Books·Books of the Year

The best Canadian poetry of 2023

Here are the CBC Books picks for the top Canadian poetry of the year!

Here's our list of this year's best Canadian poetry collections!

Wires that Sputter by Britta Badour

The magenta book cover features the book's title "Wires that Sputter" in big, orange block letters, covering most of the book cover.
Wires that Sputter is a book by Britta Badour. (Penguin Random House Canada, Gilad Cohen)

Britta Badour's debut collection of poetry, Wires that Sputter, explores topics like pop culture, sports, family dynamics and Black liberation. 

Badour, better known as Britta B., is an artist, public speaker and poet living in Toronto. She is the recipient of the 2021 Breakthrough Artist Award from the Toronto Arts Foundation. She teaches spoken word performance at Seneca College.

LISTEN | Britta Badour on The Next Chapter
Canadian poet and award-winning spoken word performer Britta Badour, aka Britta B, shares the inspirations behind her debut poetry collection, Wires that Sputter.

Chaotic Good by Sabrina Benaim

Sabrina Benaim sitting with her arms folded against a blue wall. Book cover of Benaim's new collection of poems and stories, Chaotic Good.
Chaotic Good is a book by Sabrina Benaim. (Submitted by Sabrina Benaim, Penguin Random House Canada)

Acclaimed spoken-word poet Sabrina Benaim brings a layer of levity to life with her poetry and story collection Chaotic Good. With ruminations on skincare to words expressing her love of Beyoncé, Chaotic Good is all about what it means to find yourself in a chaotic world. 

Benaim is a Toronto-based poet, storyteller and workshop facilitator. She's known for her well-viewed spoken word poems and her bestselling collection Depression & Other Magic Tricks. 

LISTEN | Sabrina Benaim on Q
Poet Sabrina Benaim on breaking expectations and her new audio-exclusive poetry collection, Chaotic Good.

Bottom Rail on Top by D.M. Bradford

Illustrated book cover of pink and yellow abstract shapes. Portrait of a Black author with wire-framed glasses and wearing a pale pink shirt
D.M. Bradford is the author of the poetry collection Bottom Rail on Top. (Brick Books, Sarah Bodri)

Bottom Rail on Top is a collection of poems which embodies the Black histories of antebellum life and emancipation in America. Bottom Rail on Top meditates on lineage and legacy through poetic fragments.

D.M. Bradford is a Montreal-based poet and translator. Their other books include Dream of No One but Myself, which won the 2022 A.M. Klein Prize for Poetry and was a finalist for the Griffin Poetry Prize, and their translated book House Within a House.

Lent by Kate Cayley

Black and white photo of a woman with short hair and glasses and the book cover with a chair by a window with drapes
Kate Cayley is the author of the poetry collection Lent. (Book*Hug Press)

Lent is built from the tension, exploring domestic and artistic life amidst the environmental crisis and the surprising ways that every philosophical quandary — large and small — converges in the home, in small objects, conversations and moments. This collection is a work of our era, asking us to contemplate what it means to live in a broken world — and why we still find it beautiful.

Kate Cayley is a fiction writer, playwright and poet based in Toronto. She is also the author of the YA novel The Hangman in the Mirror, the poetry collections When This World Comes to an End and Other Houses, and the short story collections How You Were Born and Householders.

Cayley made the longlist for the 2016 CBC Short Story Prize and the 2013 CBC Poetry Prize longlist for Writers' Bedrooms.

States of Emergency by Yoyo Comay

A man with long brown hair with bleached bottoms looks ahead. A book cover that's also grey with strips of papers with typed black words on it.
States of Emergency is a poetry book by Yoyo Comay. (Kirk Lisaj, Vehicule Press)

States of Emergency is a book-length poem  that examines the apocalyptic nature of the present day using language both prophetic and colloquial.  

Comay is a Toronto-based poet and musician. His EP, Crushed, was released under the name Sufferin Mall in 2022. His work has be published in The Peripheral Review, Commo Mag, Touch the Donkey, Metatron Press and Small Walker Press. States of Emergency is his first poetry collection.

Muster Points by Lucas Crawford

An illustration of a pink hand reach into a peanut butter jar. The image is against a green background and bordered by a pink and yellow rectangular border.
Muster Points is a book by Lucas Crawford. (University of Calgary Press, Lucas Crawford)

Muster Points is about queer love, kink, depression and pleasure. Chronicling periods of Crawford's life while quarantined in the mountains at the beginning of the pandemic, Muster Points is about his experiences as a genderqueer guy journeying through the ruins of heterosexual culture, remaking masculinity and the fluidity of both queer love and regret. 

Crawford is a writer and Canada Research Chair of Transgender Creativity and Mental Health at the Augustana Faculty of the University of Alberta. Crawford's poetry collection Belated Bris of the Brainsick won the J.M. Abraham Poetry Award at the 2020 Atlantic Book Awards. Crawford is also the author of the poetry collections Sideshow Concessions and The High Line Scavenger Hunt. The poet was a 2020 CBC Poetry Prize reader.

