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Contact - Guernica Editions...The story begins with beguiling lightness and irony, swerves into...

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84 No Borders, No Limits For four decades, Guernica has dared to publish fine literature with a special understanding of different cultures. We are proud to have published recent work by such authors as George Elliott Clarke, Henry Beissel, Michael Springate, Sky Gilbert, Daniel David Moses, Marianne Ackerman, Amanda Hale, H. Nigel Thomas, and the late Austin Clarke. Guernica Editions is home to the MiroLand Imprint—a place where our more commercial projects, from how-tos to graphic novels, can thrive—and Guernica World Editions, featuring authors from beyond Canada’s borders. Contact: 1569 Heritage Way Oakville, ON L6M 2Z7 p: 905.599.5304 www.guernicaeditions.com /guernicaed @guernica_ed /guernicaed /guernicaeditions General Inquiries: [email protected] Publicity Inquiries: [email protected] GUERNICA EDITIONS
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84

No Borders, No LimitsFor four decades, Guernica has dared to publish fine literature with a special understanding of different cultures. We are proud to have published recent work by such authors as George Elliott Clarke, Henry Beissel, Michael Springate, Sky Gilbert, Daniel David Moses, Marianne Ackerman, Amanda Hale, H. Nigel Thomas, and the late Austin Clarke.

Guernica Editions is home to the MiroLand Imprint—a place where our more commercial projects, from how-tos to graphic novels, can thrive—and Guernica World Editions, featuring authors from beyond Canada’s borders.

Contact:

1569 Heritage WayOakville, ON L6M 2Z7p: 905.599.5304www.guernicaeditions.com

/guernicaed @guernica_ed /guernicaed /guernicaeditions

General Inquiries: [email protected] Inquiries: [email protected]

GUernica eDiTions

85

FALL & WINTER FRONTLIST

85GUERNICA EDITIONS | UTP DISTRIBUTION

sales & MarkeTinG:• Winner of the 2018 Guernica Prize for Literary Fiction. • Advanced copies available on Netgalley. • Launch in Toronto in September 2019. • Cross country book tour Vancouver-Calgary-Saskatoon-Montreal scheduled for Spring 2020.• Other readings and events to take place across Ontario and Quebec

Literary Fiction ISBN-13: 978-1-771834513 ISBN-10: 1-77183451X $20.00 | trade paperback 6" x 9" | 214pp September 2019

Identity, delusion, the pain of healing and the power of narrative.

A young, mixed-race composer, raised without meaningful connections to his Chinese heritage and struggling with identity issues, travels to China in search of his long-missing uncle, an uncle who vanished in the aftermath of Tiananmen Square. An Idea About My Dead Uncle--winner of the inaugural Guernica Prize for the best unpublished novel manuscript--is about the identities we choose and the ones that are imposed on us. It is about being on the outside looking in. It is about dealing with pain through the artistic process. It is about delusion and healing. It is about the power of narrative. According to Gabriella Goliger, winner of the 2011 City of Ottawa Literary Award for Fiction for her novel Girl Unwrapped and a juror for the Guernica Literary Prize: “A witty, sharp-edged, finely-crafted story about a young man struggling with identity issues, which causes relationship disasters and a quest for his long lost uncle in China. The introspective but straightforward narrative eventually plunges into the surreal, mirroring the madness that can result from an uncompromising search for self.”

“K.R. Wilson’s remarkable novel is smart, funny, unpredictable and engaging. Imbued with insights on family, identity, relationships and music, An Idea About My Dead Uncle brims with suspense and adventure, intriguing characters and fine storytelling”.—Cora Siré, author of Behold Things Beautiful

“K.R. Wilson turns the usual quest-for-identity tale on its head in this bold and compelling novel of a young man struggling with ambivalence towards his ethnic heritage and the traumas of family dysfunction. The story begins with beguiling lightness and irony, swerves into tragi-farce and descends into fantastical chaos as the narrator literally loses himself through his obsessive search for his dead uncle. Wilson’s prose is playful, vivid, richly layered and poignant. A story that throws many curve balls at the reader, including big questions about the meaning and/or absurdity of life”. — Gabriella Goliger, winner of the 2011 City of Ottawa Literary Award for Fiction

K.R. Wilson was born in Calgary and lives in Toronto. An Idea About My Dead Uncle grew out of the journey he and his wife made to China to adopt their daughter, and the research into Chinese history and culture that it inspired.

