Books

50 fiction books featured on Bookends with Mattea Roach

If you're wondering what to read next this summer, this list of fiction books featured on the first season of CBC Radio's Bookends with Mattea Roach is a good place to start. 

If you're wondering what to read next this summer, this list of fiction books featured on the first season of CBC Radio's Bookends with Mattea Roach is a good place to start. 

On the show, Roach talks to authors from Canada and around the world.

Here are all the fiction titles that sparked the conversation this past year. 

Valid by Chris Bergeron, translated by Natalia Hero

A black book cover with big pink bubble letters. An author headshot of a woman with long black hair wearing glasses in black and white.
Chris Bergeron is the author of Valid, translated by Natalia Hero. (House of Anansi Press, Cossette)

Set in Montreal in 2050, Valid is a novel about Christelle, a trans woman who is forced to live as a man to stay alive. At 70-years-old, she's held captive by an AI and sets off on her own revolution — a revelation of her true self.

Chris Bergeron is a Montreal writer who currently works at Cossette, a global marketing agency. She previously ran the culture magazine Voir. 

Natalia Hero is a writer and translator based in Montreal. Her short fiction has been published in Mag, Shabby Doll House, Cosmonauts Avenue and The Temz Review. Her debut novel, Hum, was published in 2018. 

LISTEN | What makes Montreal a transgender city?: 

Small Ceremonies by Kyle Edwards

A book cover that shows a tiger with a black head and striped body.
Small Ceremonies is a book by Kyle Edwards. (McClelland & Stewart)

In the city of Winnipeg, two Indigenous boys are on the cusp of adulthood, imagining a future filled with possibility and greatness. Small Ceremonies follows a hockey team of Ojibway high schoolers from Winnipeg, who are chasing hockey dreams and coming of age in a game — and a place — that can be both beautiful and brutal.

Kyle Edwards is an award-winning Anishinaabe journalist and writer from the Lake Manitoba First Nation and a member of the Ebb and Flow First Nation. He has won two National Magazine Awards in Canada and he was recognized as an Emerging Indigenous Journalist by the Canadian Association of Journalists. He is currently a Provost Fellow at the University of Southern California, where he is pursuing a PhD in creative writing and literature.

LISTEN | For Indigenous players, ice hockey is a ceremony of its own: 

Atmosphere by Taylor Jenkins Reid

A book cover of a woman with dark black curly hair wearing aviators and looking up at the sky. An author image of a woman with a short brown bob.
Atmosphere is a novel by Taylor Jenkins Reid. (Doubleday Canada)

Atmosphere is thrilling from the start, when readers learn there's been an explosion on a space shuttle. Bouncing back and forth in time, the novel shares the journey of Joan, an astronaut in the 1980s, as she becomes the voice of mission control on that fateful day — and what's at stake, both personally and professionally, when things don't go as planned. 

Taylor Jenkins Reid is the author of books including Carrie Soto Is BackMalibu RisingDaisy Jones and The Six, which was also made into a TV show and The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo. She lives in Los Angeles.

LISTEN | Taylor Jenkins Reid is among the stars — on and off the page: 

Spent by Alison Bechdel

A composite image of a book cover of a comic of two women wearing glasses and an author headshot of a woman with short hair and glasses.
Spent is a comic novel by Alison Bechdel. (Mariner Books, Elena Siebert)

In Spent, a cartoonist named Alison Bechdel grapples with her complicated relationship with capitalism, community and activism after the success of her memoir and its subsequent TV adaptation.

American cartoonist Alison Bechdel is the creator of the comic strip Dykes to Watch Out For and graphic memoirs Fun HomeAre You My Mother? and The Secret to Superhuman Strength

LISTEN | Alison Bechdel on making money and seeing Fun Home in a new light: 

The World So Wide by Zilla Jones

The book cover with an illustration of a woman shaped like a volcano and the author photo: a close up portrait of a woman with dark curly hair
The World So Wide is a novel by Zilla Jones. (Cormorant Books, Ian McCausland)

The World So Wide tells the story of Felicity Alexander, a mixed-race opera star, who spends her life chasing love and validation and finds herself caught up in the military coup during the 1983 Grenada revolution and is placed under house arrest. What unfolds next is a saga that spans decades and reflects on race, love, belonging and revolution.

Zilla Jones is a Winnipeg author and has been a finalist for the CBC Short Story Prize on four occasions, and the CBC Nonfiction Prize in 2024. She's also won many literary awards including the Journey Prize, the Malahat Review Open Season Award, the Jacob Zilber Prize for Short Fiction and the FreeFall short fiction award.

LISTEN | An opera singer gives voice to the Grenadian revolution: 

The Passenger Seat by Vijay Khurana

A book cover a blurred image of a passenger seat. A man with black hair and a beard in a forest.
The Passenger Seat by is a novel by Vijay Khurana. (Biblioasis, Madeleine Watts)

The Passenger Seat tells the story high school friends Teddy and Adam. Not yet men, but no longer boys, they set off on a road trip in search of freedom and self-discovery. But the further they go, the more lost they become, until they head down a road from which there's no coming back.

Vijay Khurana is an Australian writer and translator based in Germany. His stories have been published in The Guardian, the Diane Williams-edited journal NOON and 3:AM Magazine. The Passenger Seat is his debut novel. 

LISTEN | When young men murder, what can we learn?: 

One Golden Summer by Carley Fortune

A composite image of a book cover that shows a man and woman in a boat on the water on the left and a smiling woman with long brown hair sitting with a laptop decorated with stickers
One Golden Summer is a novel by Carley Fortune. (Penguin Random House Canada, Jenna Marie Wakani)

One Golden Summer is a follow-up to Carley Fortune's debut book Every Summer After and tells the story of Alice, a photographer seeking a quiet, restorative summer at her childhood cottage with her grandmother. But her plans for peace are upended when Charlie — charming, flirtatious, and impossible to ignore — unexpectedly reappears. Soon, Alice finds herself feeling like she's 17 again, questioning whether this summer might hold something more than she ever expected.

