28
Books Later
Part of TDR's feature on Toronto
Books: Spring 2008
Sit back, get your pen out or load up your printer’s black ink
cartridge cause it’s on.
28 books you must have for Spring 2008, in no
particular order, from poetry to fiction to graphic novels to rocked out
sophomore efforts, it’s the ultimate Spring break.
Toronto Books Gone
Wild!
- The Publishers: Coach House, Random House, Anansi,
ECW, Penguin, Book Thug, Brick Books,
Conundrum, Pedlar, Tightrope, McClelland & Stewart, DC Books, Insomniac,
Biblioasis, Exile, and Simon & Schuster.
Toronto Book Media: NOW, eye
weekly, the Globe, the
Star, Quill
and Quire, Open Book
Toronto.
Toronto Lit Events Listings: Patchy
Squirrel.
(April 2008)
1.Girls Fall Down by
Maggie
Helwig (Coach House) in her third novel, Helwig tells the love story set
against the backdrop of a panic in Toronto over an unexplained sickness
working its way through the subways and streets. Read TDR’s brand new
interview with Maggie Helwig.
2. The Ravine
by Paul Quarington. (Random House) The ravine is a
timeless backdrop seeded in the memory of every child. It’s where we
bury treasures, smoke our first cigarette, or get lost for hours;
escaping the surveillance of the city. Canada Reads winner Paul
Quarington’s tenth novel centers around Phil McQuigge,
whose marriage is over. He has lost his job as the producer of a wildly
successful TV series, and has also lost the star of that series who died
on the set under mysterious circumstances which adds to Phil’s
depression and guilty.
3. Stunt
by Claudia Dey (Coach House) follows Eugenia Ledoux, as
she searches for her missing father. The search takes her to Toronto
Island and is studded with tightrope walking, postcards from outer space
and the explosion of a shoulder-pad factory. Read the new TDR interview with
Claudia Dey.
4. Skim written by Mariko Tamaki and illustrated by Jillian
Tamaki, (Anansi).
After a successful Toronto launch where they sold an estimated 104
copies, this is certainly one of the must-have graphic novel of the
season. Written by this Toronto cousins team Tamaki, Skim is a graphic
novel about an outcast at a private girls school in Toronto. Read
Nathaniel G. Moore’s review of Skim.
5.
A Week of This by Nathan Whitlock
(ECW). Award-winning
writer and literary critic debuts his darkly comic novel that follows
the lives of an extended family over one increasingly desperate week. Read
TDR’s interview with Nathan Whitlock.
6. Fond
by Kate Eichhorn (Book Thug). What drives the collector?
Fond is haunted by an author's compulsion to repeat and the archive's
inevitable limits. A finding aid guides the reader through a field of
drafts, grids and marginalia, but can it account for this conflicting
narrative of desire and its inevitable unraveling? Find out this April
during poetry month.
7.
The Angel Riots by Ibi
Kaslik (Penguin). With Skinny, Kaslik was short-listed for the Amazon
Books In Canada First Novel award, and the recently released US edition
spent nearly a month on the New York Times bestseller at the onset of
2008. Her second novel, The Angel Riots, takes readers backstage,
into hotel rooms and the minds of two dysfunctional bands on their
American tour. The novel’s central conflict is channeled through
dual-narrators in Jim, an ingénue violinist from the prairies, and Rize,
a volatile trombonist. It’s Toronto’s answer to Michael Turner’s Hard Core Logo.
8. Troubled
by RM Vaughan (Coach House) An innocent flirtation
with his therapist escalated into dangerous sexual misadventure. A
confession in poetry that is itself distrustful of the language of
confession. Says Vaughan in an interview with Xtra, "My hope
is that the book will appeal to anyone who has ever made a huge mistake,
been caught in a malevolent system or wondered how their decision-making
abilities could be so impaired — which is, I'm thinking, just about
everybody. Conrad Black might like it. Maybe I'll send one to his
prison."
9. Night Work: The
Sawchuk Poems by Randall Maggs (Brick Books). Terry Sawchuck, who played for the Leafs the last time the franchise
won the Stanley Cup is considered by many to be the greatest
professional goaltender of all time. Wrote editor Stan Dragland
in a back jacket synopsis that was not used, but which Dragland
humoursly read from at the launch and subsequently surrendered to TDR,
"Night Work is couched in language so direct and familiar that
readers might find themselves in its grip before pausing to wonder why
it grabs and holds like the notorious defensive trap. Controlled and
flexible rhythms of speech as high art. Lyric moments gathering a
powerful narrative that Aristotle would have recognized as tragedy,
supposing he could have wrapped his mind around ice."
10. The Sentinel by
A.F. Moritz (Anansi) Environmental
pathos is one of the subjects A.F. Moritz has decided to focus on in The
Sentinel, along with mortality, love, ethics, civilization, the
human body and the natural world.
11. Otherworld Uprising by
Shary Boyle (Conundrum). Published in Partnership with the Southern Alberta Art
Gallery this brand new graphic novel art book features full colour
reproductions of Boyle’s recent series of porcelain figurines,
examines the influence of her research into historical porcelain on her
drawings, and considers the parallel development of her latest oil
portraits. The book also features critical essays by the Curator of Contemporary
Art at the National Gallery of Canada, Josée Drouin-Brisebois,
and Sheila Heti (who also contributes new fiction). Boyle says
the process for coordinated so many different people has been a bit
maddening. "Full colour hardcover colour corrects, hiring
photographers, you actually need a project manager to keep it all
together on deadline. A huge leap from Witness My Shame, which
was just me, Andy and my friend who I hired to design it."
