Books

Josiah Neufeld believes faith can be driving force in environmental activism

Ben Sigurdson 6 minute read Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDT

Josiah 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.)

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New in paper

1 minute read Preview

New in paper

1 minute read Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

Woke Up This Morning: The Definitive Oral History of The Sopranos

By Michael Imperioli and Steve Schirripa with Philip Lerman (HarperCollins, $29)

The former Sopranos stars (and hosts of the Talking Sopranos podcast) chat with fellow cast members and crew from the hit HBO mobster series.

Hey, Good Luck Out There

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Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

Woke Up This Morning

History and humanization unfold in 'Haida Manga'

Brenna Owen, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview

History and humanization unfold in 'Haida Manga'

Brenna Owen, The Canadian Press 4 minute read 3:00 AM CDT

On a ship with torn sails, tossed by churning waters, the first of many Europeans needing rescue arrives along the coast of what is now British Columbia, before a Haida canoe brings an outstretched paddle and the warm light of salvation.

So begins the latest book of "Haida Manga" by artist and author Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas, as he reaches into the history of his own family and of colonization in a work that blends Indigenous artistic influences with Japanese manga comic-book story telling.

The colourful watercolour panels of "JAJ: a Haida Manga" leap off the page as they draw the audience inside the world-spanning story.

Released in May, the book traces the journeys of both Yahgulanaas's ancestors and the eponymous Norwegian mariner Johan Adrian Jacobsen, who visited Haida Gwaii in 1882 in search of cultural items for a German museum during a time of escalating colonial violence against Indigenous Peoples.

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3:00 AM CDT

Author of "JAJ: A Haida Manga" Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas is shown along with the cover of the book in this combination handout image. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO, Karolina Turek, Douglas & McIntyre *MANDATORY CREDIT*

St. Boniface-born Greenpeace co-founder fondly remembered in essay collection

Reviewed by Douglas J. Johnston 3 minute read Preview

St. Boniface-born Greenpeace co-founder fondly remembered in essay collection

Reviewed by Douglas J. Johnston 3 minute read Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

Robert (“Bob”) Hunter is an undeservedly unheralded figure in Manitoba.

Ontario has twice honoured the pioneering environmental activist and co-founder of Greenpeace in its landscapes.

It created the 400-acre Bob Hunter Memorial Park in the greater Toronto area. And Toronto city council later named a 17-hectare municipal park near Scarborough Bob Hunter Greenspace.

But the native son of St. Boniface, who got his start as a reporter for the Winnipeg Tribune, has nada here to recognize him.

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Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

The Canadian Press files

In this 1976 photo, Greenpeace co-founder Bob Hunter addresses a crowd of 2,000 supporters in Vancouver at a rally following the Greenpeace VII anti-whaling expedition.

David Sedaris’ first children’s book, ‘Pretty Ugly,’ to be published next February

The Associated Press 2 minute read Preview

David Sedaris’ first children’s book, ‘Pretty Ugly,’ to be published next February

The Associated Press 2 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 5:10 PM CDT

NEW YORK (AP) — David Sedaris is publishing his first children's book, a collaboration with Ian Falconer conceived decades ago and finished shortly before the “Olivia” creator died in March.

Toon Books, an imprint of Astra Publishing House, announced Thursday that “Pretty Ugly” will be published Feb. 27 of next year. A look at the “age-old question” of what makes people attractive or unattractive, “Pretty Ugly” began 20 years ago as a contribution to the anthology “Little Lit: Strange Stories for Strange Kids.”

More recently, Toon publisher Françoise Mouly, who helped edit “Little Lit,” thought "Pretty Ugly" would work as a stand-alone book.

“With the systematic attacks so-called conservatives are leveling on all those they see as deviant or even just different, it felt urgent to publish a tale with such a clear moral center,” Mouly said in a statement. “David and Ian agreed and earlier this year, we finalized the editing and design, prepping it for spring 2024 publication. A few weeks before he died, I sent Ian the dummy and — in true Ian style — he remarked, “this looks great. I can’t wait to see it bound ... and gagged.'”