Fortune is a Toronto-based writer and journalist who has worked as an editor for Refinery29, The Globe and Mail, Chatelaine and Toronto Life. Her previous books are Every Summer AfterThis Summer Will Be Different and Meet Me at the Lake, which was a contender for Canada Reads 2024, championed by Mirian Njoh.

LISTEN | Fans asked for another happy ending — Carley Fortune delivered: 

The Emperor of Gladness by Ocean Vuong

A composite image of the book cover with a shadow of a young boy and an author headshot of man wearing glasses and baseball cap.
The Emperor of Gladness is a novel by Ocean Vuong. (Penguin Random House, Gioncarlo Valentine)

In The Emperor of Gladness, Hai, a 19-year-old fast food worker in America, forms a found family with his co-workers and an elderly woman. They're considered to be on the margins of society, but find comfort in each other through their shared sense of ostracization by the world around them and their desire for companionship.

Ocean Vuong is a Vietnamese American poet, essayist and novelist. He has received numerous awards, including the 2014 Ruth Lilly/Sargent Rosenberg Fellowship from the Poetry Foundation, a 2016 Whiting Award, the 2017 T.S. Eliot Prize, the American Book Award and a MacArthur Genius Grant. His previous works include On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous and Time Is a Mother

LISTEN | Ocean Vuong finds beauty in a fast food shift: 

Everything Is Fine Here by Iryn Tushabe

A composite image of a green book cover with black foliage and on the right is a headshot of a woman in a bun with circle earrings smiling at the camera.
Everything is Fine Here is a novel by Iryn Tushabe. (House of Anansi Press, Robin Schlaht)

In Everything Is Fine Here, a younger sister navigates the challenges of family and societal pressures while offering love and support to her older sister, who is gay, in a country with strict anti-homosexuality laws. 

Iryn Tushabe is a Ugandan Canadian writer and journalist based in Regina. Her writing has appeared in Briarpatch Magazine, Adda, Grain Magazine, The Walrus and CBC Saskatchewan, among others. She won the City of Regina writing award in both 2020 and 2024, and was a finalist for the Caine Prize for African Writing in 2021. In 2023, she won the Writers' Trust McClelland & Stewart Journey Prize. Tushabe was longlisted for the CBC Nonfiction Prize in 2016.

LISTEN | Fighting for an unlawful love in Uganda: 

Julie Chan is Dead by Liann Zhang

A composite of two images. On the left, a book cover that shows a girl with black hair holding a phone to her face amidst many other faces that all have blonde hair. On the right, a portrait of a woman with dark hair.
Julie Chan Is Dead is a book by Liann Zhang. (Simon & Schuster)

In Julie Chan is Dead, Julie Chan and her identical twin sister, Chloe VanHuusen, are polar opposites and barely communicate after being separated at a young age. But when Chloe, a popular influencer, mysteriously dies, Julie steps in to take her place and is thrust into a glamorous world with millions of followers. However, she quickly learns that Chloe's seemingly flawless life was far from it, and as she uncovers the sinister cause behind her death, it casts Julie as the next target.

Liann Zhang is a second-generation Chinese Canadian writer who was a former skincare content creator. She holds a psychology and criminology degree from the University of Toronto and splits her time between Vancouver and Toronto. Julie Chan is Dead is Zhang's debut novel.

LISTEN | NOT CLICKBAIT! She stole her dead twin sister's identity!?: 

The Dream Hotel by Laila Lalami

A composite of a purple book cover with a figure standing in front of an orange hallway and a headshot of a woman with dark curly hair.
The Dream Hotel is a novel by Laila Lalami. (Pantheon, Beowulf Sheehan)

In The Dream Hotel, a device that's supposed to help people sleep also harvests data about their dreams. This becomes one way that the government decides if someone's likely to commit a crime. When Sara, the novel's protagonist, is flagged as high risk, she's sent to a retention centre with other women trying to prove their innocence — and fight for their freedom.

Laila Lalami is the writer of books including The Moor's Account, which won the American Book Award and the Arab-American Book Award, and The Other Americans, which won the Simpson/Joyce Carol Oates Prize. Her work also appears in Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, The Nation, Harper's, The Guardian and The New York Times. She lives in Los Angeles.

LISTEN | What if your dreams could land you in jail?: 

Open, Heaven by Seán Hewitt

A pink and white book cover. A photo of a man with grey hair looking down and left.
Open, Heaven is a novel by Seán Hewitt. (Knopf, Stuart Simpson)

In Open, Heaven, James has just come out to his family and community and is feeling shut down, isolated and filled with yearning. Then, he falls hard for Luke, who's handsome, unpredictable and a little older. As time goes on, the two boys grow closer and transform each other's lives. But because James can't control his all-consuming crush and ensuing fear of rejection, the line between reality and fiction begins to blur and he must decide whether to risk everything in his life for the possibility of love.

Seán Hewitt is an assistant professor of English at Trinity College Dublin. His poetry collection, Tongues of Fire, won the Laurel Prize in 2021, and his memoir, All Down Darkness Wide, won the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature. He is a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.

LISTEN | Why you can never forget your first love: 

Nobody Asked for This by Georgia Toews

A composite image of a book cover that shows a painted face of a woman applying make-up to her eyes and on the right is a headshot photo of a woman with blonde hair.
Nobody Asked for This is a book by Georgia Toews. (Doubleday Canada, Mark Boucher)

In Nobody Asked for This, 23-year-old Virginia juggles the challenges of grief, supporting her depressed friend and caring for her bereaved stepdad, all while dreaming of a successful comedy career. But when her stepdad decides to sell the family home and a date goes horribly wrong, she faces experiences so painstaking, that even coping with humour doesn't help. 

