by pastry chef Saïd M'Dahoma on Canada Reads 2025. The great Canadian book debate will take place on March 17-20.

Jamie Chai Yun Liew is a lawyer, law professor and podcaster based in Ottawa. Dandelion is her first novel, which won her the Jim Wong-Chu Emerging Writers Award from the Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop. She also wrote the nonfiction book Ghost Citizens. Liew was named one of CBC Books writers to watch in 2022

LISTEN | Saïd M'Dahoma on championing Dandelion by Jamie Chai Yun Liew
  

Watch Out for Her by Samantha M. Bailey

Watch Out for Her is a thriller by Samantha M. Bailey.
Watch Out for Her is a thriller by Samantha M. Bailey. (Dahlia Katz, Simon & Schuster)

Watch Out for Her is about a young mother named Sarah who thinks her problems are solved when she hires a young babysitter, Holly, for her six-year-old son. Her son adores Holly and Holly adores Sarah, who is like the mother she never had. But when Sarah sees something that she can't unsee, she uproots her family to start over. 

Her past follows her to this new life, raising paranoid questions of who is watching her now? And what do they want?

Watch Out for Her will be championed by Olympic gold medallist Maggie Mac Neil on Canada Reads 2025. 

Samantha M. Bailey is a journalist and editor in Toronto. Her first thriller, Woman on the Edge, was released in 2019 and was an international bestseller. Her other novels include A Friend in the Dark and Hello, Juliet. Her journalistic work can be found in publications including NOW Magazine, The Village Post, The Thrill Begins and The Crime Hub.

LISTEN | Maggie Mac Neil on championing Watch Out for Her by Samantha M. Bailey: 
 

A Two-Spirit Journey by Ma-Nee Chacaby, with Mary Louisa Plummer

A book cover of a person wearing regalia with short grey hair and glasses. A book cover of the same woman holding a drum. A woman with grey shoulder length hair and glasses.
Ma-Nee Chacaby, left, recounts her life and the hardships she faced throughout in her autobiography, A Two-Spirit Journey, written with Mary Louisa Plummer. (Ruth-Kivilahti/University of Manitoba Press/Yasmin Kudrati-Plummer)

In A Two-Spirit Journey, Ma-Nee Chacaby, an Ojibwa-Cree lesbian who grew up in a remote northern Ontario community, tells the story of how she overcame experiences with abuse and alcohol addiction to become a counsellor and lead Thunder Bay's first gay pride parade. 

A Two-Spirit Journey will be championed by podcaster and wellness advocate Shayla Stonechild on Canada Reads 2025. 

Ma-Nee Chacaby is a two-spirit Ojibwa-Cree writer, artist, storyteller and activist. She lives in Thunder Bay, Ont., and was raised by her grandmother near Lake Nipigon, Ont. Chacaby won the Ontario Historical Society's Alison Prentice Award and the Oral History Association's Book Award for A Two-Spirit Journey. In 2021, Chacaby won the Community Hero Award from the mayor of Thunder Bay.

Mary Louisa Plummer is a social scientist whose work focuses on public health and children's rights. 

LISTEN | Shayla Stonechild on championing A Two-Spirit Journey by Ma-Nee Chacaby: 
 

Jennie's Boy by Wayne Johnston 

A green book cover with a picture of a young child in black and white. A white man wearing glasses with white stubble.
Jennie's Boy is a memoir by Wayne Johnston. (Knopf Canada, Mark Raynes Roberts)

Jennie's Boy is a memoir that recounts a six-month period in Wayne Johnston's chaotic childhood, much of which was spent as a frail and sickly boy with a fiercely protective mother. While too sick to attend school, he spent his time with his funny and eccentric grandmother Lucy and picked up some important life lessons along the way. 

Jennie's Boy won the 2023 Stephen Leacock Memorial Medal. It will be championed by Linwood Barclay on Canada Reads 2025. 

Johnston is a writer, born and raised in Goulds, N.L. His novels include The Divine Ryans, A World Elsewhere, The Custodian of Paradise, The Navigator of New York and The Colony of Unrequited Dreams. His 1999 memoir, Baltimore's Mansion, won the RBC Taylor Prize. The Colony of Unrequited Dreams was shortlisted for the Giller Prize and was a 2003 Canada Reads finalist, when it was championed by now prime minister Justin Trudeau.