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Updated: Yesterday at 5:10 PM CDT

David Sedaris attends the PEN America Literary Awards at The Town Hall on Thursday, March 2, 2023, in New York. Sedaris is publishing his first children’s book, a collaboration with Ian Falconer conceived decades ago and finished shortly before the “Olivia” creator died in March. Toon Books, an imprint of Astra Publishing House, announced Thursday that “Pretty Ugly” will be published Feb. 27 next year. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP)

Pandemic pursuit of wonder delights

Reviewed by Vanessa Warne 4 minute read Preview

Pandemic pursuit of wonder delights

Reviewed by Vanessa Warne 4 minute read Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

Subtitles do a lot of heavy lifting for authors of non-fiction. Though they dutifully wait their turn, making their appearance in self-effacingly small fonts, subtitles share what the would-be reader needs to know.

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Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

Enchantment

Indigo's Reisman retiring, four directors leave

Christopher Reynolds, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Preview

Indigo's Reisman retiring, four directors leave

Christopher Reynolds, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Wednesday, Jun. 7, 2023

Nearly half the board of Indigo Books and Music Inc. is stepping down — including founder and executive chair Heather Reisman — in a stunning announcement that saw one director allege poor leadership and treatment.

Reisman, who built Indigo into Canada's biggest bookstore chain over a quarter-century, said she will retire this summer.

More immediate is the resignation of four other directors, including Dr. Chika Stacy Oriuwa. Appointed to the board in 2020, Oriuwa stepped down "because of her loss of confidence in board leadership and because of mistreatment," Indigo said in a release Wednesday.

The company provided no explanation for the departures of the three other directors — Frank Clegg, Howard Grosfield and Anne Marie O'Donovan — who collectively had served on the board for 40 years.

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Wednesday, Jun. 7, 2023

An Indigo bookstore is seen Wednesday, November 4, 2020 in Laval, Que. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ryan Remiorz

American Roger Reeves wins Griffin Poetry Prize

Nicole Thompson, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview

American Roger Reeves wins Griffin Poetry Prize

Nicole Thompson, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Wednesday, Jun. 7, 2023

TORONTO - When Roger Reeves was named the winner of this year's Griffin Poetry Prize on Wednesday night, his head fell to his hands and his mind went blank.

The Austin, Texas-based writer was awarded the $130,000 honour at a ceremony in Toronto for his collection "Best Barbarian," which jurors praised for charting "ruptures and violences enacted across time and space — particularly against Black humanity."

It took a beat for thoughts to return to Reeves after he heard his book's name called out, he said. But when they did, he thought of his people.

"This is for my people. For my people, and for my people over the centuries, people that have fought, that have bled, that have worked, and people that have danced, that have enjoyed," he said in a brief interview after the ceremony.

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Wednesday, Jun. 7, 2023

Poets swap books of poetry during the PoemCity opening reception at Kellogg Hubbard Library, in Montpelier, Vt., Saturday, April 1, 2023. The winner of the Griffin Poetry Prize is set to be announced at an event at Toronto's Koerner Hall this evening. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP-Lisa Rathke

US-Apple-Books-Top-10

The Associated Press 2 minute read Preview

US-Apple-Books-Top-10

The Associated Press 2 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 6, 2023

Top 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)

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Tuesday, Jun. 6, 2023

Top 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

The Associated Press 2 minute read Preview

The top 10 audiobooks on Audible.com

The Associated Press 2 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 6, 2023

Nonfiction

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)

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Tuesday, Jun. 6, 2023

Nonfiction

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

Donna Edwards, The Associated Press 3 minute read Preview

Book Review: Elliot Page’s timely debut memoir ‘Pageboy’ is powerful, humanizing

Donna Edwards, The Associated Press 3 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 6, 2023

"Pageboy" by Elliot Page (Flatiron Books)

Look, I admire Elliot Page as much as the next LGBTQ+ person and was swooning just as hard over this incredible cover and the mystery around the hush-hush book with the super-private advanced copies. In the end, it didn’t live up to the hype.

But it’s better that it doesn’t, because it humanizes the larger-than-life subject.

“Pageboy,” the highly anticipated debut memoir from trans actor, director and producer Elliot Page, begins by warning that the book follows a nonlinear narrative “because queerness is intrinsically nonlinear.” The story flits from memory to memory, following a thread that crisscrosses his life in all its comedy and tragedy and mundanity. There are awkward teen parties, wild surprise car-chase stunts and kids kicking the soccer ball around the yard.