Georgia Toews is a Toronto-based film, television and fiction writer. Toews' previous work includes her debut novel Hey, Good Luck Out There. 

LISTEN | Why growing up is so hard and Canadians are so funny: 

Dream Count by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

A book cover of a cartoon flame. A woman with her hair in face-framing poufs, leaning on her hand.
Dream Count is a novel by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. (Knopf, Manny Jefferson)

Dream Count is a sweeping novel that weaves the perspectives of four women, moving between Nigeria, Guinea and the United States. Chiamaka is a travel journalist longing to be known. Zikora is her best friend, a lawyer, who's reeling from a major betrayal. Omelogor is Chia's cousin, outspoken, bold and brave, working in finance in Nigeria. Kadiatou is Chia's maid, building a life for her and her daughter in America, when she faces the unimaginable. 

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie is the bestselling author of novels Purple Hibiscus, Half of A Yellow Sunwhich won the Orange Broadband Prize, and Americanahwhich won the National Book Critics Circle Award for fictionHer nonfiction writing includes the manifesto We Should All Be Feminists, which was sampled in Beyoncé's song Flawless and inspired a t-shirt from Dior. She received a MacArthur Fellowship and divides her time between the U.S. and Nigeria.

LISTEN | Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's triumphant return to fiction: 

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)

We, the Kindling weaves together stories of women who were abducted as children by a rebel militia in northern Uganda. Through the writing, each powerful voice tells a haunting story of loss, survival, friendship and what it means to hold on to hope, no matter how small. 

Otoniya J. Okot Bitek, a poet and scholar born in Kenya to Ugandan parents, 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, and her latest collection is Song & Dread. She was also longlisted for the 2018 CBC Poetry PrizeWe, the Kindling is her debut novel.

LISTEN | Mapping the stories of Uganda's abducted children: 

The Paris Express by Emma Donoghue

A composite image that shows a book cover with the front of a train against a starry sky on the left and a headshot photo of a woman with a short red bob hair on the right.
The Paris Express is a book by Emma Donoghue. (HarperCollins Canada, Woodgate Photography)

The Paris Express provides a vivid account of late 19th-century France, exploring the fears and desires of the time through a group of passengers — diverse in their social class, age and occupation, aboard the Granville-Paris express. The fascinating stories of the passengers, including a young boy traveling solo, a pregnant woman on the run, a medical student and the devoted railway workers, are woven around the central, suspenseful plot of a young anarchist on a mission. But this is no ordinary journey … the story unfolds on the day of the infamous 1895 French railway disaster. 

Emma Donoghue is an Irish Canadian writer whose books include the novels LandingRoomFrog MusicThe WonderThe Pull of the StarsLearned by Heart and the children's book The Lotterys Plus OneRoom was an international bestseller and was adapted into a critically acclaimed film starring Brie Larson.  

LISTEN | Emma Donoghue boards a train destined for disaster: 

Whistle by Linwood Barclay

A photo of a white man with white hair looking at a camera in front of a brick wall. A book cover of a train with an explosion behind it with green writing.
Whistle is a thriller by Linwood Barclay. (William Morrow)

In Whistle, Annie moves to a charming town in upstate New York with her young son. She's reeling from the sudden death of her husband in an accident, and the fact that one of the children's books she authored and illustrated ignited a major scandal. When her son, Charlie, finds an old train set in a locked shed on their property, he's thrilled, but there's something eerie about the toy. As weird things start happening in the neighbourhood, Annie can't help but feel that she's walked out of one nightmare and right into another.

Linwood Barclay is a New York Times bestselling author who has written more than 20 books, including thrillers I Will Ruin YouFind You FirstBroken Promise and Elevator Pitch and the middle-grade novels Escape and Chase. Many of Barclay's books have been optioned for film and television, and he wrote the screenplay for the movie Never Saw It Coming, adapted from his novel of the same name. The Toronto author championed the memoir Jennie's Boy by Wayne Johnston on Canada Reads 2025.

LISTEN | Getting to know Canada's king of suspense: 

Body Friend by Katherine Brabon

A book cover of two cartoon women in a pool. A white woman with long blonde hair in a low ponytail.
Body Friend is a novel by Katherine Brabon. (Bloomsbury Publishing)

In Body Friend, the protagonist meets two different young women — Frida and Sylvia. Not only do they look just like her, but they also move like her. It turns out, all three women are living with a chronic illness and are in pain. But when it comes to dealing with their illnesses and pain, Frida and Sylvia seem to be polar opposites. Our unnamed protagonist is caught in the middle. Through the novel, we watch her try to find the best way to manage her body, her mind and the effects of her illness on who she is.

Katherine Brabon is the Melbourne author of The Memory Artist and The Shut Ins. She's received grants from Art Omi New York and was awarded a UNESCO Cities of Literature International Residency.

LISTEN | How Frida Kahlo and Sylvia Plath inspired a novel about chronic pain: 

Picks & Shovels by Cory Doctorow

Picks and Shovels by Cory Doctorow
Picks and Shovels is a novel by Cory Doctorow. (Tor)

Picks & Shovels is the third book in the crime series about Martin Hench, which examines the early days of the personal computer and the possibilities for both exciting innovation and dangerous fraud it presented. Picks & Shovels takes us back to the 1980s, the start of Hench's career as a forensic accountant in Silicon Valley, where he exposes the finance crimes and shady dealings of tech bros. In this novel, Hench teams up with three brilliant young women to take down a pyramid scheme masquerading as a computer company.

