Books

The CBC Books fall reading list: 40 Canadian books to read this season

Need a good book to cozy up with this fall? Check out this list of buzzworthy Canadian titles out right now.

Need a good book to cozy up with this fall? Check out this list of buzzworthy Canadian titles out right now.

The Damages by Genevieve Scott 

The Damages by Genevieve Scott. A book cover with green ivy growing up the walls of a university with white windows.
The Damages is a novel by Genevieve Scott. (Penguin Random House Canada)

In her latest novel The Damages, Genevieve Scott uses the late-90s grunge and girl power movements as the backdrop for a story about consent, trauma and the cost of lies. Protagonist Ros is excited to go to university in Ontario and totally reinvent herself — but when she meets her roommate Megan, Ros knows she is a social liability. During an intense ice storm, Megan goes missing and Ros is shunned by her newfound friends.

Two decades later, Lukas — Ros's ex and the father of her young son — is accused of sexual assault and Ros is forced to face her mistakes from the past and reflect on the era she grew up in through a post-#MeToo lens. 

Genevieve Scott is a Canadian author and teacher based in California. Her previous work was the novel Catch My Drift.

The Islands by Dionne Irving 

The Islands by Dionne Irving. Illustrated book cover of palm leaves on a metal roof sheet.
The Islands is a collection of stories by Dionne Irving. (Catapult Books, Myriam Nicodemus)

Set across the United States, Jamaica and Europe from the 1950s to present day, The Islands details the migration stories of Jamaican women and their descendants. Each short story explores colonialism and its impact as women experience the on-going tensions between identity and the place they long to call home.

Dionne Irving is a writer and creative writing teacher from Toronto. She released her first novel, Quint, in 2021 and her work has been featured in journals and magazines like LitHub, Missouri Review and New Delta Review. The Islands is her debut short story collection. The Islands is shortlisted for the 2023 Scotiabank Giller Prize.

Learned by Heart by Emma Donoghue

A composite image of a book cover featuring a girl with black hair with gold circles radiating from her right eye beside a portrait of a woman with brown hair wearing a gold blazer smiling at the camera.
Learned by Heart is a novel by bestselling author Emma Donoghue. (HarperCollins Canada, Una Roulston)

Emma Donoghue's latest novel, Learned by Heart, draws on years of research and the five-million-word secret journal of British diarist Anne Lister — dubbed by many as "the first modern lesbian." Learned by Heart tells the long-buried story of the romance between Lister, a brilliant young troublemaker, and Eliza Raine, an orphan heiress banished to England from India.

The two meet at a boarding school for girls called the Manor School for Young Ladies when they are 14 and fall dangerously in love as their lives become entangled. 

Donoghue is an Irish Canadian writer whose books include the novels LandingRoomFrog MusicThe WonderThe Pull of the Stars 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 on Q with Tom Power:
Emma Donoghue’s new novel has been decades in the making. “Learned by Heart” tells the story of two young teenagers, Anne Lister and Eliza Raine, who fall in love at their boarding school in England in 1805. Except these characters aren’t that of fiction — they actually existed. Emma tells Tom about when she first discovered the story, how Anne Lister changed her life, and how it feels to finally finish this novel.

The Double Life of Benson Yu by Kevin Chong 

A red book cover featuring the title with large yellow text and a photo of the author, a man with short black hair and glasses wearing a red plaid shirt.
The Double Life of Benson Yu is a book by Kevin Chong. (Simon & Schuster, Iris Chia)

The Double Life of Benson Yu recounts the difficult adolescence of the titular character growing up in a housing project in 1980s Chinatown. The story takes a metafictional twist, when Yu's grip on memory and reality falters. The unique structure provides a layered and poignant look into how we come to terms with who we are, what happened to us as children, and that finding hope and healing lies in whether we choose to suppress or process our experiences.

Kevin Chong is a Vancouver-based writer and associate professor at the University of British Columbia Okanagan. His other books include the nonfiction book Northern Dancer and fiction titles like The Plague and Beauty Plus Pity. He was longlisted for the 2020 CBC Nonfiction PrizeThe Double Life of Benson Yu is shortlisted for the 2023 Scotiabank Giller Prize

LISTEN | Kevin Chong talks about writing experimental meta-fiction — and it paying off: 
Ryan B. Patrick interviews Kevin Chong about his new novel about a writer who loses control of his narrative.

Girlfriend on Mars by Deborah Willis

A composite photo of a book cover featuring an astronaut standing on the surface of Mars and the book's author, a blond woman in a black blazer staring into the camera.
Girlfriend on Mars is a novel by Deborah Willis. (Hamish Hamilton, deborahwillis.ca)

Girlfriend on Mars is a satirical story about tragic love and commercial space travel. Amber Kivinen is one of 23 reality TV contestants vying for two spots on the first commercial trip to Mars aboard MarsNow, a space shuttle commissioned by the billionaire Geoff Task.