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Tuesday, Jun. 6, 2023

This cover image released by Flatiron Books shows "Pageboy" by Elliot Page. (Flatiron Books via AP)

Book Review: Pulitzer-winning cartoonist Darrin Bell pens powerful graphic memoir ‘The Talk’

Donna Edwards, The Associated Press 3 minute read Preview

Book Review: Pulitzer-winning cartoonist Darrin Bell pens powerful graphic memoir ‘The Talk’

Donna Edwards, The Associated Press 3 minute read Monday, Jun. 5, 2023

“The Talk” by Darrin Bell (Henry Holt & Company)

Seeing the other children at the park playing with water guns, Darrin asks his mom for one. Her immediate response: No.

Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist Darrin Bell’s graphic memoir “The Talk” begins around age 6, when his mom first has “the talk” with him — the one about racism, fear and police brutality and the reason he can't have a realistic water gun like the other kids. It follows him into adulthood, when he is confronted with having the talk with his own son.

The result is a thought-provoking memoir beautifully rendered in expressive artwork for a powerful piece that’s easy to devour but harder to digest.

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Monday, Jun. 5, 2023

This cover image released by Henry Holt shows "The Talk" by Darrin Bell. (Henry Holt via AP)

Book Review: ‘Mozart in Motion’ by Patrick Mackie seeks to bring composer to life in new ways

Krysta Fauria, The Associated Press 2 minute read Preview

Book Review: ‘Mozart in Motion’ by Patrick Mackie seeks to bring composer to life in new ways

Krysta Fauria, The Associated Press 2 minute read Monday, Jun. 5, 2023

“Mozart in Motion: His Work and His World in Pieces” by Patrick Mackie (Macmillan Publishers).

Writing a biography of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart nowadays is no easy task. The daunting list of predecessors, which spans centuries, who have already undertaken the assignment complicates any efforts to find unique angles and inroads through which to tell the composer’s story.

But Patrick Mackie exploits his background in both poetry and academia in an effort to bring Mozart to life in new ways.

In addition to relying on letters and extant accounts for “Mozart in Motion: His Work and His World in Pieces,” Mackie also incorporates academic theory and philosophical reflections on how we collectively experience music today into his thematically organized biography. The result is still a familiar portrait of Mozart, but one that is painted in new colors.

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Monday, Jun. 5, 2023

This cover image released by FSG shows "Mozart in Motion: His Work and His World in Pieces" by Patrick Mackie. (FSG via AP)

Book Review: ‘George,’ a memoir by Frieda Hughes, is about saving and being saved by a wild bird

Ann Levin, The Associated Press 3 minute read Preview

Book Review: ‘George,’ a memoir by Frieda Hughes, is about saving and being saved by a wild bird

Ann Levin, The Associated Press 3 minute read Monday, Jun. 5, 2023

“George: A Magpie Memoir,” by Frieda Hughes (Avid Reader Press)

Frieda Hughes in an English poet and painter who has built a following on birding Instagram (@friedahughes) with her beguiling videos of owls. She has also written several children’s books and a weekly poetry column for The Times of London. Yet she has spent much of her life living in the shadow of her world-famous parents, the poets Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath.

In her new book, “George: A Magpie Memoir,” her first work of nonfiction, Hughes recounts the nearly two years she spent caring for an injured baby magpie — a “tiny, feathered scrap” — at her ramshackle estate some 200 miles from London — and how it helped her come to terms with her traumatic legacy.

On one level, it is an expert bit of nature writing, akin to a David Attenborough documentary. But on another level, it is a psychologically profound investigation of how George, her other animals, and the extensive gardens she cultivates on an acre of land in the Welsh countryside give her the “stability and sense of permanence” that she lacked as a child.

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Monday, Jun. 5, 2023

This cover image released by Avid Reader Press shows "George: A Magpie Memoir" by Frieda Hughes. (Avid Reader Press via AP)

How much of themselves do writers reveal in a poem?

Nicole Thompson, The Canadian Press 7 minute read Preview

How much of themselves do writers reveal in a poem?

Nicole Thompson, The Canadian Press 7 minute read Monday, Jun. 5, 2023

TORONTO - All five poets shortlisted for the Griffin Poetry Prize this year write in the first person, oftentimes about their lives. But they say it would be a mistake to take their work as non-fiction.

Below, The Canadian Press asked the nominees — along with the winner of the Griffin's First Canadian Book prize — to reflect on the role of the "self" in poetry.