Cory Doctorow is a Toronto-born author, activist and journalist living in Los Angeles. His work, spanning non-fiction, fiction, and adult, YA and childhood audiences, has seen him inducted into the Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame and earned him the Sir Arthur Clarke Imagination in Service to Society Award for lifetime achievement. His book Radicalized was a 2020 Canada Reads contender, defended by Akil Augustine.

LISTEN | We can still avoid a tech dystopia — here's how: 

A Different Hurricane by H. Nigel Thomas

A composite image of a book cover that shows tear drop shapes with images of palm trees on an orange background and on the right is a headshot of a man wearing glasses.
A Different Hurricane is a book by H. Nigel Thomas. (Dundurn Press, J.A. (Tony) Hadley Photography)

A Different Hurricaneis set on the Caribbean island of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines and in Montreal. It's about two young men, Gordon and Allen, who become secret lovers until 1960s society forces them apart. After returning home from studying in Canada, Gordon's wife's journal threatens to expose his affair — putting his and Allen's lives in danger — and they must do everything in their power to keep it under wraps.

H. Nigel Thomas is a Montreal-based Vincentian Canadian writer. He is the author of 13 books that span the genres of fiction, poetry and literary criticism. He has won many awards, including the Canada Council for the Arts Molson Prize in 2022, the Jackie Robinson Professional of the Year Award, the l'Université Laval's Hommage aux créateurs Award and the Black Theatre Workshop's Martin Luther King Jr. Achievement Award.

LISTEN | In the Caribbean, secret lives come at a cost: 

Say Hello to My Little Friend by Jennine Capó Crucet

A Cuban woman with curly black hair. A black book cover with red writing.
Say Hello to My Little Friend is a novel by Jennine Capó Crucet. (Carolyn de Berry, Simon & Schuster)

In Say Hello to My Little FriendPitbull-impersonator Izzy Reyes receives a cease-and-desist letter from the iconic rapper's legal team. Living in his aunt's garage, he yearns for money, respect and a girlfriend — and launches himself on a quest to become a modern-day version of Scarface drug lord Tony Montana. But when these attempts lead him to the Miami Seaquarium tank of orca Lolita, he reckons with forces of nature and the truth behind his arrival story from Cuba.

Born to Cuban parents, Jennine Capó Crucet is the writer of Make Your Home Among Strangers, which won the International Latino Book Award, How to Leave Hialeah, which won the Iowa Short Fiction Prize and the John Gardner Book Award, and My Time Among the Whites: Notes from an Unfinished Education, which was longlisted for the PEN/Open Book Award. Say Hello to My Little Friend won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize. Capó Crucet is currently based in North Carolina.

LISTEN | Pitbull, Scarface and a whale walk into a book: 

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 reconnect 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 Spaceand the poetry collection Gay Girl Prayers

LISTEN | Would life be easier as a rat?: 

The Death of the Author by Nnedi Okorafor

A Black woman with her hair up wearing dangly earrings and glasses smiles at the camera. A book cover of a shadow of a head against a blue and orange background.
Death of the Author is a novel by Nnedi Okorafor. (William Morrow)

Death of the Author tells the story of Zelu, a Nigerian American writer whose breakout sci-fi novel catapults her to literary fame and commercial success — but also becomes distorted in the way she hoped people would understand it. 

Nnedi Okorafor is a Nebula and Hugo award-winning writer based in Arizona. Her books include the Binti trilogy, Who Fears Death and Lagoon, which is currently in development to be a movie. 

LISTEN | Bringing a writer to life in Death of the Author: 

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 a 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 is a soldier during the Second World War. Buoyed by his love for Poppy, a singer who works with him in the shipyard, Josiah is determined to survive the battlefields and make it back home — but finds himself fighting injustice on all fronts.

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 publications such as Joyland Magazine, The New Quarterly and Fiddlehead. Wang's debut short story collection, We Two Alone was longlisted for Canada Reads in 2022, shortlisted for the Kobo Emerging Writer Prize and won the Danuta Gleed Literary Award.

LISTEN | Reimagining the lost stories of Chinese Canadians during WWII: 

Hum by Helen Phillips

A portrait of a bald white woman wearing green earrings. A beige book cover with abstract green leaves.
Hum is a novel by Helen Phillips. (Andy Vernon-Jones, S&S/Marysue Rucci Books)

Hum is a speculative fiction novel about May, a mother in the near future, who's struggling to provide for her family in a world that's gripped by climate change and overrun by technology. When she's presented with a solution, to be a guinea pig in a new face-altering surgery for a big payday, she goes for it. But the reward comes at a steep price — and she'll have to trust technology to save her family. 

Helen Phillips is the Brooklyn author of six books including novel The Need, which was nominated for the National Book Award, and short story collection Some Possible Solutions, which won the John Gardner Fiction Book Award. A professor at Brooklyn College, she was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship and a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers' Award.

LISTEN | In a world run by AI, what makes us human?: 

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)

I Might Be in Trouble follows struggling author David, reeling from his second book flopping after the resounding success of his first. His boyfriend has dumped him and he's fresh out of ideas for his third novel. Desperate to find redemption and some inspiration, David goes on a date with a promising stranger. After a wild night out in New York, David wakes to discover his date dead in bed next to him and the fact that he might have been responsible. In an attempt to uncover just what happened the night before, David teams up with his literary agent, Stacey, on a mission to figure out exactly what went on and maybe turn the disaster into inspiration for David's next book. 

Daniel Aleman is a Toronto-based author and writer originally from Mexico City. His debut novel, Indivisible, was released in 2021 and his second novel, Brighter than the Sun in 2023. Indivisible was a recipient of the 2022 Tomás Rivera Book Award.