Amber is surrounded by a cast of unlikely characters, including an Israeli soldier and social media influencers, while her long-term partner, Kevin, stays at home with the plants and starts to wonder: why does his girlfriend feel such a desire to leave the planet?

Willis is a fiction writer currently based in Calgary. She debuted in 2009 with Vanishing and Other Stories which was shortlisted for the Governor General's Literary Award for fiction. She followed it up with a collection of short fiction entitled The Dark and Other Love Stories in 2017, which was also longlisted for the Scotiabank Giller Prize.

The Circle by katherena vermette

A composite image of a portrait of an Indigenous woman with dark hair looking into the camera and a brown book cover made up of individual geometric shapes and the words The Circle by katherena vermette written on it.
katherena vermette is the author of The Circle. (Vanda Fleury, Hamish Hamilton)

The Circle is the third and final book set in the world of The Strangers and The Break, featuring some of the same characters. With Phoenix set for release from prison for the assault she committed in The Break, the news is sending ripples through the community. Her sister Cedar has been both dreading and longing for her return, while M, the girl Phoenix assaulted, is triggered by the news. 

When Phoenix goes missing shortly after her release, past grievances, revenge plots and accusations begin swirling — and the community and the people who live there all search for healing in their own ways.

katherena vermette is a Métis writer from Winnipeg. Her books include the poetry collections North End Love Songs and river woman, the novel The Break and the four-book graphic novel series A Girl Called Echo. North End Love Songs won the Governor General's Literary Award for poetry. The Break was a finalist for the Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize and the Governor General's Literary Award for fiction. It was defended by Candy Palmater on Canada Reads 2017.

All the Colour in the World by CS Richardson 

All the Colour in the World by CS Richardson. Book cover shows a black and white image of people walking by a building on a road in the snow. Black and white portrait of the author wearing glasses and a scarf.
All the Colour in the World is a novel by CS Richardson. (Knopf Canada, Jeff Cheong)

All the Colour In the World is a story of a young boy named Henry who discovers a passion for art which carries him through the many misadventures of his life in the 20th century. From his first set of colouring pencils he is gifted at his grandmother's place to the worlds of academia, war and sweeping romance, Henry's art stays alongside his enduring story.

CS Richardson is a Toronto-based writer and award-winning book designer. His previous novels include The End of the Alphabet which won the 2008 Commonwealth Writers Prize for Best First Book and The Emperor of Paris which was longlisted for the Scotiabank Giller Prize in 2012. 

LISTEN | CS Richardson takes The Next Chapter's Proust questionnaire: 
C.S. Richardson, author of the novel All the Colour in the World, takes The Next Chapter Proust questionnaire.

Birnam Wood by Eleanor Catton 

A black, white and orange book cover with stylized text and the book's author, a blond woman wearing a navy coat looking off into the distance.
Birnam Wood is a book by New Zealand author Eleanor Catton. (McClelland & Stewart)

Birnam Wood is an engaging eco-thriller set in the middle of a landslide in New Zealand. Mira, the founder of a guerilla gardening collective that plants crops amid other criminal environmental activities, sets her sights on an evacuated farm as a way out of financial ruin. The only problem is the American billionaire Robert Lemoine has already laid claim to it as his end-of-the-world lair.

After the same thing for polar opposite reasons, their paths cross and Robert makes Mira an offer that would stave off her financial concerns for good. The question is: can she trust him? 

Eleanor Catton is a London, Ont.-born New Zealand author. She won the 2013 Booker Prize for fiction and the 2013 Governor General's Literary Award for fiction for her second novel, The Luminaries.

LISTEN | Eleanor Catton speaks with Eleanor Wachtel: 
In 2013, Canadian-born, New Zealand writer Eleanor Catton made history when she became the youngest person ever to win the Booker Prize. Catton was just 28 and her novel, The Luminaries, went on to become an international bestseller. Catton later adapted her novel for a BBC-TV mini-series and wrote the screenplay for the 2020 film production of Jane Austen's Emma. Now, her much anticipated new novel, Birnam Wood, a page-turning eco-thriller set in New Zealand's South Island, tackles some of the biggest issues of our time, including the climate crisis, digital surveillance and economic inequality.

Roaming by Jillian Tamaki & Mariko Tamaki 

Roaming by Jillian Tamaki & Mariko Tamaki. Illustrated book cover of 3 main characters, a butterfly and the statue of liberty in the distance. Portraits of the two author-illustrators.
Roaming is a YA graphic novel by Mariko Tamaki, left, and Jillian Tamaki. (Mariko Tamaki, Drawn & Quarterly, Anne-Marie Coultier)

Set on a trip to New York City in 2009, Roaming is a graphic novel that follows best friends Zoe and Dani during their first year of college. As a queer romance blossoms between Zoe and Dani's classmate Fiona — who tags along — friendships get put to the test and all three girls learn more about who they are set against the backdrop of the big city.  

