ESTATES LARGE AND SMALL, TRY NOT TO BE STRANGE, QUERELLE OF ROBERVAL: Features and Reviews!

IN THE NEWS

ESTATES LARGE AND SMALL

Estates Large and Small (August 16, 2022) by Ray Robertson was reviewed in Shelf Awareness! The review was posted online on June 24, 2022. You can read the full review here.

Reviewer Harvey Freedenberg writes,

“A warmhearted and unconventional love story that’s also an opportunity for a gentle encounter with some of life’s fundamental questions … With Phil’s droll humor and world-weary cynicism, and Caroline’s clear-eyed determination to live her final days on her own terms, the two make for an appealing couple. Like the philosophers they encounter, Estates Large and Small only hints at answers to life’s deepest mysteries, but it’s a wise reminder that the journey is really the point.”

Order your copy of Estates Large and Small here!

TRY NOT TO BE STRANGE

Try Not to Be Strange: The Curious History of the Kingdom of Redonda (September 13, 2022) by Michael Hingston has been featured in the summer edition of the Literary Review of Canada! Editor-in-Chief Kyle Wyatt frames his editorial note “Without Great Seriousness” around Hingston’s latest book. The edition was published online on June 27, 2022.

Wyatt writes,

“It was with admittedly escapist relief that I greeted the arrival at my desk of Michael Hingston’s forthcoming Try Not to Be Strange: The Curious History of the Kingdom of Redonda.

A writer from Edmonton, Hingston has been nursing an obsession with the tiny Caribbean island of Redonda, christened by Christopher Columbus in 1493 and located midway between Nevis and Montserrat. More specifically, he has found himself transfixed by the uninhabited micro-nation’s absolute monarchy.”

You can read the full note here.

Get your copy of Try Not to Be Strange here!

QUERELLE OF ROBERVAL

Querelle of Roberval (August 2, 2022) by Kevin Lambert, trans. by Donald Winkler has been reviewed in Fugues! The review was posted online on June 24, 2022. You can read the full review here.

Reviewer Benoit Migneault writes,

“The translation by Donald Winkler, who was also responsible for the previous novel, is of the highest quality and once again stands out for its richness and respect of local color … Provocative and deliciously irreverent, the novel can be savored with an almost satisfying pleasure, commensurate with the disproportion of the conflicts and questionings that agitate it.”

Pick up your copy of Querelle of Roberval here!

POGUEMAHONE, A FACTOTUM IN THE BOOK TRADE, SHIMMER, ON DECLINE, CHEMICAL VALLEY: Interviews, Reviews, and Awards!

IN THE NEWS

POGUEMAHONE

Patrick McCabe was interviewed by Neil Wilson for The Ottawa Writers Festival podcast. In the interview, he reads from and discusses Poguemahone (May 3, 2022). The interview was published online on June 8, 2022. You can listen to the full interview here.

In the interview, McCabe says,

“It is not about the Winter of Discontent […] or English politics or Irish troubles […] but it is really about the secret, mysterious currents that govern everything, that we don’t understand.”

Patrick McCabe was also interviewed by Sam Jordison and Lori Feathers on the Across the Pond podcast. In the interview, he reads from and discusses Poguemahone (May 3, 2022). The episode was published online on June 14, 2022. You can listen to the full episode here.

In the interview, McCabe says,

“Often, when you tear things up, some tiny flicker happens. It could be out of a hundred pages, you get a collocation of words or a combination of sentences and something triggers in you: “Ah, that is what the book is about.” And you don’t quite know, but you start writing again. […] The first draft is trying to find out: what is the stone in your shoe?”

Pick up your copy of Poguemahone here!

A FACTOTUM IN THE BOOK TRADE

A Factotum in the Book Trade by Marius Kociejowski (April 26, 2022) has been featured in the “Summer Reads 2022: Books About Books” list in Fine Books & Collections Magazine. The list was published online June 8, 2022, and printed in the June edition. You read the full list here.

Rebecca Rego Barry writes,

“Marius Kociejowski’s A Factotum in the Book Trade (Biblioasis, $18.95) is the wistful memoir of a Cecil Court bookseller who both charms readers with anecdotes about Patti Smith and Martin Stone and also wallops them with statements such as ‘the antiquarian book trade is slowly but surely destroying the antiquarian book trade.’ A Canadian who emigrated to London, Kociejowski plumbs his experiences in the English book trade during the eighties and nineties—the major players and massive changes—and reflects on what is slipping away. He writes, ‘I want dirt; I want chaos; I want, above all, mystery. I want to be able to step into a place and have the sense that there I’ll find a book, as yet unknown to me, which to some degree will change my life.’ Agree.”