An Idea About My Dead Uncle K.r. wilson

FALL & WINTER FRONTLIST

8686GUERNICA EDITIONS | UTP DISTRIBUTION

sales & MarkeTinG:• Advanced copies available on Netgalley. • Launch at Supermarket in Toronto in September 2019.• Follow Sarah Xerar Murphy’s blog:

http://sarahxerarmurphy.com/blog/

sales & MarkeTinG:• Advanced copies available on Netgalley.• Amanda Hale will be touring in Canada and the UK in

Fall 2019.• Launches in Toronto at Supermarket and in Montreal.

Literary Fiction ISBN-13: 978-1-771834148 ISBN-10: 1-771834145 $29.95 | trade paperback 6" x 9" | 335pp September 2019

Historical Fiction ISBN-13: 978-1-771833905 ISBN-10: 1-771833904 $29.95 | trade paperback 6" x 9" | 462pp September 2019

Speculating on friendship, love, history and a student massacre.

The first of a two-part novel, Itzel I tells the story of three disparate characters swept up in the drama of the Mexican student movement of 1968 whose ending in the Massacre in Tlatelolco on October 2nd, a date now always commemorated in Mexico, changed their lives forever. Broad in scope and exuberant in style in the best tradition of Latin American literature, this book roots its readers in the ebullience of Mexico’s daily life and language, even as they are made to confront the horrors of history, to examine the difficulties of friendship and family.

What we will return to is a city under occupation. A city in defeat. And in the midst of it, the beacon of Itzel’s smile. ~from Itzel I

Prize winning author of eight books of fiction and memoir, Sarah Xerar Murphy is also widely recognized for her spoken word performance, and social justice work. Her bi-racial, bilingual and multicultural background combine with long-term residence in all three of North America’s largest countries to bring electrifying authenticity to her creations. She currently resides in Bocabec, NB.

From misguided idealism to religious mania: a slow dissolution.

When British hat manufacturer Christopher Brooke is arrested under Regulation 18B in June 1940 a slow process of personal disintegration begins. Taking us into the pre-war political era of Ishiguro’s Remains of the Day, Mad Hatter delves into the lives of Britons, tracking them through a darkening time. Irish farm girl, Mary Byrne, arrives in England in July 1940 to work as house-keeper for Cynthia Brooke and her three children, bonding with the family. When Mary is shockingly expelled from the house upon Christopher’s release, her narration continues through the mouth of 15-month-old Katie. Mad Hatter charts the slow unravelling of a marriage as the story of the Brooke family moves inexorably to a tragic conclusion.

She had a beauty like my sister Deirdre, but different because she’s English. Why is it that people look like who they are – Meg with her Romany Gypsy blood, me with my Irishness, and Cynthia so very English? ~from Mad Hatter

Amanda Hale is an award-winning writer with three novels, two books of poetry, and two collections of linked fictions to her name. She began her writing career as an immigrant in 1970s Montreal where she studied playwriting at Concordia University. She is the librettist for an original opera named Pomegranate.

Itzel I A Tlatelolco Awakening saraH Xerar MurPHy

Mad Hatter aManda Hale

87

FALL & WINTER FRONTLIST

87GUERNICA EDITIONS | UTP DISTRIBUTION

sales & MarkeTinG:• Advanced copies available on Netgalley. • Launches to take place in Toronto and Kingston.Also available: Cadillac Road by Kristin Andrychuk ISBN-13: 978-1-771831505 $25.00 | trade paperback

sales & MarkeTinG:• Advanced copies available on Netgalley.• Launches in Toronto and in Calgary in September 2019.