LISTEN | How loneliness inspired a novel about a Grindr date gone wrong: 

The Life Cycle 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, Pen arrives at the University of Edinburgh, set on uncovering what her divorced parents in Canada have hid from her. Not only does she start to uncover the truth about them during a weekend visit to a famous writer, an old friend of her father's, Pen also experiences the many pangs of adulthood for the first time — including falling in love. 

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 | 'Bad' mothers'make good stories: 

Entitlement by Rumaan Alam

A book cover of a table set in in front of a large window looking out at the New York City skyline with a red sky. An author photo of a bald man with glasses in a suit with a beard.
Entitlement is a novel by American author Rumaan Alam. (Riverhead Books, David A. Land)

Entitlement tells the story of Brooke, a woman in her thirties who gets a new job helping an elderly billionaire who wants to give away large parts of his fortune before he dies. This proximity to wealth is dizzying and intoxicating — yet it pushes Brooke closer and closer to madness. 

Rumaan Alam is the Brooklyn author of the novel Leave the World Behind, which was a finalist for the National Book Award and was adapted into a major movie. His other books include novels Rich and Pretty and That Kind of Mother and his writing has appeared in The New York Times, the Wall Street Journal and The New Yorker.

LISTEN | How would you spend a billion dollars?: 

Scott Pilgrim's Precious Little Life by Bryan Lee O'Malley

A composite of a book cover of a cartoon man punching and an author photo of an Asian man with glasses and red dyed hair smiling.
(Oni Press, Superfan Promotions)

The Scott Pilgrim series is about an unemployed 23-year-old Torontonian, the titular character, who's going through a breakup. But when he falls for the enigmatic Ramona Flowers, he must face off against her seven evil exes in order to continue their relationship. Scott Pilgrim's Precious Little Life is the first book in the series. 

Bryan Lee O'Malley's career in comics took off after publishing Scott Pilgrim's Precious Little Lifethe first in a Toronto-centric series about an indie music-loving nerd who must defeat his girlfriend Ramona's seven evil exes. The bestselling books later became a film starring Michael Cera, Mary Elizabeth Winstead and Brie Larson. O'Malley followed up this success with the acclaimed graphic novel Seconds and another series called Snot Girl with Leslie Hung.

LISTEN | 20 years of Scott Pilgrim: 

The Mistletoe Mystery by Nita Prose

A white woman with brown hair and bangs leans on her hand as she smiles at the camera. A book cover shows a hand holding a wrapped present on a green background.
The Mistletoe Mystery is a novella by Nita Prose. (Dahlia Katz, Viking)

The Mistletoe Mystery is a holiday novella featuring Molly the Maid from Nita Prose's earlier books. When Molly and her boyfriend are part of a secret Santa exchange that makes her question her relationship, she's thrown into solving her most personal mystery yet. 

Prose is a Toronto author and editor. She was formerly the Canadian vice president and editorial director for publishing company Simon & Schuster. Her books include The Maid and The Mystery Guest.

LISTEN | Nita Prose's mystery with a Christmas twist: 

Final Cut by Charles Burns

A book cover of a cartoon woman with red hair. An author photo of a white man with a shaved head looking left in a red glow.
Final Cut is a graphic novel by Charles Burns. (Pantheon, Charles Burns)

In Final Cutchildhood friends Brian and Jimmy set out to create a sci-fi horror movie using an old eight-millimetre camera. With Laurie as Brian's muse, they trek to a remote cabin in the mountains and Brian struggles with finding the balance between his dreams and reality.

Charles Burns is an American cartoonist. His graphic novel Black Hole won Eisner, Harvey and Ignatz awards. He is the cover artist for The Believer and has made covers for Time, The New Yorker and The New York Times Sunday Magazine.

LISTEN | Charles Burns returns to teengage angst in his graphic novel: 

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 — an unnamed narrator and a woman named K. Sohail — are not a couple — which incites humorous, yet uncomfortable moments. As horror and surrealism seeps into the narrative, All You Can Kill 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 PrizePeople Park, which was shortlisted for the Amazon First Novel Award, and Kill the MallOriginally 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 | Parodying a wellness resort with horror and humour: 

Blackheart Man by Nalo Hopkinson

A bald Black woman with glasses smiles into the camera. A book cover shows a man with long black hair flanked by two woman and two crocodiles.
Blackheart Man is a book by Nalo Hopkinson. (David Findlay, Saga Press/Simon & Schuster)

Blackheart Man is a fantasy novel about the magical island of Chynchin. It follows Veycosi who is training as a griot (historian and musician) and is hoping to score a spot on Chynchin's Colloquium of scholars. Blackheart Man explores themes of Black self-actualization and empowerment within a world of African and Caribbean-inspired history, myth, fantasy and magic.

Nalo Hopkinson is the author of many novels and short stories including Brown Girl in the Ringwhich won the Warner Aspect First Novel Contest and was defended on Canada Reads in 2008 by Jemeni. Her other books include Sister MineMidnight RobberThe ChaosThe New Moon's Arms and Skin FolkIn 2021, she won the Damon Knight Grand Master award, a lifetime achievement award for science fiction. Blackheart Man is shortlisted for the 2025 Sunburst Award for Excellence in Canadian Literature of the Fantastic.

LISTEN | Nalo Hopkinson weaves Caribbean folklore in her latest novel: 

Peggy by Rebecca Godfrey, with Leslie Jamison

A black and white photo of a white woman with a short black bob. A colourful book cover with an abstract hot balloon. A White woman with long brown hair and a floral shirt looking down and left.
The late author Rebecca Godfrey, left, wrote the novel with the help of her friend, writer Leslie Jamison. (Brigitte Lacombe, Knopf Random Vintage Canada, Beowulf Sheehan)

Peggy tells the story of Peggy Guggenheim from her early beginnings in New York as the daughter of two Jewish dynasties to her adventures in the European art world. Throughout the novel, she is forced to balance her loyalty to her family and her desire to break free from conventions and live her own original life. 