Mariko Tamaki is a writer based in California. Her other books include the YA novels (you) Set Me On Fire and Saving Montgomery Sole. She's also the author of many superhero comics for DC Comics, Darkhorse and Marvel.  

Jillian Tamaki is a Toronto-based cartoonist, illustrator and educator. With her cousin Mariko Tamaki, she co-created the YA graphic novel Skim, which won the Governor General's Literary Award for young people's literature — text. Another collaboration, This One Summer, won the Governor General's Literary Award for young people's literature — illustration. 

LISTEN | Mariko and Jillian Tamaki discuss the make-or-break experiences of travelling with friends: 
The Canadian cousins and creative collaborators' new graphic novel Roaming explores college friends getting a taste of adulthood in the Big Apple.

Do You Remember Being Born? by Sean Michaels 

Do You Remember Being Born? An illustrated book cover with a book on a bed and an open window in the background. A portrait of a bald white man with glasses and a white shirt looking into the camera.
Do You Remember Being Born? is a novel by Sean Michaels. (Random House Canada)

Do You Remember Being Born? follows a famous poet named Marian Ffarmer, who after years of dedicating herself singularly to her art has started to question her life choices. After receiving an invitation to the Silicon Valley headquarters of one of the biggest tech companies in the world, Marian begins collaborating with a state-of-the-art poetry bot named Charlotte.

What follows is a journey of self-discovery for both Marian and Charlotte, as the two begin to form a friendship unlike any Marian has ever known.

Sean Michaels was born in Stirling, Scotland and moved to Montreal, where he currently lives, when he was 18 years old. His first novel, Us Conductors, won the Scotiabank Giller Prize in 2014 and was nominated for the Amazon.ca First Novel Award, the Kirkus Prize and the International Dublin Literary Award. Michaels is also the founder of the music blog Said the Gramophone.

Rouge by Mona Awad

A woman wearing a red and black dress looks at the camera. A red rose on a black backdrop.
Rouge is a novel by Mona Awad. (Penguin Random House)

In Rouge, Mona Awad plays with horror and surrealist elements to tell a fairy tale about a lonely dress shop clerk who is sent down a dangerous path in pursuit of youth and beauty after her mother's unexpected death.

Drawn to the culty spa her mother belonged to by a mysterious woman in red that shows up at the funeral, Belle finds herself unravelling the frightening secret behind her and her mother's obsession with the mirror and the demons that await on the other side.

Awad is a Boston-based author whose debut short story collection 13 Ways of Looking at a Fat Girl, won the Amazon Canada First Novel Award, the Colorado Book Award and was shortlisted for the 2016 Scotiabank Giller Prize. She is also the author of the novels Bunny and All's Well.

LISTEN | Mona Awad's Rouge explores the beauty myth with a horror tinged take on Snow White: 
Ryan B. Patrick talks to acclaimed author Mona Awad about her new novel, Rouge.

Moon of the Turning Leaves by Waubgeshig Rice

Side by side of the book cover and author photo the cover is a forest with an overturned tree the author is a man with long hair in front of a tree
Moon of the Turned Leaves is a novel by Waubgeshig Rice. (Random House Canada, Shilo Adamson)

Moon of the Turning Leaves takes place 10 years after the events of the post-apocalyptic novel Moon of the Crusted Snow and depicts an epic journey to a forgotten homeland. With food supplies dwindling, Evan Whitesky and his band of survivors  need to find a new home. Evan volunteers to lead  a group — including his daughter Nangohns and a great archer and hunter — to their ancestral home, the "land where the birch trees grow by the big water."

Along the way, they come across other survivors — not all of whom can be trusted. 

Waubgeshig Rice is an Anishinaabe author, journalist and radio host originally from Wasauksing First Nation. Rice's first short story collection Midnight Sweatlodge, which was about his life growing up in his Anishinaabe community, won an Independent Publishers Book Award in 2012. His novel Moon of the Crusted Snow was on the Canada Reads 2023 longlist.

Daughter by Claudia Dey

On the left is a headshot photo of the author, and on the right is the image of a book cover that is black - coloured with a tropical - coloured cave
Claudia Dey is a writer from Toronto. (Norman Wong, Doubleday Canada)

Daughter explores the regenerative power of art, and how making art is making selfhood, when Mona Dean strives to make a life and art of her own. The story is about a playwright, actress and titular daughter named Mona Dean, who is caught in her charismatic father's web — a man famous for one great novel, and whose needs and insecurities have a hold on the women in the family. 