LISTEN | Linwood Barclay on championing Jennie's Boy by Wayne Johnston: 
 

Etta and Otto and Russell and James by Emma Hooper

 A book cover of a posted letter with a stamp with cursive writing. A photo of a woman with a short brown bob smiling in front of logs.
Emma Hooper is the author of Etta and Otto and Russell and James. (Penguin Canada, Sean Maylon)

In Etta and Otto and Russell and James, 82-year-old Etta decides to walk 3,232 kilometres to Halifax from her farm in Saskatchewan to fulfil her dream of seeing the ocean. With little more than a rusty rifle and a talking coyote named James for company, she begins her adventure, and in the process, her early life with her husband Otto and their friend Russell is revealed in flashbacks. While Russell wants to bring her home safe, she's committed to making her way to the sea and before returning to her husband who will always wait patiently for her to come back.

Etta and Otto and Russell and James will be championed by Heartland actor Michelle Morgan on Canada Reads 2025. 

Emma Hooper is a Canadian musician and writer. Her other novels include Our Homesick Songs, which was on longlisted for the 2018 Scotiabank Giller Prize, and We Should Not Be Afraid of the Sky. She also holds a PhD in music-literary studies and has published her research on many related topics. Raised in Alberta, she currently lives in England.

LISTEN | Michelle Morgan on championing Etta & Otto & Russell & James by Emma Hooper: 
 

Here After by Amy Lin 

A book cover of a Venn diagram with two figures it it. An Asian woman with slicked-back hair looks to the left and rests her chin on her hand.
Here After is a memoir by Amy Lin. (Zibby Books, Blair Marie)

Here After tells the powerful love story between Amy Lin and her husband Kurtis and how she copes with his sudden death. Lin shares how this loss upended her ideas of grief, strength and memory. 

Amy Lin is a Calgary-based writer whose work has been published in Ploughshares. She has received residencies from Yaddo and Casa Comala. Here After was on the 2024 shortlist for $75K Hilary Weston Writers' Trust Prize for Nonfiction. Lin was recently announced as one of the readers for the 2025 CBC Nonfiction Prize.

LISTEN | Amy Lin finds meaning in grief: 
 

Home and Away by Mats Sundin, with Amy Stuart 

A composite image of hockey player beside a book cover.
Home and Away is a memoir by Mats Sundin and Amy Stuart. (Simon & Schuster Canada)

Home and Away tracks a path that began with Mats Sudin's parents and two brothers outside Stockholm and eventually led to the Hockey Hall of Fame. Sudin dives into the pressures and anxieties of being the first European selected No. 1 overall at the NHL draft, getting traded by the Quebec Nordiques to Toronto for franchise icon Wendel Clark and the turbulent end to his time with the Leafs.

Mats Sundin is the former captain of the Toronto Maple Leafs and also a Hall of Fame hockey player. 

Amy Stuart is the writer of thrillers Still HereStill Mine, Still Water and A Death at the Party. She is based in Toronto.

LISTEN | Amy Stuart on collaborating with Mats Sundin to write his memoir: 
 

The Lifecycle of the Common Octopus by Emma Knight 

A book cover of a colourful vase filled with flowers. An author image of a white woman with red hair looking at the camera.
The Life Cycle of the Common Octopus is a novel by Emma Knight. (Viking, Caitlin Cronenberg)

In The Life Cycle of the Common Octopus, 18-year-old Pen arrives at the University of Edinburgh with some baggage from back home in Canada. Her parent's messy divorce has left her with some unanswered questions about their break up and she's hoping her new life in Scotland will provide some answers. When she writes a letter to her dad's estranged best friend, thriller writer Lord Lennox, he invites her to spend a weekend at his family estate. She can't help but become enthralled with his entire family and begins to unravel family secrets and experiences her first debilitating crush.

Emma Knight is an author, journalist and entrepreneur based in Toronto. Her work has appeared in Literary Hub, Vogue, The Globe and Mail, The Walrus and The New York Times. She co-hosted and created the podcast Fanfare and co-founded the organic beverage company Greenhouse. She is the author of cookbooks How to Eat with One Hand and The Greenhouse Cookbook.