A Factotum in the Book Trade by Marius Kociejowski has been reviewed by David Moscrop in the Globe and Mail. The review was published online on June 10, 2022. You read the full review here.

Moscrop writes,

“Reading Marius Kociejowski’s A Factotum in the Book Trade is like walking through an endangered species of bookstore … [It] is cranky, obscure, charming, … and illuminating. It reads like a used bookstore smells. … Go open this book and see where it takes you.”

A Factotum in the Book Trade by Marius Kociejowski has also been reviewed by Laurence Worms, of Ash Rare Books, on his blog: The Bookhunter on Safari. The review was published online on June 10, 2022. Check out the full review here.

Worms writes,

“It is enviably and beautifully written, full of memorable flashes of description, bringing characters to life in a phrase … It is unquestionably the best-written account of the modern rare book trade you could hope to find.”

Pick up your copy of A Factotum in the Book Trade here!

SHIMMER

Alex Pugsley, author of Shimmer (May 17, 2022), was interviewed by Junction Reads for their series, ‘The First Thirty’. The interview was posted online on June 9, 2022. You can watch the full conversation here.

Yesterday on June 14, the launch of Shimmer was held in Toronto at the Ballroom in Gladstone House! There were readings, music, and conversation, and we partnered with Flying Books for book sales.

Pick up your copy of Shimmer here!

ON DECLINE

On Decline cover

Andrew Potter, author of On Decline (October 2021) was interviewed for CBC Ideas with Nahlah Ayed. The episode was published online on June 7, 2022, and was aired on CBC radio the next evening at 8PM ET. You can listen to the full interview here.

Potter tells Ayed,

“I think climate change is an effect of our civilization, but it becomes a problem when you lose the ability to do anything about it.

The argument in the book is that the real nature of our decline is not an event, it’s a process. That is: what have we lost? We’ve lost the ability to fix the problems we face. And I think climate change is the biggest one.”

Grab your copy of On Decline here!

HAIL, THE INVISIBLE WATCHMAN

Alexandra Oliver, author of Hail, the Invisible Watchman (April 5, 2022), was interviewed by Tabassum Siddiqui for CBC Books! The interview was published online on June 7, 2022.

An excerpt from the interview:

“Sometimes a line comes to you, so you take that line and then you model the poem around that. Sometimes it’s like a block of marble and you go in and chip into it, and you shape it into something completely different. But I think it allows for musicality and pleasure and some kind of intrigue—in the best case, the reader can feel a vibration.”

You can read the full interview here.

Get your copy of Hail the Invisible Watchman here!

CHEMICAL VALLEY

Chemical Valley cover

On Thursday, June 9, 2022, it was announced by the Atlantic Book Awards that Chemical Valley by David Huebert (October 19, 2021) won the Alistair MacLeod Prize for Short Fiction! You can watch the full ceremony here, with the Alistair MacLeod Prize presented at 1:03:00.

Here’s what the jury had to say:

“In this courageous collection, David Huebert holds little back as he weaves superbly crafted stories of the dark, difficult, and gritty reality of being human. Whether it be the destructive impact we have on our environment, each other, or ourselves, Huebert tackles this challenge with intelligence and compassion, both in his language and style, and in the empathy with which he portrays the human experience. The intertwining of ugliness, beauty, metallic cold and human warmth, and destruction and hope, creates a visceral, hopeful, and rewarding experience for the reader.”

David Huebert, author of Chemical Valley, was interviewed in an author spotlight on the Writers’ Federation of Nova Scotia website for the Atlantic Book Awards! The spotlight was posted on June 8, 2022.

Huebert told interviewer K.R. Byggdin,

“Oil is the imagistic backdrop of Chemical Valley, but it’s also a book, first and foremost, about struggling people—guilty people, people in crises, hilarious people, people at turning points, sick people, people seeking help. It’s not all doom and gloom, either: there’s joy and love and humour here. I’d like to think everyone can find parts of themself in one or two of these characters.”

You can read the full interview here.

Pick up your copy of Chemical Valley here!

CHEMICAL VALLEY wins the ATLANTIC BOOK AWARDS’ ALISTAIR MACLEOD PRIZE!

Chemical Valley coverBiblioasis is thrilled to share that last night, on Thursday, June 9 at 6:30PM EST, it was announced by the Atlantic Book Awards that Chemical Valley by David Huebert won the Alistair MacLeod Prize for Short Fiction!

The prize for the Alistair MacLeod Prize for Short Fiction is $1000, and celebrates excellent short story collections by writers who are either from the Atlantic Provinces, or live there now.

