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Butler 2. Chief Clarence Louie on his motorcycle

Honouring the sacred river

“I had been helping Craig with his book. It also happened that my wife and I had plans to visit the Okanagan for a week in September which corresponded with the dates for the 2025 Okanagan Columbia run. I was very eager to be introduced to Chief Clarence and perhaps even hang out.” Richard Butler reflects on his time attending the 2025 Salmon Feast.

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‘A statement worth making’

Part pop music meditation, part memoir, a poetry-and-prose hybrid offers “an authentic glimpse into Michael Turner’s roots and perspective through a lens that only Turner can provide.” With that said, some of the author’s techniques and choices raise questions for our reviewer. —Joe Enns reviews Playlist: A Profligacy of Your Least-Expected Poems, by Michael Turner (Vancouver: Anvil Press, 2024) $20.00 / 9781772142280

Lester 3. feature cover Partisans

Using art to fight fascism

“These stories of resistance need to be shared to help understand the breadth of depravity of fascism and its impact that can evolve under unchecked hate and power. Rather than “fascism” being an abstract word or slogan, it becomes visceral when told as a story using sequential art.” David Lester writes an essay telling of how, “as the creeping noose of modern-day fascism encircles us, I found myself drawing a story from 80 years ago.” Partisans: A Graphic History of Anti-Fascist Resistance, by Raymond Tyler & Paul Buhle (eds.) (Toronto: Between the Lines, 2025) $34.95 / 9781771136525

Rogers 1. MUTTON_FINAL_Cover_2nd printing_PRESS copy

‘Representative of a sacred art’

“Liz Hammond-Kaarremaa begins with a conversation about her discovery and research into the one empirical example of an ancient practice, the raising of almost but not quite domestic animals who lived in isolation to protect them from inbreeding and physical damage, animals bred to provide the weft in essential weavings.” Linda Rogers reviews The Teachings of Mutton: A Coast Salish Woolly Dog, by Liz Hammond-Kaarremaa et al (Madeira Park: Harbour Publishing, 2025) $36.95 / 9781998526024

Hawking the Surf Diana Hayes Cover Reveal Nov2025

‘My journal nearly lost / remembering’

With “roots in the tradition of West Coast poetry that sprang up in the 1970s,” a photo-illustrated volume of poems sings the wondrous nuances of nature while also reflecting on the poet’s own history. —Harold Rhenisch reviews Hawking the Surf, by Diana Hayes (Vancouver: Silver Bow Publishing, 2025) $23.95 / 9781774033890

Scott 4. feature cover Perfect Day

Strolls that stimulate

“A Perfect Day for a Walk by the Water is an excellent example of the mix of observation, reflection, interpretation, and rich language that brings Bill’s books onto the bestseller list time after time.” Marianne Scott reviews A Perfect Day for a Walk by the Water: Exploring Vancouver’s Shores, by Bill Arnott (Vancouver: Arsenal Pulp Press, 2025) $24.95 / 9781834050201

Melancholy and gratitude

A slim debut volume of poems is by turns elegiac and allusive. And—whether focussed on a widow’s grief, a wife of Henry VIII, or rain in Tofino—it roves widely as well. —Isabella Ranallo reviews Portraits, by Lacey Jones (N.p.: Nerdy Kat Books, 2025) $14.36 / 9780986120886

Fisher 3. feature cover Histories Kitwancool

‘This book represented reconciliation’

“‘The authors of this book are the Kitwancool themselves…’ was the first line of the introduction when this book was first published in 1959. It was also, at that time, hugely significant. The line was written by Wilson Duff, the senior anthropologist at the British Columbia Provincial Museum, whose vision and patience had produced the book even though he made it clear that he was not the author. It was significant because, when First Nations voices told their own stories, usually they were not heard and they seldom appeared in print. In its time this book was, in the words of another Provincial Museum anthropologist, a ‘brilliant move.’ It was an example of reconciliation before its time.” Robin Fisher reviews Histories, Territories and Laws of the Kitwancool by Gitanyow Hereditary Chiefs (edited and with an introduction by Wilson Duff)(Victoria: Royal BC Museum, second edition, 2022) $19.95 / 9780772680327

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A ‘strange and heady mix’

A “first novel from an author short-listed for the Giller Prize … is an extraordinary work—inventive, eclectic, heartfelt, playful, angry, often brilliantly written, mingling myth and actuality, with characters waking from various ‘dreams’ into various realities.” —Harvey De Roo reviews Variations on a Dream, by Angélique Lalonde (Toronto: McClelland and Stewart, 2026) $26.95 / 9780771012600

Labonte-Smith 3. books up for awards

‘Be anything but boring’

“Think of all the books that live in our heads that never become books or only make it to a few chapters on paper before they’re abandoned due to life’s interruptions. That makes it all the more exciting when a completed, edited, published book takes its place on bookshelves both physical and digital and has your name on it.” In advance of the entry period for the 2026 SCWES Book Contest, Cathalynn Labonté-Smith starts off her latest essay with “any book that gets written is a miracle.”