Claudia Dey is a Toronto author, playwright and actor. She is also the co-designer of women's clothing brand Horses Atelier. She is also the author of the novels Stunt and HeartbreakerHeartbreaker was a finalist for the 2019 Trillium Book Award

Empty Spaces by Jordan Abel

Empty Spaces by Jordan Abel. A black book cover with a circle of colours in the centre. A portrait of an Indigenous man standing on a path in the forest.
Empty Spaces is a novel by Jordan Abel. (McClelland & Stewart, Sweetmoon Photography)

Empty Spaces is a reimagining of James Fenimore Cooper's 19th-century text The Last of the Mohicans from a modern urban perspective. Jordan Abel explores what it means to be Indigenous without access to familial territory and complicates popular understandings about Indigenous storytelling.

Abel is a Nisga'a writer from British Columbia. He is also the author of the poetry collections The Place of ScrapsUn/inhabited and Injun. In 2017, he won the Griffin Poetry Prize for Injun.

LISTEN | Jordan Abel's debut novel Empty Spaces is a trippy, genre-bending subversion of The Last of the Mohicans: 
<p>The acclaimed Edmonton-based writer dissects and disassembles the classic story and reframes it into a powerful Indigenous account of location, identity and agency.</p>

The Adversary by Michael Crummey

The Adversary by Michael Crummey. An orange book cover with two black birds flying on either side. A portrait of author Michael Crummey.
The Adversary is a novel by Michael Crummey. (Knopf Canada, Richard Lautens)

The Adversary features two rivals who represent the largest fishing operations on Newfoundland's northern outpost. When a wedding that would have secured Abe Strapp's hold on the shore falls apart it sets off a series of events that lead to year after year of violence and vendettas and a seemingly endless feud. 

Michael Crummey is a poet and novelist from Newfoundland and Labrador. He is also the author of the novels The InnocentsSweetland and Galore and the poetry collections Arguments with Gravity and Passengers. Two of Crummey's novels have been shortlisted for the Governor General's Literary Award for fiction — Sweetland in 2014 and Galore in 2009. 

The Innocents was shortlisted for the 2019 Scotiabank Giller Prizethe 2019 Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize and the Governor General's Literary Award for fiction.

LISTEN | Michael Crummey talks The Adversary with Shelagh Rogers at Woody Point Writers Festival 2023: 
The Newfoundland author tells a story of a brother and sister who run the largest mercantile firms in the North Atlantic. As animosity and violence grows between the pair, their community becomes increasingly divided.

Study for Obedience by Sarah Bernstein

Study for Obedience by Sarah Bernstein. Illustrated book cover of a small dead bird on a table. Black and white photo of female writer's side profile.
Study for Obedience is a novel by Sarah Bernstein. (Knopf Canada, Alice Meikle)

Study for Obedience is a novel by Sarah Bernstein. It explores themes of guilt, abuse and prejudice through the eyes of its unreliable narrator. In it, a woman leaves her hometown to move to a "remote northern country" to be a housekeeper for her brother, whose wife recently decided to leave him.

Soon after her arrival the community is struck by unusual events from collective bovine hysteria to a potato blight. When the locals direct their growing suspicions of incomers at her, their hostility grows more palpable.

Study for Obedience is shortlisted for the 2023 Scotiabank Giller Prize. The $100,000 prize is the richest in Canadian fiction. Study for Obedience is also longlisted for the 2023 Booker Prize. Bernstein was named one of Granta's best young British novelists in 2023. She currently lives in Scotland.

The African Samurai by Craig Shreve

A composite image featuring a pink book cover with a silhouette of a solider on a horse and the book's author, a smiling man with short dark hair.
The African Samurai is a novel by Craig Shreve. (Simon & Schuster)

Yasuke was a 16th-century samurai. He was Japan's first foreign-born samurai, and the only samurai of African descent. His story is special, and little known. Canadian writer Craig Shreve, hopes to change that with his novel The African Samurai

The African Samurai tells Yasuke's story. As a boy, he is sold as a slave to Portuguese mercenaries. A series of unlikely events results in Yasuke in Japan, now imprisoned by the powerful warlord Oda Nobunaga. From there, the two forge an unlikely bond, and Yasuke begins his journey to becoming a samurai, and the  power that comes with it. But with this power comes attention, risk, danger ⁠— and the chance to make history.

Craig Shreve is a writer originally from North Buxton, Ont. He is also the author of One Night in Mississippi.