LISTEN | Emma Knight on her campus novel about unravelling family secrets and motherhood: 

How To Share An Egg by Bonny Reichert 

A white woman with brown-grey hair looking to the left. A book cover of half a hard boiled egg against a blue background.
How to Share an Egg is a memoir by Bonny Reichert. (Kayla Rocca, Appetite)

When Toronto-based journalist Bonny Reichert turned 40, she quit her job and enrolled in culinary school — a life-changing decision that pushed her to explore her relationship with food in writing. This exploration, along with a critical bowl of borscht in Warsaw, led Reichert to writing her memoir, How to Share an Egg, which dives into how food shapes her history as the daughter of a Holocaust survivor. 

Bonny Reichert is a journalist and chef based in Toronto. She was formerly an editor at Today's Parent and Chatelaine and has written for The Globe and Mail. She won a National Magazine Award and was on the longlist for the 2020 CBC Short Story Prize. She teaches writing at the University of Toronto. 

LISTEN | Bonny Reichert delves into her new memoir: 

For the Love of a Son: A Memoir of Addiction, Loss and Hope by Scott Oake

A composite image of a book cover with tree branches against a blue sky and on the right is a headshot photo of a man wearing glasses.
For the Love of a Son is a memoir by Scott Oake. (Simon & Schuster, CBC Radio-Canada )

For the Love of a Son is about a young man who never got to grow up and a family's mission to help others find hope and healing. After the heartbreaking loss of his son Bruce, who battled addiction and died from an overdose at 25, broadcaster Scott Oake and his family founded the Bruce Oake Recovery Centre to support those facing substance use disorder.

Scott Oake is a Gemini award-winning sportscaster for CBC Sports, Sportsnet and Hockey Night in Canada. He is on the Roll of Honour of the Manitoba Sportswriters and Sportscasters Association and appointed a Member of the Order of Manitoba and the Order of Canada. Originally from Sydney, Nova Scotia, Oake started his broadcasting career at Memorial University's campus radio station before spending five decades with CBC.

WATCH | Scott Oake on grief, loss and hope: 

Scott Oake carries his grief every day

1 month ago
Duration 8:42

The Art of Doing by Jesse Lipscombe

A composite image of a a dark blue cover that shows the book title and author's name in spirally font with a headshot photo of the author wearing a purple shirt and green jacket on the right.
The Art of Doing is a book by Jesse Lipscombe. (HarperCollins Canada, Helenna Santo)

In The Art of Doing, Jesse Lipscombe shares how a life-changing mini-stroke that disrupted his Olympic dreams transformed his focus from single-minded goal pursuit to embracing the process of "doing," unlocking a world of opportunity, wonder and happiness. Drawing from his diverse experiences as an actor, speaker, writer, entrepreneur, athlete and singer, he offers practical strategies to help you stay motivated, productive and achieve your dreams. 

Lipscombe is an Alberta-born actor, speaker, former athlete, entrepreneur and activist. He invests in multiple businesses and runs a consultancy focused on fighting racism, misogyny, homophobia and hatred. In 2017, he won the Obsidian Award for Top Business Leader in Western Canada and named Community Man of the Year by Diversity magazine. He is the first Black man to receive the AMPIA Award for Best Male Acting Performance at the Rosie Awards. 

Almost Brown by Charlotte Gill

Almost Brown by Charlotte Gill. Illustrated book cover shows patterns of red, blue and green leaves on a yellow background. Author portrait of a mixed-race Indian and English woman with long black hair.
Almost Brown is a memoir by Charlotte Gill. (Kevin Turpin, Penguin Canada)

In Almost Brown: A Mixed-Race Family Memoir, a young Charlotte recalls her experiences living in the diaspora in Toronto and New York. As the daughter of a Punjabi Sikh father and English mother, following their divorce, she looks into the frayed familial relationships that brought them to the present. Later in life, after spending time in India, Gill reconnects with her father and attempts to answer questions about what it means to be mixed-race and have two parents with very contrasting views on parenthood.

Charlotte Gill is a B.C.-based writer of Indian and English descent. She is also the author of the memoir Eating Dirt and currently teaches writing at the University of King's College.

LISTEN | Charlotte Gill reflects on her mixed-race family: 

No Credit River by Zoe Whittall

A white blonde woman with bangs looks to the left. A book cover of a woman's face painted in pink and red.
No Credit River is a memoir by Zoe Whittall. (N Maxwell Lander, Book*hug Press)

In No Credit River, Whittall brings readers along through six years of her life which include the loss of a pregnancy, a global pandemic and abandoned love. Honest, emotional and painful, the collection of prose poems examines anxiety and creativity in the modern world as well as the intersection of motherhood and queerness.

