Quietly, Loving Everyone
Curtis McRae

A striking debut collection by one of Montreal’s brightest young writers.

Quietly, Loving Everyone, Curtis McRae’s debut collection of stories, assembles a meditative and often profound cycle of portraits pulled from everyday Canadian life. A young boy raises James Dean from the dead, only to find out the cult icon is not the playmate he’d hoped for. A university student riddled with ulcers silently spirals after being diagnosed with an autoimmune disease. A young girl takes a road trip with her older sister to Cape Cod, and years later reconstructs the tragic circumstances behind what she remembers. A couple goes on a date at an old porn theatre that is the last remaining vestige of a neighbourhood that has moved on. McRae plays witness characters at those crucial beginnings or ends of relationships, with lovers, friends, family, and most importantly themselves.

Ricochet Bundle #2


Special offer—the most recent 6 titles in our Ricochet Canadian noir series.

This book bundle includes:

Four Days
The Damned and the Destroyed
I Am Not Guilty
The Ravine
Perilous Passage
Whispering City

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Interrobang
Mary Dalton

The spirit of the interrobang, a punctuation mark merging the questioning and the exclamatory, informs Mary Dalton’s compelling investigations of home and identity in this, her sixth poetry collection—in extraordinary poems of aging; of despised plants once revered; of rites and sites of community abandoned. The “flared mouth” of Dalton’s acclaimed musicality gives voice to lost souls and a lost sense of the earth. The collection’s unique mix of bleakness and beauty is also reflected in various riddle and riddle-like series with their ambiguity, open-endedness, playfulness, and unexpected linguistic shifts. Interrobang movingly fuses notions of exploration —of glancing at things slant—with an emotional range that feels new and visionary. This is a steely, brilliant book from a major Canadian poet.

Girls, Interrupted
Lisa Whittington-Hill

The past decade has seen a rise in documentaries, memoirs and podcasts that revisit the legacies of women wronged by pop culture. With movements like #MeToo and #TimesUp challenging long-standing narratives around female celebrities, it’s no surprise so many believe the representation of women in the media has improved. In her scathingly witty collection of essays, Girls, Interrupted: How Pop Culture is Failing Women, Lisa Whittington-Hill argues otherwise. Pop culture’s treatment of women, writes Whittington-Hill, is still marked by misogyny and misunderstanding. From the gender bias in celebrity memoir coverage to problematic portrayals of middle-aged women and the sexist pressure on female pop stars to constantly reinvent themselves, Girls, Interrupted critically examines how mainstream media keeps failing women and explores what we can do to fix it. A work of searing relevance, this candid and often cathartic debut marks Whittington-Hill as a cultural critic of the first rank.

States of Emergency
Yoyo Comay

States of Emergency is a book-length poem about the apocalyptic present, written in a language whose meaning is liquid and full of slippage, always spilling out from its container. In Yoyo Comay’s hands, words roil, churn, and surge. By taking on different mood and modes, from the prophetic to the colloquial, he has created a form that is a constant unravelling—a leap of faith into intuitive meaning, a letting go into ongoingness. “I am catapulted into where I am,” he writes, “and the air concusses around me.”

Comay sees poetry as a visceral experience: a state of immanence, embodiment, emergence, emergency. This is poetry as diary and seismograph, an infinite scroll for the end of days. It is a debut like no other.

Press

On Girls, Interrupted:
"Lisa Whittington-Hill's Girls, Interrupted

On My Brother's Keeper:

Praise for My Brother’s Keeper

On Kilworthy Tanner:
Kilworthy Tanner

On National Animal:
National Animal

News

JULY NEWSLETTER (click for link)
The launch of Evan Jones' The Civilizing Discourse: Interviews with Canadian Poets will be Wednesday, July 31st 16 6:30 pm at Flying Books in Toronto, hosted by Derek Webster (whose book National Animal is receiving glowing reviews). Looking for more summer reading? Check out the Montreal Review of Books, featuring Blaise Ndala's The War You Don't Hate (review here) and Jean Marc Ah-Sen's Kilworthy Tanner (review here). And congratulations to Pierre Nepveu, whose poetry collection The Four-Doored House (translated by Donald Winkler) has been shortlisted for the Derek Walcott Prize for Poetry!

JUNE NEWSLETTER (click for link)
The Montreal launch of both Blaise Ndala's The War You Don't Hate and Jean-Marc Ah Sen's Kilworthy Tanner is on June 14 at 7 pm at La Petite Librairie D+Q! Blaise NDala will be in conversation with Dimitri Nasrallah, and Jean-Marc Ah Sen will be in conversation with Montreal writer Neil Smith. On Sunday, June 16 a 2 pm, Derek Webster will be at Paragraphe to read from his poetry collection National Animal. And congratulations to Michael Lista, whose true crime book The Human Scale has won the 2024 Brass Knuckles Award for Best Nonfiction Crime Book from Crime Writers of Canada.

MAY NEWSLETTER (click for link)
Join us in Toronto for a double poetry launch - Flying Books welcomes Derek Webster and Rhea Tregebov May 22 at 6:30 for the launch of their new books National Animal and Talking to Strangers. Then on June 2 at 7 pm, we are at Supermarket in Toronto to launch Jean Marc Ah-Sen's highly anticipated novel Kilworthy Tanner. Then it's a Montreal launch at La Petite Librairie D+Q on June 14 at 7 pm for both Kilworthy Tanner and Blaise Ndala's The War You Don't Hate.

APRIL NEWSLETTER (click for link)
Congratulations to Signal Editions poets Rhea Tregebov and Derek Webster, who launched their new books Talking to Strangers and National Animal this month! We are also celebrating the publication of Blaise Ndala's novel The War You Don't Hate, translated by Dimitri Nasrallah. It will be launched on May 5th at the Ottawa International Writers' Festival. And speaking of Dimitri Nasrallah, Hotline is this year's selection for the One eRead Canada digital book club! DECEMBER NEWSLETTER (click for link)
'Tis the season to give the gift of books and we have just the thing for every book lover. From pulp fiction to pop culture, true love to true crime. As we approach the end of our 50th year, thank you to everyone who supported our mission of publishing quality Canadian writing. We can’t wait to share our new 2024 titles!
Discover

Click here to see Kaie Kellough read from his QWF Paragraphe Hugh MacLennan Award winning book Dominoes at the Crossroads

Click here to listen to Rosalind Pepall's interview on CBC's All in a Weekend about Talking to a Portrait: Tales of an Art Curator.

In Periodicities’ fifth series of videos, Sadiqa de Meijer reads a few poems from her new book, The Outer Wards. Click here

Read “The Silence of A.M. Klein,” an incisive essay by our editor Carmine Starnino in the April issue of The New Criterion.



SODEC, Québec  Canada Council for the Arts Canadian Heritage
The Canada Council
Véhicule Press acknowledges the generous support of its publishing program from the Book Publishing Industry Development Program of the Department of Canadian Heritage, The Canada Council for the Arts, and the Société de développement des entreprises culturelles du Québec (SODEC).