After That by Lorna Crozier

After That by Lorna Crozier. Photographed book cover of a body of water with a silhouette of a swan swimming in the distance. Portrait of the poet with short grey hair in bright blue top.
After That is a poetry collection about grief and healing by Lorna Crozier. (McClelland & Stewart, Tom O'Flanagan)

Acclaimed Canadian poet Lorna Crozier lost her longtime partner, fellow poet Patrick Lane, in 2019. In her poetry collection, After That, Crozier examines immense grief and loss and highlights the beauty of sorrow and the magic you find in everyday life.

Crozier is a Governor General's Literary Award-winning poet who has written more than 15 books. She won the 1987 CBC Poetry Prize for Angels of Silence. Her other poetry collections include God of Shadows and What the Soul Doesn't Want. 

LISTEN | Lorna Crozier discusses The Quiet in Me by Patrick Lane
Lorna Crozier talks to Shelagh Rogers about Patrick Lane's posthumous collection of poetry, The Quiet in Me.

Pronounced / Workable by Candace de Taeye

A black and white photo of a white woman's face. She wears wire-rimmed glasses and has her hair up. Medical supplies on white background book cover.
Pronounced/Workable is a poetry book by Candace de Taeye. (Vocamus Press, Mansfield Press)

Pronounced / Workable is a poetry collection that draws from medical protocols, legislative acts and patient quotes. The poems are inspired by Candace de Taeye's experience working 12-hour shifts as a paramedic in Toronto and explore themes of food, opportunistic creatures, tragedy and apathy while referencing specific Toronto landmarks. 

Pronounced / Workable was nominated for a 2023 ReLit Award.

Candace de Taeye is a Guelph-based writer and a paramedic. Her poetry has been published in Arc, Bad Nudes, CNQ, CV2, Grain, Joypuke, Meat for Tea and Vallum. She's also published chapbooks Roe and The Ambulance Act. 

Elements by Jamesie Fournier, translated by Jaypeetee Arnakak

Elements by Jamesie Fournier, translated by Jaypeetee Arnakak. Illustrated book cover of a close up of a brown iris surrounded by snow. Image of Inuk male writer.
Elements is a bilingual debut poetry collection by Jamesie Fournier, left, and translated by Jaypeetee Arnakak, not pictured. (Inhabit Media, Jamesie Fournier)

Elements is a debut collection of bilingual verse about the complex experiences of an Inuk writer. Following one interior voice, Elements evokes themes of resistance, darkness and erasure.

Jamesie Fournier is an Inuk author who has been published in Inuit Art Quarterly and the anthology Coming Home: Stories from the Northwest Territories. He has also written the novel The Other Ones. He currently lives in Iqaluit, Nunavut.

Jaypeetee Arnakak is a translator and former policy analyst with a focus on Inuit culture. He has adapted several picture books, including The Woman and Her Bear Club and The Story of the Loon and the Raven.

Heating the Outdoors by Marie-Andrée Gill, translated by Kristen Renee Miller

The book cover features a paper-collage illustration of a window on fire.
Heating the Outdoors is a book by Marie-Andrée Gill and translated by Kristen Renee Miller. (Book*hug Press, submitted by Book*hug Press)

Heating the Outdoors is a collection of micropoems that explore love and writing as decolonial resilience. Marie-Andrée Gill examines her interior world of heartbreak, love and loss through examining the historical subjugation and reclamation of land and language. 

Marie-Andrée Gill combines her Quebec and Ilnu identities through her writing. In 2018, Gill won an Indigenous Voices Award. She is also the author of the poetry collections SpawnBéante and Chauffer le dehors.

Kristen Renee Miller is a writer and translator currently living in Kentucky. She previously translated Gill's poetry collection Spawn.

Xanax Cowboy by Hannah Green 

On the left, the book cover is yellow with black block lettering that reads, "House of Anansi Press Xanax Cowboy Poems Written and Directed by Hannah Green." On the right, a white woman with short dark hair and a yellow jacket stands outside.
Xanax Cowboy is a book by Hannah Green. (House of Anansi Press, Hannah Green)

Xanax Cowboy is a poetry collection that follows the adventures of the Xanax Cowboy, a pill-popping, whiskey drinking woman with a reputation like a rattlesnake. 

Xanax Cowboy won the 2023 Governor General's Literary Award for poetry.

Hannah Green is a Winnipeg-based writer and poetry editor. She was a poetry finalist for the 2021 Bronwen Wallace Award for Emerging Writers

LISTEN | Hannah Green and her dad, Chris, on her book Xanax Cowboy winning the Governor General's Literary Award for Poetry: 
Winnipeg-based writer Hannah Green won the 2023 Governor General's Literary Award for poetry. She and her dad, Chris, who went viral for his adorable supportive t-shirt, spoke with Nil Köksal on As It Happens.

Crushed Wild Mint by Jess Housty

Crushed Wild Mint by Jess Housty. Illustrated book cover of a rib cage and spine with plants growing through it. Portrait of a Heiltsuk Indigenous poet.
Crushed Wild Mint is a poetry collection by Jess Housty. (Nightwood Editions, Rhon Wilson)

Crushed Wild Mint is a sensory exploration of land and ancestral knowledge based on Jess Housty's own connection to Indigenous lands. Crushed Wild Mint is a collection of conversations between Housty and elements of nature like the mountains and animals, and it explores the past, potential futures and humanity at large.