Ada Limon, nominated for "The Hurting Kind"

The Canadian Press: How do you decide how much of yourself to show in a poem?

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Monday, Jun. 5, 2023

Iman Mersal is shown in a handout photo. All five poets shortlisted for the Griffin Poetry Prize this year write in the first person, oftentimes about their lives. But they say it would be a mistake to take their work as non-fiction. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Griffin Poetry Prize **MANDATORY CREDIT**

Canadian pair among finalists for Griffin poetry prize

Bob Armstrong 4 minute read Preview

Canadian pair among finalists for Griffin poetry prize

Bob Armstrong 4 minute read Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

Two 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.

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Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

Two 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

Reviewed by Jess Woolford 3 minute read Preview

Beauty, joy found in encounters with nature

Reviewed by Jess Woolford 3 minute read Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

As even the longest life is short compared with that of the great, wheeling universe, Jean-François Beauchemin “strives to… balance this brevity… by way of joy… or otherwise the seeking of beauty.”

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Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

Archives of Joy

Courtroom thriller a mysterious masterclass

Reviewed by Nick Martin 3 minute read Preview

Courtroom thriller a mysterious masterclass

Reviewed by Nick Martin 3 minute read Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

Seattle lawyer Keera Duggan reckons her zillionaire hunky client isn’t guilty, maybe, as she doggedly preps for her first murder trial... but he still gives her a case of the serious creeps.

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Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

Professor, student come to terms with love and loss in Kang’s new novel

Reviewed by Jessie Taylor 4 minute read Preview

Professor, student come to terms with love and loss in Kang’s new novel

Reviewed by Jessie Taylor 4 minute read Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

Han Kang’s latest novel Greek Lessons is far more than a simple retelling of the age-old student-falls-in-love-with-their-professor trope. Instead, what she crafts is an intimate look into the lives of two people trying to find solace in the study of language as they navigate a world that is slowly slipping from their grip.

Set in Seoul (the city Kang calls home), a woman finds herself dealing with an egregious amount of loss. Her mother has recently passed, her ex-husband has gained full custody over her young son and she has lost her ability to speak. Having lost her speech once before as a teenager, and finding it returned to her by learning a new language, she attempts the same by joining a class on ancient Greek.

Her professor takes notice of her silence and solemn demeanour, reminded of a previous lover who was deaf. When his attempts to communicate with her through sign language fail, he seems to give up, though curiosity remains on either side: “There are times when they look at each other without speaking. Waiting for the lessons to begin… Little by little, his face became familiar to her,” Kang writes.

We learn that he too is experiencing a loss. That loss is of a strong cultural identity — his childhood having been split between South Korea and Germany — and the rapidly impending loss of his sight.

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Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

Paik Dahuim photo

At times, Han Kang’s novel reads less like a romance and more like a piece of philosophy as she explores the way language and loss affect one’s perception.

Métis women’s struggles span generations

Reviewed by Kathryne Cardwell 3 minute read Preview

Métis women’s struggles span generations

Reviewed by Kathryne Cardwell 3 minute read Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

Beautifully crafted and deeply moving, Manitoba-born, Newfoundland and Labrador-based Métis author Michelle Porter’s debut novel is a testament to the strength of Métis women.

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Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

A Grandmother Begins the Story

Floridian trio look to right the wrongs of the past in Jones’ evocative new novel

Reviewed by Wendy Sawatzky 4 minute read Preview

Floridian trio look to right the wrongs of the past in Jones’ evocative new novel

Reviewed by Wendy Sawatzky 4 minute read Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

Pebble & Dove is a story built around the generational relationships of women and the choices they make in attempting to right the wrongs of their mothers.

Canadian author Amy Jones’ third novel is told from the perspective of multiple characters, a narrative structure she also employed effectively in her 2016 debut We’re All In This Together and sophomore effort Every Little Piece of Me.

As in her earlier novels, Jones shows a particular mastery for setting a scene, bringing a Florida trailer park for retirees so vividly to life that the reader can feel the humidity, hear the cicadas and see the “chain restaurants and gun shops and laser-hair removal clinics… condo towers rising up between scrubs of palmettos, huge pines dripping with Spanish moss, vultures perched in their upper branches.”