The Clarion by Nina Dunic

A blue book cover with white text with a texture treatment over it to make it look like a 1960s comics.
The Clarion is a novel by Nina Dunic. (Invisible Publishing)

Siblings Peter and Stasi are struggling to find their place in the world in the novel The Clarion. Peter is a trumpet player who also works in a kitchen and Stasi is trying to climb the corporate ladder. The Clarion looks at themes of intimacy and performance — and how far one must go to find or lose their sense of self.

Nina Dunic is a freelance writer and journalist living in Scarborough. She has been longlisted for the CBC Short Story Prize four times: in 2023 for The Artist, in 2022 for Youth, in 2020 for Bodies and in 2019 for an earlier version of Bodies. In 2023, she was named to the CBC Books Writers to Watch list. Her debut novel, The Clarion, was longlisted for the 2023 Scotiabank Giller Prize longlist

The Defector by Chris Hadfield

An illustration of a grey fighter plane streaking through a red sky.
The Defector is a book by Chris Hadfield. (Mulholland Books)

The Defector is a follow-up to astronaut Chris Hadfield's debut novel, the space thriller The Apollo MurdersThe Defector follows NASA flight controller and former U.S. test pilot Kaz Zemeckis as he takes to the sky in aerial combat to hunt down a high-level defector and uncover Soviet secrets. 

Hadfield was a military pilot and astronaut for 35 years. He was the first Canadian to walk in space and served as commander of the International Space Station. He received the NASA Exceptional Service Medal in 2002 and became a member of the Order of Canada in 2014. He is also the author of the memoir An Astronaut's Guide to Life on Earththe children's book The Darkest Darkwhich was illustrated by the Fan Brothers, and the photo book You Are Here: Around the World in 92 Minutes.

The Age of Insecurity by Astra Taylor

A white arrow on a pink and brown background. A woman with bangs and a curly bob looks at the camera.
Astra Taylor is the author of The Age of Insecurity. (House of Anansi Press, Nye Taylor)

Writer and filmmaker Astra Taylor delivers the 2023 Massey Lectures in The Age of InsecurityShe explores the pervasive insecurity in our current reality and how the institutions that promise to make us more secure actually contribute to this feeling. Throughout the book, Taylor argues that embracing this vulnerability is the key to more caring, sustainable notions of security. 

Taylor is a writer, filmmaker and political organizer who was born in Winnipeg and currently lives in New York. Her other books include The People's Platform: Taking Back Power and Culture in the Digital Age and Remake the World: Essays, Reflections, Rebellions

LISTEN | Introducing the 2023 Massey Lecturer Astra Taylor

Doppelganger by Naomi Klein

A smiling woman with glasses and wearing a beige blazer over a red blouse and the book cover with the title written across the blurred face of a woman
Doppelganger is a memoir by Naomi Klein. (Rob Trendiak, Knopf Canada)

In Doppelganger, Naomi Klein explores the concept of Mirror World. This includes the presence of far right movements and how they attempt to appeal to the working class, anti-vaxxers, implications of artificial intelligence in content curation and the additional identities that we create on social media. Through referencing thinkers such as Sigmund Freud and bell hooks, Klein also connects to greater social themes to share how one can break free from the Mirror World. 

Klein is a Montreal-born journalist, bestselling author, political thinker and advocate regarding climate change and the ills of corporate globalization. She is associate professor in geography at the University of British Columbia, and the author of This Changes EverythingThe Shock DoctrineNo LogoNo Is Not Enough and On Fire

Races by Valerie Jerome

A book cover of a silhouette of a man running. A woman with short, greying hair smiles at the camera.
Valerie Jerome wrote the book Races. (Goose Lane Editions, Ulla Lemberg)

The Jerome family have an historic record in Canadian sports with the grandfather being the country's first Black Olympian and siblings Harry and Valerie also competing and setting world records in the 1960s. In the book Races, Valerie Jerome details those heroic moments for her family and the nation that came alongside the racism they simultaneously had to face.

Valerie Jerome is the granddaughter of Canada's first Black Olympian John "Army" Howard and a Canadian Olympian herself. She has previously represented the Green Party of British Columbia and her work in conservation garnered her a 125th Anniversary of the Confederation of Canada Medal and a City of Vancouver Heritage Award.

One Sunny Afternoon by Rowan Jetté Knox

A tree line with pink clouds. A person with short, colourful hair crosses their arms and looks at the camera.
Rowan Jetté Knox is the author of the the memoir One Sunny Afternoon. (Viking, Danielle Donders)

One Sunny Afternoon is a memoir about facing one's trauma head on. Rowan Jetté Knox writes about his recovery from the violent events that have haunted him for years, but it's also a story of resilience and hope for the future.

Rowan Jetté Knox is a Toronto-based journalist, writer and human rights advocate. He is also the author of the memoir Love Lives Here: A Story of Thriving in a Transgender Family.

