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Tag: quest

‘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

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

‘Odd things’ and dream-quests

An intriguing, alchemical novel “that blends the real and the unreal into something more myth than fable, more real than magic, for all its occasionally fantastical elements,” has a “dreamy quality that is enhanced by the understated prose.” —Ryan Frawley reviews The Unfinished World, by Marilyn Bowering (Montreal: Linda Leith Publishing, 2025) $26.95 / 9781773901800

The ‘strange forms’ of grief

With a wealth of imagery and motifs, a captivating sophomore novel tells a tale of an uncertain pilgrimage; it “presents a more complex truth than typical family reunion stories: that survival sometimes requires accepting fundamental uncertainty about our own stories.” —Selena Mercuri reviews Rufous and Calliope, by Sarah Louise Butler (Madeira Park: Douglas & McIntyre, 2025) $24.95 / 9781771624572

Loins girded, knives sharpened

The middle volume of The Lost Wells Trilogy overcomes middlevolumeitis with sharpened relations between characters and intriguing world-building. —Myshara McMyn reviews Mantle of the World Ruler, by Kate Gateley (Altona: Friesen Press, 2023) $31.99 / 9781039155251

Oldo and Vunt, a dynamic duo

Vunt and Oldo—squabbling sidekicks, current quest-mates, accidental traffickers—arrive in a town where wizards (power-hungry or deranged) vie for supremacy. With time travel thrown in, a charming maximalist tale grows a little overwhelming. —Sophia Wasylinko reviews Henchmen, by Matthew Hughes (Seattle: Amazon, 2025) $19.99 / 9781927880463

Kateiko’s epic quest

Third novel of a complex, magic- and power-laden series (this volume set in a parallel historical time) grabs attention and does not let go. But be sure to read books One and Two before Three, writes Myshara Herbert-McMyn in her review of Crest (The Call of the Rift, Book Three), by Jae Waller (Toronto: ECW Press, 2021) $23.95 / 9781770414587

Here be dragons

Featuring a tyrannical emperor, a kindhearted young hero, a daunting quest, and an “exceedingly chaste” romance, the novel succeeds on its own terms. —Jessica Poon reviews The Last Dragon of the East, by Katrina Kwan (Toronto: Saga Press, 2024) $24.99 / 9781668051238

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