Much of the action in the novel quirkily takes place in the Florida Keys aboard a 19th-century sailing ship turned into a tourist-trap aquarium, its main attraction a manatee named Pebble. (This appears to be loosely based on the real-life Miami Aquarium and Tackle Company and its manatee Snooty who, like Pebble, was born on a sailing ship converted into an aquarium in the 1930s and lived decades in captivity.)

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Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

Pamela Crichton / Ten West Photography

Amy Jones once again proves a master of setting a scene, in this case a trailer park for retirees and a 19th-century ship turned tourist trap in Florida.

Deep-space mystery morphs into horror

David Pitt 4 minute read Preview

Deep-space mystery morphs into horror

David Pitt 4 minute read Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

David 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.

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Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

David 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

Reviewed by Susan Huebert 3 minute read Preview

Executive’s early plight in Sri Lanka influential

Reviewed by Susan Huebert 3 minute read Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

Every family’s legacy can be mixed, whether due to strained relationships, major or minor disagreements, external factors or some combination of issues. In his memoir Prisoner #1056: How I Survived War and Found Peace, Roy Ratnavel relates how his background as a Tamil man from Sri Lanka, and particularly his relationship with his father, influenced his later life and his determination to succeed in his new life.

Ratnavel grew up in Sri Lanka during a period of intense persecution of the Tamil people in that country. He became a political prisoner at the age of 17 before immigrating to Canada, where he worked at a variety of jobs before becoming an executive at CI International, Canada’s largest asset management company. Currently, he lives with his wife and son in Toronto. Prisoner #1056 is his first book.

In Prisoner #1056, Ratnavel tells the story of his early years in Sri Lanka where, as a teenager, he was rounded up together with other Tamils, taken to prison and tortured before being released three months later through the intervention of a family friend. The author’s father insisted on getting his son to Canada to give him a better life and the chance to flourish.

Only a short section of the book deals with the author’s imprisonment, but it establishes Ratnavel’s sense of obligation to work hard and thus justify his father’s decision. When he learned his father was shot and killed only days after Ratnavel’s departure, it gave the author an added incentive to do well in his new country.

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Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

Prisoner #1056

Hanks’ colossal cast of characters provides inside look at movie magic

Reviewed by Craig Terlson 5 minute read Preview

Hanks’ colossal cast of characters provides inside look at movie magic

Reviewed by Craig Terlson 5 minute read Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

Chances are you’ve heard of Tom Hanks — movie actor, director, producer, global icon and collector of vintage typewriters. As it turns out, you can now add novelist to that list — actually, surprisingly good novelist.

The Making of Another Major Motion Picture Masterpiece, Hanks’ second book (after his short-story collection, 2017’s Uncommon Type), is not without flaws, including a too-long title which, in a way, points to its excess — though the book holds many surprises.

There have been recent novels that weave together a myriad of characters over different time periods, such as Jennifer Egan’s excellent The Candy House, from last year. Hanks amps up the concept by dipping into the mindset of dozens of players. To say it’s an ensemble cast doesn’t do it justice.

Egan’s book followed minor characters and expanded their story by showing their lives and motivations. Hanks does a similar thing, but goes a bit too far. Upon meeting a new character, you start to worry if the next chapter will follow them back to conception, which in fact happens more than once.

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Saturday, Jun. 3, 2023

Jordan Strauss / The Associated Press Files

Tom Hanks’ passion for storytelling is evident in his new novel, and readers may come away from the book wishing the film portrayed in the book actually existed.

Jasmine Sealy wins Amazon Canada First Novel Award

The Canadian Press 1 minute read Preview

Jasmine Sealy wins Amazon Canada First Novel Award

The Canadian Press 1 minute read Thursday, Jun. 1, 2023

TORONTO - An intergenerational saga about a family that runs a beachfront hotel has won the Amazon Canada First Novel Award.

Jasmine Sealy took home the $60,000 prize for "The Island of Forgetting."

The book, which is loosely inspired by Greek mythology, follows four generations of the family as they grapple with their past and try to shape their future.

The Vancouver-based Sealy was awarded the prize at an event at The Globe and Mail Centre in Toronto on Wednesday evening.

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Thursday, Jun. 1, 2023

Jasmine Sealy has won the Amazon Canada First Novel Award for "The Island of Forgetting." Sealy is shown in this undated handout photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Ben Gardere *MANDATORY CREDIT*

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