Breaking and Entering by Don Gillmor

A composite image featuring a yellow and blue book cover with an air conditioning unit in a window and a portrait of a white man with glasses and a black t-shirt looking into the camera.
Breaking and Entering is a novel by Don Gillmor. (Biblioasis, dongillmor.ca)

In Breaking and Entering, Beatrice is a 49-year-old dealing with a stale marriage and a strained relationship with her son Thomas, who is away at university. She is the primary caregiver for her mother who is in the early stages of dementia and she has trouble getting along with her older sister Ariel. Reflecting on her life and feeling unfulfilled, she discovers a talent — and passion — for picking locks.

Breaking into other people's homes quickly becomes a thrilling hobby that makes her feel alive again as she begins to analyze the lives of strangers — and her own.

Don Gillmor is a Toronto journalist and author of novels and nonfiction books, including Canada: A People's History. He has twice been nominated for the Governor General's Literary Award in the young people's literature — text category for The Fabulous Song and The Christmas Orange.

My Name is Not Harry by Haroon Siddiqui

A book cover with the title in big over a white background with a red line. A man with glasses wearing a red tie smiles at the camera.
My Name is Not Harry is a memoir by Haroon Siddiqui. (Dundurn Press)

In My Name is Not Harry, Harron Siddiqui shares his experiences within the media as a brown and Muslim reporter, especially following the events on 9/11 and how Islamophobia grew both in his native India and North America. Siddiqui compares his native and adopted lands and shows how things can go wrong, but can also be made right.

Siddiqui is editorial page editor emeritus of the Toronto Star, a senior fellow at Massey College and a member of the Order of Canada.

Ignite by Andre De Grasse

Ignite is a book by Andre De Grasse.
Ignite is a book by Andre De Grasse. (HarperCollins, Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)

Ignite: Unlock the Hidden Potential Within is a book about Andre De Grasse's journey to becoming the most decorated male summer Olympian in Canadian history. It tells De Grasse's story while sharing the lessons he has learned about achieving success and finding happiness along the way. 

De Grasse is a six-time Olympic medallist and World champion sprinter, and the founder of the Andre De Grasse Family Foundation. He is also the author of the picture book Race with Me!.

The Grimmer by Naben Ruthnum

 
On the left a book cover in red featuring a black cat, a burning candle and a skull. On the right a man looks into the camera.
The Grimmer is a book by Naben Ruthnum. (ECW, Rudrapriya Rathore)

The Grimmer is a YA horror novel about a high schooler named Vish who loves heavy metal and literature, but who is uncertain about his future. With his father recently out of treatment for addiction, he can feel the eyes of the town focused on his family — one of few brown families there. After Vish is attacked by a pale, decaying monster, he finds himself drawn into a world of witches, undead creatures and magic.

With the help of an eccentric local bookstore owner and his teenage employee Gisela, Vish tries to stop an inter-dimensional threat that could destroy his whole town.

The Grimmer is for ages 13 and up. 

Naben Ruthnum is a Toronto-based author and screenwriter who has written everything from short fiction and crime fiction to thrillers, memoir and literary criticism. He is the author of the memoir Curry: Eating, Reading, and Race and the novels Helpmeet and A Hero of Our Time. Under the pen name Nathan Ripley, he is the author of two thrillers: Find You In the Dark and Your Life is Mine

My Effin' Life by Geddy Lee

The book cover with a black and white photo of a young man with long dark hair and the author sitting on a couch with a dog and his face is hidden behind a Dr. Seuss book
My Effin' Life is a memoir by Rush bassist Geddy Lee. (HarperCollins)

My Effin' Life is the long-awaited memoir from Rush bassist Geddy Lee. He writes candidly about his childhood, the history of the Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Canadian band Rush and their success after some struggles early on, as well as intimate stories about his friends and bandmates Alex Lifeson and Neil Peart.

Lee is the vocalist, bassist, and keyboard player for the group Rush, with drummer Neil Peart and guitarist Alex Lifeson. Lee was ranked by Rolling Stone as one of the top bassists of all-time. Lee is also the author of the best-selling Geddy Lee's Big Beautiful Book of Bass.

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 latest collection, After That, Crozier examines immense grief and loss and highlights the beauty of sorrow and the magic you find in everyday life.

When you can read it: Sept. 5, 2023

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.

Songs of Irie by Asha Ashanti Bromfield

 
On the left a book cover shows two women, one with a red flower in the hair, as they face one another and their noses are touching. On the right a woman looks into the camera.
Songs of Irie is a historical YA novel by Asha Ashanti Bromfield. (St. Martin's Press, Kyle Kirkwood)

Songs of Irie is a historical coming-of-age YA novel set in 1976. Irie and Jilly are from two different worlds — Jilly lives in the hills, safe in a mansion, while Irie is from the heart of Kingston, where fighting on the streets is a regular occurrence. Tension is building on the streets and there is civil unrest in the lead-up to an important election. Irie and Jilly bond at Irie's dad's record store over their love of Reggae music and must fight for their friendship, and budding romance, to survive. 