Zoe Whittall, based in Prince Edward County, Ont., is an author, poet and screenwriter. Her past works include the short story collection Wild Failure and the novels The Fake, The Best Kind of People and Bottle Rocket Hearts. Her previous poetry collections include The Emily Valentine Poems and The Best Ten Minutes of Your Life. She has received the Writers' Trust Dayne Ogilvie Award, a Lambda Literary Award and been shortlisted for the Giller Prize. Whittall is also a juror for the 2025 CBC Nonfiction Prize alongside Danny Ramadan and Helen Knott.

LISTEN | Zoe Whittall bares her heart in poetic memoir: 

At a Loss for Words by Carol Off

A composite image of a woman with brown hair smiling into the camera beside a white book cover.
At a Loss For Words is a nonfiction book by Carol Off. (CBC, Penguin Random House Canada)

At a Loss for Words: Conversation in an Age of Rage, traces what former CBC Host Carol Off calls the manipulation and weaponization of language through the lens of six words: freedom, democracy, truth, woke, choice and taxes.

Off co-hosted the acclaimed CBC radio program As It Happens for nearly sixteen years. Prior to that, she reported on news and current affairs both in Canada and internationally. Her previous books include The Lion, The Fox and the Eagle: A Story of Generals and Justice in Yugoslavia and Rwanda and All We Leave Behind: A Reporter's Journey into the Lives of Others which won the British Columbia National Award for Canadian Non-Fiction. 

LISTEN | Carol Off on the power of language: 

When the Pine Needles Fall by Katsi'tsakwas Ellen Gabriel, with Sean Carleton

An Indigenous woman with brown hair looks past the camera. A green book cover shows orange pine needles. A bald man leans on a railing.
When the Pine Needles Fall is a memoir by Katsi’tsakwas Ellen Gabriel, left, with Sean Carleton, right. (Alan Lissner, Between the Lines/ZG Stories)

When the Pine Needles Fall tells the story of Canada's violent siege of Kanehsatà:ke and Kahnawà:ke in 1990 from the perspective of Katsi'tsakwas Ellen Gabriel who was the Kanien'kehá:ka spokesperson during that time. The book covers her experiences leading up to the siege and her work as an activist for her community since. 

Gabriel is a Kanien'kehá:ka, Wakeniáhton, artist, documentarian and Indigenous human rights and environmental rights activist. She lives in Kanehsatà:ke Kanien'kehá:ka Homelands.

Sean Carleton is a historian and professor in Indigenous studies at the University of Manitoba. He is one of the readers for the 2025 CBC Nonfiction Prize.

LISTEN | Katsi'tsakwas Ellen Gabriel on her art and activism: 

However Far Away by Rajinderpal S. Pal 

An Indian man with glasses and grey hair and beard looks into the camera. A book cover with a blue silhouette of a man wearing orange headphones.
However Far Away is a novel by Rajinderpal S. Pal. (Hill Peppard, House of Anansi Press)

However Far Away  follows Devinder Gill who must navigate the emotional minefield of both his wife and his ex-girlfriend, with whom he's been having an affair, attending his nephew's wedding. He is certain nothing will come between him and his wife Kuldip but as the day goes on he realizes he does not have the control he thought. A series of threats including a curious daughter and an unwelcome guest only throw Dev's life into further disarray. 

Rajinderpal S. Pal is a writer and stage performer based in Toronto. He has written the poetry collections pappaji wrote poetry in a language i cannot read and pulse

LISTEN | Rajinderpal S. Pal contends with love, loyalty and settling: 

Songs for the Brokenhearted by Ayelet Tsabari

A woman with long brown and red hair and glasses stands in front of a door that says "I love you." A book cover shows the red silhouette of a woman with blue hair.
Songs for the Brokenhearted is a book by Ayelet Tsabari. (HarperCollins)

In Songs for the Brokenhearted, Zohara hasn't looked back since moving to the U.S. for her PhD. Her life feels much simpler than her childhood growing up in Israel, where she felt othered as a Yemeni Jew by the predominant Ashkenazi (eastern European) culture. When her sister calls to let her know of their mother's death, she gets on a plane with no return ticket. But as she goes through her mother's belongings and discovers tapes of her mother singing hauntingly beautiful songs in Arabic, she begins to unravel family secrets, including a forbidden romance that challenges her perception of the conservative Yemeni community of her parents.

