Books
Josiah Neufeld believes faith can be driving force in environmental activism
6 minute read Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDTJosiah Neufeld wants to believe the human race will do the right thing when it comes to saving the planet from ourselves.
He also believes there’s a higher power that has shaped our world and those who live on it.
Finding an intersection in his own life between faith and the facts about our climate crisis spurred the 42-year-old journalist to write his first book, The Temple at the End of the Universe: A Search for Spirituality in the Anthropocene. Published on June 6 by House of Anansi, Neufeld launches the book tonight at 7 p.m. at McNally Robinson Booksellers’ Grant Park location, where he’ll be joined in conversation with novelist Joan Thomas (Five Wives).
The child of Christian missionaries, Neufeld spent the first few years of his life in Burkina Faso before his family moved back to Blumenort. (He now lives in Winnipeg with his partner and two children.)
Advertisement
Weather


Winnipeg MB
16°C, Mainly clear

New in paper
1 minute read Preview Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023History and humanization unfold in 'Haida Manga'
4 minute read Preview 3:00 AM CDTSt. Boniface-born Greenpeace co-founder fondly remembered in essay collection
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023David Sedaris’ first children’s book, ‘Pretty Ugly,’ to be published next February
2 minute read Preview Updated: Yesterday at 5:10 PM CDTPandemic pursuit of wonder delights
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023Indigo's Reisman retiring, four directors leave
3 minute read Preview Wednesday, Jun. 7, 2023American Roger Reeves wins Griffin Poetry Prize
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Jun. 7, 2023US-Apple-Books-Top-10
2 minute read Preview Tuesday, Jun. 6, 2023Top Paid Books (US Bestseller List):
1. Cherishby Tracy Wolff - 9781649373175 - (Entangled Publishing, LLC)
2. Identity by Nora Roberts - 9781250284327 - (St. Martin’s Publishing Group)
3. Happy Place by Emily Henry - 9780593441206 - (Penguin Publishing Group)
The top 10 audiobooks on Audible.com
2 minute read Preview Tuesday, Jun. 6, 2023Nonfiction
1. Atomic Habits by James Clear, narrated by the author (Penguin Audio)
2. Outlive by Peter Attia, MD and Bill Gifford - contributor, narrated by Peter Attia, MD (Random House Audio)
3. Spare by Prince Harry, The Duke of Sussex, narrated by the author (Random House Audio)
Book Review: Elliot Page’s timely debut memoir ‘Pageboy’ is powerful, humanizing
3 minute read Preview Tuesday, Jun. 6, 2023Book Review: Pulitzer-winning cartoonist Darrin Bell pens powerful graphic memoir ‘The Talk’
3 minute read Preview Monday, Jun. 5, 2023Book Review: ‘Mozart in Motion’ by Patrick Mackie seeks to bring composer to life in new ways
2 minute read Preview Monday, Jun. 5, 2023Book Review: ‘George,’ a memoir by Frieda Hughes, is about saving and being saved by a wild bird
3 minute read Preview Monday, Jun. 5, 2023How much of themselves do writers reveal in a poem?
7 minute read Preview Monday, Jun. 5, 2023Canadian pair among finalists for Griffin poetry prize
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023Two Canadians are on the short list for the revamped Griffin Poetry Prize, including a professor of Arabic literature at the University of Alberta.
Iman Mersal’s poetry collection The Threshold, translated to English by Robyn Creswell, is on the short list along with Exculpatory Lies, by B.C. poet Susan Musgrave.
The rest of the books in the running for the $130,000 prize, all by American authors, are The Hurting Kind, by Ada Limon; Best Barbarian, by Roger Reeves; and Time is a Mother, by Ocean Vuong. The winner will be announced Wednesday.
Last fall, the Griffin board announced it was switching from a Canadian-only prize to an international one and bumped up the prize money accordingly.
Beauty, joy found in encounters with nature
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023Courtroom thriller a mysterious masterclass
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023Professor, student come to terms with love and loss in Kang’s new novel
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023Métis women’s struggles span generations
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023Floridian trio look to right the wrongs of the past in Jones’ evocative new novel
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023Deep-space mystery morphs into horror
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023David Wellington has written some fine horror novels: Monster Island, Thirteen Bullets, Frostbite. He’s also published some excellent science fiction: Forbidden Skies and its sequels (written as D. Nolan Clark) and The Last Astronaut. In his new novel Paradise-1 (Orbit, 688 pages, $24), he combines the genres.
What begins as a science fiction story — Alexandra Petrova, an agent for a policing group called Firewatch, is sent on a mission to the deep-space Colony Paradise-1, which has mysteriously gone silent — shades into horror when, unexpectedly, her ship comes under attack from a vessel that appears to have been stripped of human life.
But the situation is much worse than that.
It takes guts to put a monster story inside a science-fiction novel, and Wellington pulls it off spectacularly.
Executive’s early plight in Sri Lanka influential
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023Hanks’ colossal cast of characters provides inside look at movie magic
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023Jasmine Sealy wins Amazon Canada First Novel Award
1 minute read Preview Thursday, Jun. 1, 2023LOAD MORE