Rebecca Godfrey was an author and journalist known for her books The Torn Skirt, which was a finalist for the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize, and the true crime story Under the Bridge, which was adapted into a Disney+ series. She grew up in Canada but lived in upstate New York. Peggy is her final novel, completed by Leslie Jamison after she died. 

Leslie Jamison is the Brooklyn-based author of essay collections The Empathy ExamsThe Recovering, the novel The Gin Closet and the memoir Splinters. She won the 2025 Weston International Award for her body of nonfiction work.

LISTEN | Capturing Peggy Guggenheim in fiction: 

The Blue Hour by Paula Hawkins

A white woman with brown hair. A book cover of an open window to a blue sea.
The Blue Hour is a novel by British writer Paula Hawkins. (Kate Neil, Doubleday Canada)

At the Tate Modern in London sits a unique sculpture by the famous artist Vanessa Chapman. It's made up of all kinds of materials — wood, ceramic, wire, gold leaf, deer bone — all enclosed in a glass box. But when a forensic anthropologist happens upon the piece, he's convinced that the bone in the sculpture is actually human, sending the exhibit's curator into a frenzy. The thrilling mystery of the bone — and the dark look into the art world that surrounds it — is the story told in The Blue Hour

Paula Hawkins is the London-based writer of the novels Into the Water and The Girl on the TrainThe Girl on the Train sold 23 million copies worldwide and was adapted into a film starring Emily Blunt.

LISTEN | Paula Hawkins explores the dark side of the art world: 

Curiosities by Anne Fleming

A book cover of a person's face partially obscured by colourful flowers. A white woman with short hair and glasses wearing a button-down and glasses with her hand on her face.
Curiosities is a novel by Anne Fleming. (Knopf Canada, Martin Dee)

Curiosities is a novel that centres around an amateur historian who discovers an obscure memoir from 1600s England that explores a love that could not be explained in those times. Weaving together different fictional accounts, the novel tells the life stories of Joan and Thomasina, the only two survivors of a village ravaged by the plague, and how they eventually find each other again — Thomasina, now Tom, navigating the world in boy's clothes and as a male — and the struggles they face when they're discovered, naked, by a member of the clergy. 

Anne Fleming is an author based in Victoria, B.C. Her books include Pool-Hopping and Other Stories, which was shortlisted for the Governor General's Literary Award for Fiction and the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize, and her middle-grade novel, The Goat, which was a Junior Library Guild and White Ravens selection. Curiosities was shortlisted for the 2024 Giller Prize and longlisted for the Carol Shields Prize for Fiction.

LISTEN | Anne Fleming chats with Mattea Roach: 

What I Know About You by Éric Chacour, translated by Pablo Strauss

A man with short dark hair and a beard looks into the camera. A book cover shows the chin of statue and a city from high up.
What I Know About You is a novel by Éric Chacour, left, translated by Pablo Strauss. (Justine Latour, Coach House Books)

In What I Know About YouTarek is on the right path: he'll be a doctor like his father, marry and have children. But when he falls for his patient's son, Ali, his life is turned upside-down as he realizes his sexuality against a backdrop of political turmoil in 1960s Cairo. In the 2000s, Tarek is now a doctor in Montreal. When someone begins to write to him and about him, the past that he's been trying to forget comes back to haunt him. 

Éric Chacour is a Montreal-based writer who was born to Egyptian parents and grew up between France and Quebec. In addition to writing, he works in the financial sector. What I Know About You is his first book and was a bestseller in its French edition, winning many awards including the Prix Femina. What I Know About You was on the shortlist for the 2024 Giller Prize and the 2024 Atwood Gibson Writers' Trust Fiction Prize.

Pablo Strauss has translated 12 works of fiction, several graphic novels and one screenplay. He was a finalist for the Governor General's Literary Award for translation for The Country Will Bring Us No Peace, Synapses and The Longest Year. His translation of Le plongeur by Stephane Larue called The Dishwasher won the 2020 Amazon First Novel Award. He lives in Quebec City. 

LISTEN | Éric Chacour on Bookends with Mattea Roach: 

Creation Lake by Rachel Kushner

A white woman with long brown hair and sunglasses backlit by the sun in an outdoor setting. A book cover of a woman's eye tinted green and pink.
Creation Lake is a novel by Rachel Kushner. (Chloe Aftel, Scribner)

Creation Lake tells the story of Sadie, an undercover agent tasked with sabotaging a young group of activists. But as the writings of a radical thinker named Bruno start to infiltrate her mind, Sadie starts to rethink her choices and the consequences of her transient life.

Rachel Kushner is an American writer. Her previous work consists of the novels The Mars RoomThe Flamethrowers and Telex From Cuba, the short story collection The Strange Case of Rachel K and the essay collection The Hard Crowd. She has won the Prix Médicis and has been a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award, the Folio Prize, the Booker Prize and the National Book Award in Fiction. Creation Lake was nominated for the 2024 Booker Prize.

LISTEN | An agent provocateur faces deep questions about how to live:  

Our Evenings by Alan Hollinghurst

A white man with a goatee, white hair and black glasses. A book cover of a man smoking while lying on a bed.
Our Evenings is a novel by British writer Alan Hollinghurst. (Robert Taylor Photography, Random House)

Our Evenings tells the story of Dave Win, the son of a white British dressmaker and a Burmese father he's never met, from his time growing up in small-town England in the 1960s to the COVID-19 lockdown of 2020. 