Ayelet Tsabari is the author of The Art of Leaving, which won the Canadian Jewish Literary Award for Memoir and was a finalist for the Writer's Trust Hilary Weston Prize, and The Best Place on Earth, which won the Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature and the Edward Lewis Wallant Award. She spent years living in Canada and is now based in Tel Aviv. Tsabari's short story Green was shortlisted for the 2018 CBC Short Story Prize.

It Must be Beautiful to be Finished by Kate Gies

A white woman with long blonde hair smiles at the camera. A book cover with a cartoon profile of a woman in pink and red with a flower instead of an ear.
It Must Be Beautiful to be Finished is a book by Kate Gies. (Will O'Hare, Simon & Schuster)

In It Must Be Beautiful to Be Finished, Kate Gies recounts her experiences as a young girl born without an ear and the 14 surgeries she underwent before the age of 13 to craft the appearance of an outer ear. Her debut memoir details the path to accepting her body through poignant vignettes. 

Kate Gies teaches at George Brown College. Her writing has been published in The Malahat Review, The Humber Literary Review, Hobart, Minola Review and The Conium Review. She was also longlisted for the 2018 CBC Nonfiction Prize for Kids of 7C — which became a chapter in her memoir. 

LISTEN | Kate Gies' powerful journey to self-love: 

We Could Be Rats by Emily Austin 

A white woman with blonde hair and glasses smiles and looks to the right. A green book cover of a person crouched on the floor wearing rat ears.
We Could Be Rats is a novel by Emily Austin. (Bridget Forberg, Simon & Schuster)

In We Could Be Rats, Margit has always found it difficult to understand her sister Sigrid, who rejected the conventional path of life, never graduating high school, and preferring instead, to roam the streets with her best friend Greta. When Margit, for the first time, tries to connect with her sister, she uncovers the heartwrenching reasons behind her sister's choices. 

Emily Austin is a writer based in Ottawa who studied English literature and library science at Western University. She is also the author of the novels Everyone in This Room Will Someday Be Dead and Interesting Facts About Space, and the poetry collection Gay Girl Prayers

Searching for Serafim by Ruby Smith Díaz

A composite photo of a book cover that shows a Afro Latino man and on the right is headshot photo of an Afro Latina woman.
Searching for Serafim is a book by Ruby Smith Díaz. (Arsenal Pulp Press, Hay f Photography )

Searching for Serafim is about the life of Vancouver's first lifeguard, Serafim "Joe" Fortes. The book explores the complexities of his legacy as a hero who saved numerous lives in a racially divided society. Through a blend of historical research, personal reflections and poetry, Ruby Smith Diaz sheds light on the untold struggles of an Afro Latino man in an openly white supremacist world.

Ruby Smith Diaz is an Afro Latina multidisciplinary artist, educator and award-winning body-positive personal trainer. Raised in a migrant, low-income, single-parent household in amiskwaciy (Edmonton), her upbringing has fuelled her dedication to addressing equity and social justice issues. She now lives on the unceded territories of the Stz'uminus peoples (Ladysmith, B.C.). 

I Might Be in Trouble by Daniel Aleman

A man with short brown hair smiles at the camera. A book cover shows an open book with a woman and man pulling a body across the page.
I Might Be in Trouble is a novel by Daniel Aleman. (Monography, Grand Central Publishing/Hachette)

In I Might Be in Trouble, David hooks up with a great guy, only to find him dead in his bed the next morning. He teams up with his literary agent, Stacey, on a mission to find out just what happened the night before and maybe turn the disaster into inspiration for David's next book.

Daniel Aleman is a Toronto author originally from Mexico City. His previous work includes YA novels, Indivisible, which won the 2022 Tomás Rivera Book Award, and Brighter than the Sun.

LISTEN | Daniel Aleman's latest novel is about a date gone deadly: 

We, the Kindling by Otoniya J. Okot Bitek

A composite image that shows a book cover that shows a three people walking along a light blue and yellow path and a headshot photo of a woman wearing yellow and purple earrings and a yellow shirt.
We, the Kindling is a book by Otoniya J. Okot Bitek. ( Knopf Canada, Seasmin Taylor)

In We, the Kindling, three women who, as children, survived the horrors of war in Uganda, continue to experience the trauma of their past, even when they've started families of their own.