Songs of Irie is for ages 13 and up.

Asha Ashanti Bromfield is a writer, actress, singer and producer of Afro-Jamaican descent. She is known for starring as Melody Valentine, drummer for the band Josie and the Pussycats, in the television show Riverdale and as Zadie Wells in the Netflix show Locke and Key. Her YA novels include Hurricane Summer and Songs of Irie. She is from Toronto. CBC Books named Bromfield a Black Canadian writer to watch in 2022

LISTEN | Asha Ashanti Bromfield discusses Songs of Irie on The Next Chapter:

The Canadian actress and author talks with Ryan B. Patrick about her new novel Songs of Irie, which takes place in 1970s Jamaica.

Falling Back in Love with Being Human by Kai Cheng Thom

 
Falling Back in Love with Being Human by Kai Cheng Thom. Illustrated book cover of a bended and twisted woman. Portrait of a Chinese female author.
Falling Back in Love with Being Human is a poetry collection by Kai Cheng Thom. (Penguin Canada, Rachel Woroner)

A collection of vulnerable and poetic love letters, Falling Back in Love with Being Human is a lyrical journey of self-acceptance. Kai Cheng Thom writes poems to those she describes as "lost souls" both within and far from her own lived experiences. Thom meditates on her own identities as a Chinese Canadian transgender woman in this collection about healing and love.

Thom is a Chinese Canadian writer, artist and activist. Her poetry collection a place called No Homeland was named an American Library Association Stonewall Honor Book. Her other books include Fierce Femmes and Notorious Liars and I Hope We Choose Love.

Bottom Rail on Top by D.M. Bradford

 
Bottom Rail on Top by D.M. Bradford. Illustrated book cover of pink and yellow abstract shapes. Portrait of a Black male author with wire-framed glasses.
Bottom Rail on Top is a poetry collection by D.M. Bradford. (Brick Books)

The latest book from D.M. Bradford, 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.

Bradford is a Montreal-based poet and translator. His 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 his translated book House Within a House.

Building a Nest from the Bones of My People by Cara-Lyn Morgan

 
Building a Nest from the Bones of My People by Cara-Lyn Morgan. Illustrated book cover of two yellow hummingbirds surrounded by green leaves and a dark brown colour hand reaching towards the birds. Portrait of a Metis and Trinidadian female writer wearing a black shirt and white cardigan.
Building a Nest from the Bones of My People is a poetry collection by Cara-Lyn Morgan. (Invisible Publishing, Love Bee Photography 2022)

Building a Nest from the Bones of My People begins with the speaker realizing their experience with sexual abuse in their family. In this poetry collection, Cara-Lyn Morgan writes about first-time motherhood, generational trauma and colonization. 

Cara-Lyn Morgan is a Métis and Trinidadian poet and writer from Oskana, or Regina, Sask. Her other poetry collections include What Became My Grieving and Cartograph

People You Know, Places You've Been by Hana Shafi

 
People You Know, Places You’ve Been by Hana Shafi. Illustrated book cover of a fallen mint ice cream cone and a red, white and blue ice pop. Photo of a poet sitting down in a white shirt.
People You Know, Places You’ve Been is a collection of poetry and artwork by Hana Shafi. (Book*hug Press, Hana Shafi)

People You KnowPlaces You've Been is a collection of poetry and illustrations that focuses on those everyday interactions that leave a lasting impression on your own identity. Hana Shafi gives insight into the liminal spaces of waiting rooms, checkout counters, public transit and more. 

Shafi is a visual artist and poet also known as Frizz Kid. Her writing often explores feminism, race, body politics and popular culture. Her previous poetry collections include It Begins With The Body and Small, Broke, and Kind of Dirty. She is currently based in Toronto.

And Then She Fell by Alicia Elliott

 
A composite image of an Indigenous woman with dark brown hair, red lipstick and trees behind her looking at the camera beside an illustrated book cover with a girl's face obstructed by tree branches and leaves and the words And Then She Fell by Alicia Elliott written on it.
Alicia Elliott is the author of the novel And Then She Fell. (Submitted by Alicia Elliott, Doubleday Canada)

And Then She Fell follows a young woman named Alice who is struggling to navigate the early days of motherhood and live up to the unrealistic expectations of those around her. 