Alan Hollinghurst is a British author of the novels The Swimming-Pool Library, The Spell and The Line of Beauty, which won the 2004 Booker Prize. Hollinghurst also won the Somerset Maugham Award, the E. M. Forster Award of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for Fiction. He lives in London.

LISTEN | Coming of age in Britain and writing through the gay gaze: 

Hi, It's Me by Fawn Parker

A book cover shows a room with an empty chair and a hole in the middle of the cover. A white woman with long blonde hair looking to the right.
Hi, It's Me is a novel by Fawn Parker. (McClelland & Stewart, Steph Martyniuk)

In Hi, It's MeFawn returns home after her mother's death. But the old farmhouse is also inhabited by four other women with interesting and strange beliefs. As she lives in her mother's room and tries to figure out what to do with her possessions, she becomes obsessed with archiving her mother's writing and documents, teaching her more and more about the woman she thought she knew so well. 

Fawn Parker is an author and current PhD student at the University of New Brunswick. Her novel What We Both Know was longlisted for the Scotiabank Giller Prize in 2022. Her poetry collection Soft Inheritance won the Fiddlehead Poetry Book Prize. Hi, It's Me was nominated for the 2024 Atwood Gibson Writers' Trust Fiction Prize. 

LISTEN | Fawn Parker on blending her grief with fiction: 

Cicada Summer by Erica McKeen

A large cicada with a pink and orange filter against a beige background is facing vertically, partially overlapping the words Cicada Summer, written at the top of the page.
Cicada Summer by Erica McKeen (Penguin Random House Canada, Macy Mirka)

In Cicada Summer, Husha, a woman quarantining with her grandfather and her ex-lover at a remote lakeside cabin, mourns her mother's recent death. While cleaning, Husha discovers a strange short story collection, the last message left by her mother. As the stories, teeming with unsettling imagery, begin to seep into the cloistered life at the cabin, the inhabitants must each reckon with loss, longing and what it means to truly know someone.

Erica McKeen is a writer living in Vancouver. Her work has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize, longlisted for the Guernica Prize and shortlisted for The Malahat Review Open Season Awards. Her first novel, Tear, won the 2023 Rakuten Kobo Emerging Writer Prizes for literary fiction. Cicada Summer was longlisted for the Carol Shields Prize for Fiction.

LISTEN | Erica McKeen uses horror and surrealism to explore grief, care and love: 

Absolution by Jeff VanderMeer

A black-and-white photo of a white man wearing glasses with a goatee. A bookcover with an alligator decomposing into flowers.
Absolution is a novel by Jeff VanderMeer. (Ditte Valente, McClelland & Stewart)

Absolution, the final instalment of Jeff VanderMeer's Southern Reach series, explores the conditions that may have contributed to the formation of Area X, including government complicity and scientific experimentation. It includes an account of the very first expedition into Area X, which is surrounded by an invisible border on a coastline that's referred to as the Forgotten Coast. 

VanderMeer is an American author based in Tallahassee, Florida. His bestselling Southern Reach series includes four books: AnnihilationAuthorityAcceptance and Absolution. Annihilation won the Nebula Award and the Shirley Jackson Award. His other work includes Hummingbird SalamanderDead AstronautsBorne and The Strange Bird. His reporting has appeared in Current Affairs, TIME, the Nation and Esquire.

LISTEN | Jeff VanderMeer on reflecting our fight against climate change in his writing: 

Brotherless Night by V.V. Ganeshananthan

A book cover of a woman in a yellow dress on a bicycle. A woman with brown hair wearing a blue top.
Brotherless Night by V.V. Ganeshananthan has won the 2024 Carol Shields Prize for Fiction. (Penguin Random House, Sophia Mayrhofer)

Brotherless Night follows the story of 16-year-old Sashi in 1981 Jaffna, Sri Lanka. Sashi, an aspiring doctor, wants to do something to help her brothers and friends who are swept up in the violence of the civil war. She decides to work as a medic for the Tamil Tigers, a militant group who are fighting for self-determination for Sri Lanka's Tamil minority. But when the Tigers kill a beloved teacher and Indian peacekeepers show up and only incite more the violence, Sashi begins to question what she stands for and accepts a dangerous opportunity to document human rights violations. 

V.V. Ganeshananthan is an American writer and journalist of Ilankai Tamil descent. She served as the vice president of the South Asian Journalists Association, on the board of the Asian American Writers' Workshop and is a current board member for the American Institute for Sri Lankan Studies and the Minnesota Prison Writing Workshop. She teaches at the University of Minnesota and co-host a podcast called Fiction/Non/Fiction. Her first novel, Love Marriage, was longlisted for the Women's Prize. Brotherless Night won the U.K. Women's Prize and the Carol Shields Prize for Fiction.

LISTEN | V.V. Ganeshananthan on her novel Brotherless Night: 

Bad Land by Corinna Chong

A woman with a brown bob looks into the camera. A sepia book cover shows hands holding a dinosaur skull.
Bad Land is a novel by Corinna Chong. (Silmara Emde, Arsenal Pulp Press)

In Bad LandRegina's brother shows up on her doorstep with his six-year-old daughter after seven years away, interrupting her quiet loner life. The longer they stay, the clearer it becomes to Regina that something terrible has happened. Once the secret is revealed, they're sent on a fraught journey from Alberta to the coast of B.C. 