Here’s what the jury had to say about Chemical Valley:

In this courageous collection, David Huebert holds little back as he weaves superbly crafted stories of the dark, difficult, and gritty reality of being human. Whether it be the destructive impact we have on our environment, each other, or ourselves, Huebert tackles this challenge with intelligence and compassion, both in his language and style, and in the empathy with which he portrays the human experience. The intertwining of ugliness, beauty, metallic cold and human warmth, and destruction and hope, creates a visceral, hopeful, and rewarding experience for the reader.

The other finalists for the Alistair MacLeod Prize were: The Running Trees by Amber McMillan (Goose Lane Editions) and The Love Olympics by Claire Wilkshire (Breakwater Books).

Chemical Valley was also named a finalist for the Thomas Raddall Atlantic Fiction Award. A huge congratulations from all of us to David!

ABOUT CHEMICAL VALLEY

A Thomas Raddall Atlantic Fiction Award Finalist • An Alistair MacLeod Prize for Short Fiction Finalist • A 2022 ReLit Award Finalist • A Siskiyou Prize Semi-Finalist • Miramichi Reader Best Fiction Title of 2021

Out there by the dock the ocean and the air are just layers of shadow and darkness. But the creature’s flesh hums through the dark—a seep of violet in the weeping night.

From refinery operators to long term care nurses, dishwashers to preppers to hockey enforcers, Chemical Valley’s compassionate and carefully wrought stories cultivate rich emotional worlds in and through the dankness of our bio-chemical animacy. Full-hearted, laced throughout with bruised optimism and sincere appreciation of the profound beauty of our wilted, wheezing world, Chemical Valley doesn’t shy away from urgent modern questions—the distribution of toxicity, environmental racism, the place of technoculture in this ecological spasm—but grounds these anxieties in the vivid and often humorous intricacies of its characters’ lives. Swamp-wrought and heartfelt, these stories run wild with vital energy, tilt and teeter into crazed and delirious loves.

David Huebert – cr. Nicola Davison

ABOUT DAVID HUEBERT

David Huebert’s writing has won the CBC Short Story Prize, The Walrus Poetry Prize, and was a finalist for the 2020 Journey Prize. David’s fiction debut, Peninsula Sinking, won a Dartmouth Book Award, was shortlisted for the Alistair MacLeod Short Fiction Prize, and was runner-up for the Danuta Gleed Literary Award. David’s work has been published in magazines such as The Walrus, Maisonneuve, enRoute, and Canadian Notes & Queries, and anthologized in Best Canadian Stories and The Journey Prize Stories. David teaches literature and creative writing at The University of New Brunswick.

Pick up your copy of Chemical Valley from Biblioasis here!

SHIMMER, THE DAY-BREAKERS, A FACTOTUM IN THE BOOK TRADE: Media Hits!

IN THE NEWS

SHIMMER

Shimmer (May 17, 2022) by Alex Pugsley has been reviewed by the Toronto Star! The review was posted online on May 26, 2022. You can read the full review here.

Reviewer Robert Wiersema writes,

“Looking at Shimmer as a whole, one is struck by Pugsley’s mastery of the short-story form, his ability to distil entire lives’ worth of meaning into a few short pages. He’s not just a writer to watch: he’s a writer to savour.”

Steven Beattie also reviewed the story ‘Ordinary Love Song’ from the collection on his blog, That Shakespearean Rag. You can read the full review here.

Beattie writes,

“His story proves that the digital mode of communication, while frequently castigated as impersonal and dehumanizing, can, in the right hands, carry with it strong emotional resonance.”

Get your copy of Shimmer here!

A FACTOTUM IN THE BOOK TRADE

A Factotum in the Book Trade by Marius Kociejowski (April 26, 2022) has been reviewed in the Times Literary Supplement. The article was published online May 25, 2022 and in print on May 27, 2022. You read the full review here.

Henry Hitchings writes,

“A bookseller for half a century, [Kociejowski] has encountered a great many strange and rare items. … Full of curious information … Kociejowski is eloquent about the magic of books, their bindings and associations.”

Get your copy of A Factotum in the Book Trade here!

THE DAY-BREAKERS

Michael Fraser, author of The Day-Breakers (April 5, 2022) was interviewed by Shauna Powers on CBC Saskatchewan Weekend. In the interview he discusses his collection of poems and the CBC Poetry Prize. The episode aired on May 22, 2022, and you can listen to the full interview here.

The Day-Breakers was reviewed by Melanie Brannagan Frederiksen in the Winnipeg Free Press. The review was published online on May 28, 2022. You can read the complete review here.

Frederiksen writes,

“Throughout the collection Fraser uses texture and rhythm to unsettling effect. […] line breaks interrupt the flow of accruing details to hold the reader in the moment of bodily vulnerability as long as possible.”

Get your copy of The Day-Breakers here!