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Novel & short stories

Jellyfish attacks!

Jellies big cover

Debut novel by a Vancouver Island author splices together parody, satire, and an urgent environmental message. Some parts play out far better than others, our reviewer notes. —Kenna Clifford reviews Rise of The Jellies, by Brian Wilford (Altona: Friesen Press, 2025) $28.49 / 9781038322364

[ book excerpt: novel ]

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An excerpt from Lindsay Wong’s Villain Hitting for Vicious Little Nobodies (Toronto: Penguin Canada, 2026) $27.95 / 9780735242418

[ book excerpt: short stories ]

Philip Holden’s “The Strange Machine of Dr Goh,” a story in Heaven Has Eyes (Singapore: Gaudy Boy, 2026), $19.00 / 9781958652220.

Gendered pathologies

Maternal angst, filial contempt: a Freudian field day. (And recommended for the comforts of home: “I made the mistake of reading it on an empty stomach on an unpleasant bus ride while I was already in an overly pensive mood. What Boys Learn is best read with a heating blanket, on a full stomach, ideally with the reassurance of a warm dog curled up near you.) —Jessica Poon reviews What Boys Learn, by Andromeda Romano-Lax (New York: Soho Crime, 2026) $39.95 / 9781641296915

Eyes blinded to danger

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Vancouver-set YA novel relates the dangers of sex traffickers and Snapchat: “The subject material is heavy and dark. If readers are hoping to ignite consciousness and conversations about teen safety on the Internet, however, this is a comprehensive option. The story features authentic characters, vivid examples of how not to use social media, and an unforgiving portrayal of a worst case scenario.” —Isabella Ranallo reviews At Least I’m Trying, by Tara Hodgson (Sturgeon County: Tara Hodgson, 2025) $26.42 / 9781069617705

Things to come?

Darkly clairvoyant, a novel envisions Vancouver in the upcoming midcentury: “It is a thought-provoking, frightening picture of the world along the Corridor, where AI assistants are the norm, where wealth is everywhere, where the Canadian health system is broken and in great jeopardy, and where a social divide between the ‘haves’ and ‘have-nots’ is apparent everywhere.” —Valerie Green reviews Broadway Corridor: The Great Social Divide, by John D’Eathe (Vancouver: Adagio Media, 2025) $21.99 / 9780991993079

Inspirational ‘what if’ moments

Runs in the Blood

In an inventive, queer-forward collection, stories offer “sustained engagements with a common ethical terrain.” The book’s strength “lies in its refusal to simplify moral experience.” —Michael Bigam reviews Runs in the Blood, by Matthew J. Trafford (Vancouver: Arsenal Pulp Press, 2025) $21.95 / 9781834050140

Environmental cause and effect

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Stylish novel, filled with “viscerally descriptive” as well as “beautiful and morose” writing, also struggles to effectively realize some of its conceits. —Kenna Clifford reviews Horsefly, by Mirielle Gagńe (translated by Pablo Strauss) (Toronto: Coach House, 2025) $24.95 / 9781552454992

A ‘fanciful journey of discovery’

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Set in assorted time periods and on land (Australia, Italy) and water (Indian Ocean, Mediterranean Sea), a historical murder mystery is marked by the return of a coolly stylish PI and a cast of striking characters. —Valerie Green reviews The Italian Secret, by Tara Moss (Toronto: HarperCollins Canada, 2025) $25.99 / 9781443461290

More ‘bests’: short fiction

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Although the front pages of the current volume of an annual anthology raise a couple of questions, the stories that follow range wide in theme, style, and tone. They’re impressive too, from start to finish. —Brett Josef Grubisic reviews Best Canadian Stories 2026, selected by Zsuzsi Gartner (Windsor, Biblioasis, 2025) $24.94 / 9781771966788

‘The warrior way’

MEDICINE WALK - Kanata - Book Cover

Reissued 2014 novel recounts a father and son’s journey to a backcountry destination: “In Wagamese’s prose, the descriptions of these places are so skilfully rendered that the ugliness becomes beautiful. In the rhythmic, pulsing language, you can smell the empty bottles, the smoke and ashes, the unwashed bodies, the frying bologna.” —Ryan Frawley reviews Medicine Walk, by Richard Wagamese (Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 2025) $22.00 / 9780771023521

Reviewer picks 2025 (part II)

Pt2

Further selections from BCR’s community of reviewers…
BCR asked some of our regular contributors about books they read in the past year that really stayed with them. Once again, “eclectic” is our word of the year.

Reviewer picks 2025 (part I)

PtIjpg

BCR asked some of our regular contributors about books they read in the past year that really stayed with them. Once again, “eclectic” is our word of the year.

An A+ for gore and yuck

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YA horror set at a spiritual retreat that isn’t: “Structurally impressive, mythologically rich, and recurrently dark, Cheng has carefully infused just enough humour and hope in a novel where it’s easy to root for the good guys.” —Jessica Poon reviews Beautiful Brutal Bodies, by Linda Cheng (Toronto: Listening Library, 2025) $20.99 / 9781250865816

World-building, treachery, romance

The fourth volume of an epic series—with “two branching timelines that have a massive crossover of characters, cities, histories, and wars”—grabs attention for its deft and artful handling of complexity, and for its queer inclusivity. —Myshara McMyn reviews Wake (The Call of the Rift, Book Four), by Jae Waller (Toronto: ECW Press, 2023) $23.95 / 9781770414594

Tech systems, spiritual cosmologies

Phantasmagorical speculative fiction that spans centuries and jumps between dimensions, a novel unfolds as “a bold, evocative exploration of what it means to awaken to one’s purpose in a world shaped by both ancient forces and uncertain futures.” —Raeshelle Pascual reviews A Dream Wants Waking, by Lydia Kwa (Hamilton: Wolsak & Wynn, 2023) $22.00 / 9781989496756

All hail… King Dummkopf?

A satiric tale about the MAGA era is a “lighthearted romp.” And though another facet of the novel—the coming-of-age tale focussed on a miniature dragon and its wizard master—promises a “nuanced development of a father-son type relationship,” the “book seems to lose its way.” —Sheldon Goldfarb reviews We’ve Come for Your Eggs (And Other Reasons to Annex the North), by Septimus Brown (Victoria: Look—See—Press, 2025) $23.00 / 9781738076666

A plague-era memorial

A soulful novel set in New York City at the height of the AIDS crisis “is a meditation on the intertwined nature of love and loss”; it “confronts readers with uncomfortable truths about vulnerability, mortality, and the limits of human connection, while showing that meaning can still be found amid suffering.” —Anna Horsch reviews A Friend of Dorothy’s, by Richard Willett (Los Angeles: Magic Show Press, 2025) $25.99 / 9798992339802

Big trouble in little Franklin

Set in a Colorado town in the early 1990s, a sophomore novel opens with an act that leaves townies reeling. Compelling and twist-filled, this “mystery wrapped in layers of small-town politics and interpersonal grudges” is a “novel that entertains while providing ample room for contemplation.” —Trish Bowering reviews We Bring You an Hour of Darkness, by Michael Bourne (Los Angeles: DoppelHouse Press, 2025) $26.95 / 9781954600263

Dragon eggs & a dagger named Dagger

A “‘romantasy’ with elaborate world-building, discernible inspiration from Game of Thrones, and class divides” (plus, a sentient dog), comes with possible side-effects: “a rampant desire to watch Game of Thrones, wariness of gendered power imbalances, and impatience for an adventurous sequel.” —Jessica Poon reviews Realm of Thieves, by Karina Halle (Toronto: Ace, 2025) 9780593819821 / $25.99

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