Otoniya J. Okot Bitek, a poet, fiction writer and scholar born in Kenya to Ugandan parents, who currently lives in Kingston, Ont. Her first collection of poetry, 100 Days, won the 2017 IndieFab Book of the Year Award for poetry and the 2017 Glenna Lushei Prize for African Poetry. Her second poetry collection, A is for Acholi, won the 2023 Dorothy Livesay Poetry Prize. She was also longlisted for the 2018 CBC Poetry Prize. We, the Kindling is her debut novel.

May It Have a Happy Ending by Minelle Mahtani

May It Have a Happy Ending by Minelle Mahtani. Illustrated book cover of a pink and orange feather circled by three birds. Author portrait of a South Asian woman with long black hair, in a silk green top.
May It Have a Happy Ending is a memoir by Minelle Mahtani. (Doubleday Canada, Kyrani Kanavaros)

May It Have a Happy Ending is a memoir about the anticipatory grief of caring for a dying loved one and the gravity of their loss when they do pass. As Minelle Mahtani was finding her stride in the newsroom, hosting her radio show Sense of Place in Vancouver, her Iranian mother had been diagnosed with tongue cancer. Through vignettes and lyrical prose, Mahtani shares the intimate experience of talking with strangers while struggling to have tough conversations with close friends and family. 

Minelle Mahtani is a Canadian writer and former radio host whose writing has been featured in publications like The Walrus. She is also an associate professor at the University of British Columbia. May It Have a Happy Ending is her debut memoir. 

LISTEN | Minelle Mahtani on her mother, love and grief: 
 

The Riveter by Jack Wang

A composite image of a book cover that shows black parachutes descending on snowy mountains against a purple and red sky and  man wearing a short sleeved blue collar shirt.
The Riveter is a book by Jack Wang. (House of Anansi Press, Holman Wang )

The Riveter follows a Chinese Canadian man named Josiah Chang who pursues a cross-cultural romance with a singer named Poppy. When he is given the chance to fight abroad in Europe during World War II, their passionate relationship is what keeps Josiah determined to survive the battlefields and make it back home. 

Jack Wang is a N.Y.-based writer and professor originally from Vancouver. He teaches in the department of writing at Ithaca College and his writing has appeared in Joyland Magazine, The New Quarterly and Fiddlehead, among others. Wang's debut short story collection, We Two Alone, was longlisted for Canada Reads 2022, shortlisted for the Kobo Emerging Writer Prize and won the Danuta Gleed Literary Award.

LISTEN | Jack Wang on Bookends with Mattea Roach
 

All Our Ordinary Stories by Teresa Wong

A composite image featuring an illustrated book cover and a portrait of an Asian woman  smiling into the camera.
All Our Ordinary Stories is a graphic memoir by Teresa Wong. (Arsenal Pulp Press, Kaitlin Moerman)

In All Our Ordinary Stories, Teresa Wong unpacks how intergenerational trauma and resilience can shape our identities. Starting with her mother's stroke a decade ago, Wong takes a journey through time and place to find the origin of her feelings of disconnection from her parents. The graphic memoir examines the cultural, language, historical and personality issues that have been barriers to intimacy in her family.

Teresa Wong is the author of the graphic memoir Dear Scarlet: The Story of My Postpartum Depression, which was a finalist for The City of Calgary W.O. Mitchell Book Prize and longlisted for Canada Reads 2020. Her comics have appeared in The Believer, The New Yorker and The Walrus. She teaches memoir and comics at Gotham Writers Workshop and was the former writer-in-residence at the University of Calgary. CBC Books named her a writer to watch in 2019.

LISTEN | How Teresa Wong wrote and drew her family history: 

Chrystia by Catherine Tsalikis

A grey book cover with a smiling woman next to a headshot of a dark haired woman smiling at the camera
Author Catherine Tsalikis next to her book, "Chrystia: From Peace River to Parliament Hill" (Andreea Muscurel, House of Anansi Press Inc.)

Chrystia is a biography that chronicles Chrystia Freeland's incredible journey from her roots in Peace River, Alta., to her role as a journalist and ultimately to her position as deputy prime minister and finance minister in prime minister Justin Trudeau's Liberal government. The book gives an inside look at the trailblazing woman, sharing key moments and achievements in her impressive political career.