Alicia Elliott is a Mohawk writer living in Brantford, Ont. Her writing has been published most recently in Room, Grain and The New Quarterly. She is the author of the nonfiction book A Mind Spread Out on the Grounda columnist for CBC Arts and CBC Books named her a writer to watch in 2019. She was chosen by Tanya Talaga as the 2018 recipient of the RBC Taylor Emerging Writer Award.

Enough by Kimia Eslah

 
Enough by Kimia Eslah. A book cover featuring a photo of the Toronto skyline from above. A portrait of a woman with black hair and a blue polka dot shirt smirking into the camera.
Enough is a novel by Kimia Eslah. (Fernwood Publishing, www.kimiaeslah.com)

Faiza Hosseini is a ruthless executive trying to circumvent the old boys club in the novel Enough. Sameera Jahani has a passion for equity but can't get her girlfriend to care as much as she does. And Goldie Sheer has just landed her first job but work drama is making her question herself. Enough chronicles the lives of these three women of colour as they navigate the cubicles and courtyards of Toronto's City Hall. 

Born in Iran, Kimia Eslah spent her early childhood in New Delhi before immigrating to Toronto with her family. She is a feminist, queer writer and the author of the novels The Daughter Who Walked Away and Sister Seen, Sister Heard

Away from the Dead by David Bergen

Away from the Dead by David Bergen. A black book cover with tattered white fabric. A portrait of a white man with glasses looking into the camera.
Away from the Dead is a novel by David Bergen. (Goose Lane Editions, Thies Bogner)

Away from the Dead is set in early 20th century Ukraine as anarchists, Bolsheviks and the White Army come and go — all claiming justice and freedom. The book follows the lives of Lehn, Sablin and Inna, three Ukranians dealing with the chaos violence around them as the best and worst of humanity are on display.

David Bergen is the author of 11 novels and two collections of stories. His work includes The Time in Between, which won the Scotiabank Giller Prize and the McNally Robinson Book of the Year Award, The Matter with Morris and The Age of Hope, which was championed by Ron MacLean on Canada Reads 2013. He currently lives in Winnipeg.

Her Body Among Animals by Paola Ferrante

Her Body Among Animals is a novel by Paola Ferrante. Her Body Among Animals by Paola Ferrante. An illustrated book cover with a silhouette of a dog jumping over a mermaid's fin. A portrait of a white woman with short brown hair looking into the camera.
Her Body Among Animals is short story collection by Paola Ferrante. (Book*hug Press)

Her Body Among Animals is a genre-bending collection of short stories that merges sci-fi, horror, fairy tales and pop culture to examine the challenges and boundaries society places on women's bodies. 

Paola Ferrante is a poet and fiction writer from Toronto. Her books include the poetry collection What to Wear When Surviving A Lion Attack and the poetry chapbook The Dark Unwind. She was longlisted for the 2020 Journey Prize and won Room's 2018 prize for fiction.

A Ramshackle Home by Felicia Mihali, translated by Judith Weisz Woodsworth

A Ramshackle Home By Felicia Mihali, translated by Judith Weisz Woodsworth. A blue book cover with geometric patterns and an white and blue bowl in the centre. Two portraits of Felicia Mihali and Judith Weisz Woodsworth.
A Ramshackle Home is a novel written by Felicia Mihali, centre, and translated by Judith Weisz Woodsworth. (Linda Leith Publishing)

When her marriage falls apart, a woman and her son move back into the ramshackle home in the Romanian countryside where her parents once lived in the novel A Ramshackle Home. Struggling with feelings of isolation she escapes into her imagination where her memories are interwoven with stories from ancient mythology. 

Felicia Mihali is a translator, editor and author living in Montreal. She is the founder and president of Montreal publishing house Éditions Hashtag.

Judith Weisz Woodsworth is a Canadian translator and recently retired professor at Concordia University. Her translation of Pierre Anctil's History of the Jews in Quebec won the 2022 Governor General's Literary Award for French-to-English translation.

Semi-Detached by Elizabeth Ruth

Semi-Detached by Elizabeth Ruth. A white book cover with various multicoloured spots. A portrait of a woman with short salt and pepper hair and glasses looking over her shoulder.
Semi-Detached is a novel by Elizabeth Ruth. (Cormorant Books, Samuel Engelking)

Semi-Detached is part ghost story, part love story with a murder mystery twist. Laura Keys is a Toronto real estate agent looking to sell a one-of-a-kind house on behalf of its comatose owner, but she is being haunted by a mysterious teenage girl with a Scottish Terrier tucked in her coat. After some digging she uncovers the story of its owner Edna's ill-fated affair with her boss's daughter and a decades-old murder mystery. 

Elizabeth Ruth is an author, poet and professor living in Toronto. She is the author of the novels Ten Good Seconds of Silence, Smoke and Matadora. Her debut poetry collection, This Report Is Strictly Confidential, is forthcoming in 2024.

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