Housty is a writer and grassroots activist of Heiltsuk and mixed settler heritage. They are based in their unceded ancestral territory within Bella Bella, B.C., where they are a community herbalist and educator.  

LISTEN | Jess Housty discusses Crushed Wild Mint: 

Old Gods by Conor Kerr

The book cover features a black and white photo of bison on the prairies.
Old Gods is a book by Conor Kerr. (Nightwood Editions, Zachary Ayotte)

Old Gods is a poetry collection in motion. From coyotes that race through the night to buses that drive from region to region or people that search for lost loves on the Internet, Conor Kerr's book is a meditation on the travels humans and animals take over time. The poet places readers in the "Métis mindset," showing that wherever one is in the natural world, there is life in the rivers, the hills and the prairies we travel on. 

Old Gods was shortlisted for the 2023 Governor General's Literary Award for poetry

Kerr is a Métis and Ukrainian educator, writer and harvester. He is a member of the Métis Nation of Alberta and is descended from the Gladue, Ginther and Quinn families from the Lac Ste. Anne and Fort Des Prairies Métis communities and the Papaschase Cree Nation. His poem Prairie Ritual was on the 2021 CBC Poetry Prize longlist.

Kerr won the 2022 Novel ReLit Award for his debut novel Avenue of Championswhich was also longlisted for the 2022 Giller Prize and a finalist for the 2022 Amazon Canada First Novel Award

LISTEN | Conor Kerr discusses Old Gods
Edmonton-based poet Conor Kerr talks to Ryan B. Patrick about his thought-provoking poetry collection, Old Gods, and why he calls the Prairies home.

Baby Book by Amy Ching-Yan Lam 

A blue book cover with an abstract black and white illustration.
Baby Book is book by Amy Ching-Yan Lam. (Brick Books, Marvin Luvualu Antonio)

Baby Book locates mundane and everyday experiences, such as a family vacation via bus tour, to discuss how belief systems are first formed and how everything we know about power, death, life and property can be formed and reformed again and again. 

Amy Ching-Yan Lam is a Toronto-based artist and writer. She is the author of Looty Goes to Heaven. Baby Book is her first collection of poetry and was shortlisted for the 2023 Governor General's Literary Award for poetry

archipelago by Laila Malik

The beige book cover features a persian rug that is torn and tattered.
archipelago is a book by Laila Malik. (Book*hug Press, Meera Sethi)

archipelago is a collection of lyrical poems exploring family dynamics and self-identity in the face of multigenerational migration. 

Laila Malik is a writer living in Adobigok, the traditional land of Indigenous communities that include the Anishinaabe, Seneca, Mohawk Haudenosaunee, and Wendat. archipelago is her debut poetry collection.

Sonnets from a Cell by Bradley Peters

Sonnets from a Cell by Bradley Peters. Illustrated book cover of red background with grey lines resembling prison bars. Black and white portrait of the poet.
Sonnets from a Cell is a debut poetry collection by Bradley Peters. (Brick Books, Bradley Peters)

In his debut collection, Sonnets from a Cell, Bradley Peters writes from personal experiences as a young man in the Canadian prison system. Combining lyrical verse with inmate speech, Sonnets from a Cell offers empathy and grace within moments of isolation and fear.

Peters is a poet and actor currently based in Mission, B.C. His poetry has been featured in numerous literary magazines. Sonnets from a Cell is his debut poetry collection. 

LISTEN | Bradley Peters discusses Sonnets from a Cell:
When the poet Bradley Peters discovered sonnets while studying poetry and creative writing, he knew it was the perfect form to write about his experience with incarceration as a teenager and young adult. Bradley talks to Tom about his new poetry collection, “Sonnets from a Cell,” what it felt like to be in solitary confinement, and how he “held on to his humanity” in prison.

Way to Go by Richard Sanger

The beige book cover features the title "way to go" in bubbled black font.
Way to Go is a book by Richard Sanger. (Biblioasis, Rita Leistner)

In Way to Go, Richard Sanger uses poetry to explore his passions, give gratitude and provide humourous observations about a life well-lived. 

Sanger was a writer who grew up in Ottawa and lived in Toronto. He published three poetry collections and a chapbook. His plays included Not SpainTwo Words for SnowHannah's Turn, and Dive. He has also published essays, reviews and poetry translations.

The Mask by Terry Watada

Masks by Terry Watada. Book cover of a traditional Japanese mask. Portrait of a Japanese male poet in a blue collared shirt.
The Mask is a poetry collection by Terry Watada. (Mawenzi House, Tane Akamatsu)

The Mask is a poetry collection titled after both the emblem of the 2020 pandemic and as a significant cultural symbol in Japan. Terry Watada's poems are centred around themes of loss, the mystical and the reality of being an immigrant in Canada.

Watada is a poet and writer currently based in Toronto. He is the author of many books including his novels The Three Pleasures and The Blood of Foxes. His play, Sakura: the Last Cherry Blossom Festival will premiere in 2024. 

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