Originally from Calgary, Corinna Chong lives in Kelowna, B.C. and teaches English and fine arts at Okanagan College. She published her first novel, Belinda's Rings, in 2013. In 2023, she published the short story collection The Whole Animal which includes Kids in Kindergarten, the winner of the 2021 CBC Short Story Prize

LISTEN | Corinna Chong on her debut novel Bad Land: 

The Life Impossible by Matt Haig

A white bald man with a greying ginger beard smiles. A blue book cover with a small boat on the water amid cliffsides.
The Life Impossible is a book by Matt Haig. (Kan Lailey, HarperAvenue)

In The Life Impossibleretired math teacher Grace Winters is left a house in Ibiza by a long lost friend. Feeling unfulfilled in her life, she books a one-way ticket to Ibiza, determined to figure out why she was left this property — and what happened to her friend, who died under mysterious circumstances. Featuring Matt Haig's trademark magic realism, dark humour, complex characters and optimism, The Life Impossible is a tale of a woman rediscovering the beauty of life and fighting for a better world.

Haig is a British author of fiction, nonfiction and kids' books, but is perhaps best known for his novel The Midnight Library — which became popular on TikTok during the pandemic — and for his candid memoir, Reasons to Stay Alive, about his struggles with depression. 

LISTEN | Matt Haig on hope in fiction and life: 

The Pairing by Casey McQuiston

A teal book cover with two people kissing drawn in cartoons. A person with brown shoulder-length hair and glasses.
The Pairing is a romance novel by Casey McQuiston. (St. Martin's Griffin)

The Pairing tells the story of Kit and Theo, two exes with a long history of love and friendship. They accidentally end up on the same European food and wine tour after not seeing each other for four years. Trapped together at some of the most romantic places in the world, Kit and Theo jump headlong into a friendly European hookup competition to get their mind off their ever-present chemistry.

Casey McQuiston is the author of Red, White & Royal BlueOne Last Stop and I Kissed Shara Wheeler. Their work has appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post and Bon Appetit. They were born and raised in Louisiana but currently live in New York City. 

LISTEN | Casey McQuiston on the future of the romance genre: 

The Anthropologists by Ayşegül Savaş

A woman with long dark hair with one hand behind her head. A book cover of a photo of a person's fingers in a cup against a green background.
The Anthropologists is a novel by Ayşegül Savaş. (Maks Ovsjanikov, Bloomsbury)

The Anthropologists centres on a young immigrant couple in an unnamed city navigating friendships, the guilt of being away from family and the search for an apartment.  

Ayşegül Savaş is a Paris-based, Turkish novelist and short story writer. Her other works include novels White on White and Walking on the Ceiling and the nonfiction book The Wilderness. Her short stories are published in the New Yorker.

LISTEN | Ayşegül Savaş on writing a book where nothing really happens: 

Oil People by David Huebert

A man with brown hair crosses his arms while leaning against a brick wall. A book cover shows a multi-coloured oil spill in waves with a drip of black oil covering the first word of the title.
Oil People is a novel by David Huebert. (Nicola Davison, McClelland & Stewart)

Oil People tells the story of 13-year-old Jade Armbruster in 1987, who is living on the family's deteriorating oil farm, as her parents decide what to do about the land and their business. Jade's teenage experiences are juxtaposed with the 1862 story of Clyde Armbruster, who built the oil farm, and the rivalry he develops with his neighbours.

David Huebert is a Halifax-based writer who has won the CBC Short Story Prize and The Walrus Poetry Prize. He is the author of short story collections Peninsula Sinking, which won a Dartmouth Book Award and was a runner-up for the Danuta Gleed Literary Award, and Chemical Valley, which won the Alistair MacLeod Short Fiction Prize.

LISTEN | David Huebert on family secrets and the history of oil in Ontario: 

The Capital of Dreams by Heather O'Neill

On the left, a woman with short hair and blue eyes looks into the camera with her hand tucked under her chin. On the right a sage and dusty pink book cover says the words 'The Capital of Dreams by Heather O'Neill' and shows a young girl falling through the clouds.
The Capital of Dreams is a novel by Heather O'Neill. (Julie Artacho, HarperCollins)

The Capital of Dreams is a dark fairytale set in a small European country during a period of war. Fourteen-year-old Sofia is the daughter of the revered writer, Clara Bottom. When their country is invaded, Clara bundles Sofia onto the last train evacuating children out of the city. Clara gives her daughter her latest manuscript to smuggle to safety.

When the children's train stops in the middle of the forest, Sofia senses they are in danger. She manages to escape, but loses her mother's beloved manuscript. Soon Sofia finds herself alone in a country at war on an epic journey to find all that she has lost.

Heather O'Neill is a novelist, short story writer and essayist from Montreal. She won Canada Reads 2024, championing The Future by Catherine Leroux, translated by Susan Ouriou. O'Neill is the first person to win Canada Reads as both an author and a contender. Her debut novel Lullabies for Little Criminals won Canada Reads 2007 when it was defended by musician John K. Samson. 

LISTEN | Heather O'Neill on crafting fairy tales: 

Martyr! by Kaveh Akbar

A man with short dark hair look outwards past the camera. A bright yellow book cover.
Martyr! is a novel by Kaveh Akbar. (Beowulf Sheehan, Knopf)

Martyr! follows a 20-something Iranian American poet named Cyrus in his early years of sobriety. When he becomes fascinated with the stories of historical martyrs, he finds himself on his way to interview a terminally ill artist in Brooklyn — a journey and conversation that changes the course of his life. 

Kaveh Akbar is an Iranian American writer. His poems have appeared in publications including The New Yorker and The Paris Review. His previous books include Pilgrim Bell and Calling a Wolf a Wolf

LISTEN | Kaveh Akbar discusses Martyr! on Bookends

Add some “good” to your morning and evening.

Sign up for our newsletter. We’ll send you book recommendations, CanLit news, the best author interviews on CBC and more.

...

The next issue of CBC Books newsletter will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in the Subscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.