12. Skin Room
by Sara Tilley
(Pedlar). The debut novel from playwright Tilley alternates between
Sanikiluaq,
Northwest Territories (now Nunavut), and St. Johns, Newfoundland. The
voice also alternates between 12-year-old Teresa Normans who crashes
into Inuit culture, and her later life as a 23-year-old adult in the
harrowing final phase of coping with the tragedy of her year in
Sanikiluaq. Read TDR's new interview with
Sara Tilley.
13. I. V. Lounge Nights: An anthology of the last five years edited
by Alex Boyd and Myna Wallin (Tightrope). Every other Friday night for the last ten years, published and
promising writers have been reading their work at the IV Lounge.
Five years ago poet Paul Vermeersch passed the hosting duties
along to Alex Boyd and he's been bringing the series to Toronto
ever since. Says Boyd about the collection "The idea for I.V.
Lounge Nights, as a new anthology to celebrate the tenth anniversary of
the series, came out of a conversation with Myna Wallin, we sort of hit
on the idea together, Myna suggested Tightrope books, and it has all
come together fairly recently," Boyd says. The editors proceeded to
cull material from Toronto authors who had impressed them at the series,
as well as emerging and established authors, local and otherwise, so the
book "reflects the series." The editors are "immensely
pleased with the quality of work submitted," and feel it’s a
great way to celebrate the series."
14. The Alchemy of Loss: A Young Widow’s Transformation
by
Abigail Carter (McClelland & Stewart). A memoir of the grief-stricken
journal of a 9/11 Canadian widow, the family turmoil that follows and
the road to recovery.
15. Dead Cars in Managua
by Stuart Ross (DC Books). In this
his sixth full-length poetry collection, divided into three
"discrete poetry projects" Ross works through claustrophobic
spaces and amorphous moods of hospitals, muses on Bill Berkson, Joe
Brainard, and observes the power of language to say what it does not
mean exactly with great and moving precision.
16. The New Layman’s Almanac by
Jacob McArthur Mooney (McClelland & Stewart). As a poetry collection,
its primary question is: What are the rules? Specifically, what in our
culture is available for irony, and what needs to be protected? What is
sacred and what is spiritually expendable? What benefits from formal
packaging and what doesn’t?
17. Open Slowly by Dayle Furlong (Tightrope). Young lovers tangle,
tumble and dance their way through the urban landscape in this debut
collection of poetry.
18. The Debaucher by Jason Camlot (Insomniac). Montreal poet gets
lyrical and bawdy in this his third collection of poetry. "The
debaucher understands/each moment is just once./His understanding is
chronic."
19. Augustine in Carthage and Other Poems by
Alessandro Porco (ECW). In Porco’s second poetry collection he subverts
the very communication of history, remixes some classic English poems
and ends the collection with a 21-part series titled "We So Seldom
Look on Nantucket."
20. The Dream World
by Alison Pick (McClelland &
Stewart) explores the mystery concealed within the world we know and
recognize, written over a five year period during a move from the
mainland to Newfoundland and back again.
21. Asylum
by Andre Alexis (McClelland & Stewart) a novel set
in Ottawa during the Mulroney years that arrives a decade after the
author's debut novel, Childhood.
22. Diana: A Diary in the Second Person
by Russell Smith (Biblioasis).
In the Introduction to Diana: A Diary in the Second Person, Smith
explains that this book came out of his repeated attempts at seduction.
Smith’s pornographic novel explores female desire. The unnamed
narrator – gorgeous, sophisticated, bored, underemployed – embarks
on a series of intense urban encounters in an unnamed city. Her desire
is limitless: passionate, playful, intense, humorous and without
reserve.
23. Blert
by Jordan Scott (Coach House) In this debut collection,
the poet undertakes a "poetics of stutter", and his life-long
linguistic stigma becoming a creative filter. Read Nathaniel G. Moore’s
review of Blert here.
24.
The Withdrawal Method by Pasha Malla
(Anansi) Malla’s
work has already garnered attention from the Pushcart and Journey Prize
juries, and he has contributed to CBC Radio's Definitely Not the
Opera as well as McSweeney’s. Read TDR’s interview with
Pasha
Malla.
25. The North End Poems
by Michael Knox (ECW) In his second
collection of poetry, Knox explores the beliefs, passions, fears,
friends and fights of Nick Macfarlane, a young steel town warehouse
worker in his bruiser bard style tender rendered in gritty lyric
sequences that reveal the nuance of masculinity in both familial and
social spheres.
26. The Selected Gwendolyn Macewen Edited
by Meaghan Strimas
(Exile). Collecting the poetry of a Canadian poetry treasure, 21 years after her death in this brand new career-spanning edition. Read
TDR's new interview with Meaghan Strimas.
27. Hagiography
by Jen Currin (Coach House). These poems push
life’s barely hidden strangeness into the light, and present thought
as a bright, emotionally complex event. In Hagiography, mind and sense
and the world they move through are interwoven to create a mysterious,
familiar, vexing and continuously fascinating human drama.
28.
Concertina by Susan Winemaker (Simon &
Schuster). A memoir in three parts, Concertina spans five years of the
author's life as she makes the extraordinary transition from culinary
expert to professional dominatrix. Taking the reader into the secret,
hidden world of suburban sado–masochism, Toronto-bred Winemaker
introduces readers to an array of colourful characters, before breaking
the code of domination: falling in love with a client.
Nathaniel G. Moore is TDR’s features editor.
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