Catherine Tsalikis is a Toronto-based writer and journalist. She reports on foreign policy, politics and gender equality. Tsalikis respectively received her undergraduate and graduate degrees from the University of Toronto and the London School of Economics. She worked as an editorial assistant for The World Today magazine, a politics producer for Sky News, and most recently, as the senior editor for OpenCanada.org, an international affairs site.

LISTEN | Catherine Tsalikis publishes timely biography on Chrystia Freeland: 

All You Can Kill by Pasha Malla

A book cover of block letters with tropical flowers in them. An author photo of a man with glasses smiling.
All You Can Kill is an absurdist novel by Pasha Malla. (Coach House Books, Penguin Random House Canada)

All You Can Kill, is an absurdist story set at a wellness resort that specializes in solving couples' martial issues with erotic therapy. But the main characters of the novel are not a couple — which incites humorous, yet uncomfortable moments. As horror and surrealism seeps into the narrative, Pasha Malla creates a world and a story that reminds us how strange people can be.

Pasha Malla is the author of several books of poetry and fiction including The Withdrawal Method, which was shortlisted for the Commonwealth Prize and longlisted for the Scotiabank Giller Prize, People Park, which was shortlisted for the Amazon First Novel Award, and Kill the Mall. Originally from Newfoundland, he now lives in Ontario and has taught at York University, University of Toronto, the University of Guelph, Brock University and McMaster University.

LISTEN | How Pasha Malla wrote his absurdist novel set at a wellness resort: 

Just Say Yes: A Memoir by Bob McDonald

A book cover of a man with white hair. The same man with white hair in a garden.
Just Say Yes is a memoir by Bob McDonald. (Douglas & McIntyre, Jennifer Hartley)

Starting in a small town with a boy from a low-income family, Just Say Yes explores how Bob McDonald ended up travelling the world, hosting CBC's Quirks and Quarks, becoming an officer of the Order of Canada and even having an asteroid named in his honour. 

Bob McDonald has been the host of CBC Radio's Quirks and Quarks since 1992. He is a regular science commentator on CBC's News Network and a science correspondent for CBC TV's The National. He has written multiple books including Measuring the Earth with a Stick, which was shortlisted for the Canadian Science Writers Association Book Award and The Future Is Now, about the achievable greener future. 

LISTEN | Bob McDonald takes the Proust questionnaire: 

Living Disability: Building Accessible Futures for Everybody, edited by Emily Macrae 

A book cover of an abstract house. A white woman with a brown bob wearing a green scarf.
Living Disability is a book edited by Emily Macrae, pictured. (David Gee, Louise Wrazen)

Living Disability brings together diverse disabled perspectives to explore how urban systems can be accessible to all populations. Including both essays and interviews, the book brings research together with lived experience to share stories and strategies for an inclusive future. 

Emily Macrae is a disabled writer and organizer. Her work has been published in Canadian Architect, Spacing and NOW magazine. She is based in Toronto. 

Safekeeping by Chelene Knight

A composite image of a book cover that shows the title, subtitle and author name appear in black type in a white box against an indigo background that is lightly textured to look like handmade paper and a author photo of a woman wearing a black blouse and printed skirt.
Safekeeping is a book by Chelene Knight. (House of Anansi Press, Maxine Bulloch )

In Safekeeping, award-winning author Chelene Knight provides practical advice for writers at all stages of their literary endeavours. The book combines writing prompts, tips, reflective exercises and mindset-building activities to equip authors with the tools for successful publishing, while maintaining a healthy outlook and helping them avoid imposter syndrome, burnout and the pitfalls of comparing themselves to others. 

Chelene Knight is a writer and poet from Vancouver. She is the author of the Braided Skin and the memoir Dear Current Occupant, which won the 2018 Vancouver Book Award. Her 2022 novel Junie won the 2023 Vancouver Book Award, was longlisted for Canada Reads 2024 and the Carol Shields Prize for Fiction, and was a finalist for the Ferro-Grumley Award for LGBTQ fiction. Her work has appeared in literary magazines in Canada and the U.S. and she has been a judge for literary awards, including the B.C. Book Prizes. 

LISTEN | Chelene Knight on what inspired her to write Junie: 

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