Verzuh 3. War Resisters Feature nCover V1 Max copy

Resisters united

“In this intimate account, Comox Valley writer Joline Martin uniquely focuses on the draft resisters who came to Vancouver Island and became Canadians.” Ron Verzuh reviews War Resisters: Standing Against the Vietnam War, by Joline Martin (Qualicum Beach: Caitlin Press, 2025) $26 / 9781773861685

trainor cover

[ book excerpt: eco-poetics ]

“Grandmother Tree, Grandfather Tree,” an excerpt from Blue thinks itself within me: Lyric Poetry, Ecology, and Lichenous Form, by Kim Trainor (Regina: U Regina Press, 2026) $27.95 / 9781779401205

Anonuevo 3 Curve feature cover

Relationships shaping artistic practice

“Each of the artists portrayed in the book–like a unique piece of wood, bone, or argillite they carve–teaches us something significant about their communities, their clans, and their personal histories.” Christine Añonuevo reviews Curve! Women Carvers on the Northwest Coast, curated by Dana Claxton and Curtis Collins (Vancouver: Figure 1 Publishing, 2024) $45 / 9781773272542

Green 3. feature cover They Never Left Me

Before, during, and after war

“…the memoir They Never Left Me, written by a Holocaust survivor, Evelyn Kahn, assisted by her daughter Hodie Kahn, is very different and extremely powerful.” Valerie Green reviews They Never Left Me: A Holocaust Memoir of Maternal Courage and Triumph, by Evelyn Kahn with Hodie Kahn (Vancouver: Ronsdale Press, 2025) $22.95 / 9781553807322

Kaboom big

‘What a commotion!’

A Vancouver author’s debut novel, a kind of ‘cozy spy thriller comedy’ set in the England of the ’60s, is a paradoxical offering—at once too much and not enough. —Brett Josef Grubisic reviews The Queens of Kaboom, by Martin Butler (Cambridge: Pegasus Publishers, 2025) $26.99 / 9781836710257

Brown 3. feature cover Coastal Connections copy

A progression on the water

“BC Ferries indeed proved very popular from the beginning. In fact, the corporation underestimated its popularity. By 1965, seven larger ships were added, all basically the same design, plus three smaller ships for the inter-island routes. By 1970, five million passengers had been carried. By 1979, that number had doubled. Routes had been added, terminals built. Even larger ships were called for.” Steven Brown reviews Coastal Connections: A History of British Columbia Ferries and Passenger Ships, by Derek Hayes (Madeira Park: Harbour Publishing, 2025) $50 / 9781998526383

Farrant excerpt cover

[ book excerpt: memoir ]

“Little Brown Birds” and “Someone,” excerpts from Seventy-Two Seasons: A Memoir About Noticing, by M.A.C. Farrant (Vancouver: Ronsdale Press, 2026) $22.95 / 9781553807438

Johnson-Dean 3. feature cover Painting Victoria copy

‘The vistas can be breathtaking’

“Amos has been clear about his purpose. ‘Because my work is first and foremost, of local interest, I did not pursue gallery representation. As it is unabashedly old-fashioned, I never bothered to try for government grants. My goal has been to create paintings, which people will like, and which will become part of the life of the community.'” Christina Johnson-Dean reviews Painting Victoria: Fifty Years of Memories From a City by The Sea, by Robert Amos (Victoria: TouchWood Editions, 2025) $30 / 9781771514873

Levenson 4. feature image Scrabble letters in box copy

You know what I mean?

“Apart from inveterate crossword puzzlers or Scrabblers, most of us get by with a tiny fraction of the words that could be available. In conversation people often say ‘you know what I mean?’ and for the most part we do, more or less, but for people such as teachers, lawyers, journalists, and writers, who use language professionally, ‘more or less’ isn’t good enough.” In the essay The world’s favourite second language, regular contributor Christopher Levenson asks the question: What is the language?

Reid 3. feature cover mamala goes fishing

An education on the boat

“Haig-Brown has said for many years that his 13 years in the fishing fleet educated him every bit as much as his going to university to prepare for being a writer in his life…” DC Reid reviews Raincoast Chronicles 25 – m̓am̓aɫa Goes Fishing, by Alan Haig-Brown (Madeira Park: Harbour Publishing, 2025) $24.95 / 9781998526185

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