Literary Fiction ISBN-13: 978-1-771834247 ISBN-10: 1-771834242 $25.00 | trade paperback 6" x 9" | 280pp October 2019

Literary Fiction ISBN-13: 978-1-771834001 ISBN-10: 1-771834005 $20.00 | trade paperback 5" x 8" | 260pp September 2019

Martin’s fall: a story of anger, guilt and motherly devotion.

Set in the small town of Grenville, Ontario, a setting perhaps familiar to the reader from the author’s previous novel Cadillac Road, this story progresses from the 1950s through the 1980s. In 1940, five-year-old Martin Thorton fell from the family’s apartment balcony, suffering catastrophic and permanent injuries. His accident plays a role in everything that happens afterwards – his marginalization growing up a disabled person, his mother’s guilt and unfailing devotion, his sister’s alienation. Told from the point of view of his sister Gretchen, and his friend Donna, this is Martin’s story.

I’m reading Beautiful Joe. The poor old dog is dying, and I’m crying so much I can’t see the print. Mother says to always finish a book no matter how sad it makes you. “Prepares one for life,” she says.

Kristin Andrychuk was raised in Southern Ontario, in an area of stark contrasts between a conservative village and a vibrant summer resort town close to Buffalo, New York. Place and family relationships majorly influence the stories in her poetry, and fiction. Mother’s Genius is her fourth novel. She resides in Kingston.

Struggling for balance in a life filled with secrets and lies.

In this fractured familial story, Esther Prat reflects on the secrets, lies, and pain that haunt her life. Born on Grand Manan Island, New Brunswick, as an infant she is unceremoniously taken to Mon-treal, Quebec, to spend the first ten years of her life with an affluent Jewish family. Upon the death of her “daddy,” she is not allowed to attend his funeral and is taken back to the poverty stricken environ-ment of her family of origin. The culture shock results in emotional and spiritual torment, undermining her self-esteem and sense of identity. On into life, marriage, children, divorce, a devastating flood, geographical moves, and a battle with pharmaceutical drugs, she struggles to maintain equilibrium and balance of past and pres-ent.

Sometimes I light two short candles for the Sabbath 18 minutes before sundown on Friday. I sing the prayer and gently wave my hands. I leave the candles to burn down, flicker, and go out. ~from Melba’s Wash

Born into an impoverished New Brunswick family, Reesa Steinman Brotherton was taken to Montreal, raised Jewish, then at age 10 sent back to her family of origin. A “dark horse” among Canadian authors, she received a certificate of creative writing from Humber college and is a graduate of writing from the University of Calgary.

Mother’s Genius Kristin andrycHuK

Melba’s Wash reesa steinMan brotHerton

FALL & WINTER FRONTLIST

8888GUERNICA EDITIONS | UTP DISTRIBUTION

sales & MarkeTinG: • George Elliott Clarke will be participating in 2019 literary

festivals and events in Canada and internationally.Also Available: Canticles I (mmxvi) Canticles I (mmxvii)ISBN-13: 978-1-550719123 ISBN-13: 978-1-71831901$8.95 | trade paperback $8.95 | trade paperback

sales & MarkeTinG: • Advanced copies available on Netgalley.• Launch at Supermarket in Toronto in November 2019Also available: Floating Bodies by Julie Roorda ISBN-13: 978-1-550713213 $5.95 | trade paperback

Poetry | Canadian Epic ISBN-13: 978-1-771834094 ISBN-10: 1-771834099 $29.95 | trade paperback6" x 9" | 400pp October 2019

Fiction | Short StoriesISBN-13: 978-1-771833646 ISBN-10: 1-771833645 $20.00 | trade paperback5" x 8" | 220pp October 2019

The scriptures re-imagined as lyric-styled epic poetry.

Canticles is a lyric-styled epic. This second testament—Canticles II (MMXIX) and the forthcoming Canticles II (MMXX)—issues re-readings—revisions, rewrites—of scriptures crucial to the emergent (Anglophone) African Diaspora in the Americas. Canticles II (MMXIX) follows Testament I (also issued in two parts—Canticles I [MMXVI] and Canticles I [MMXVII]) whose subject is History, principally, of slavery and imperialism and liberation and independence. Canticles II, the second part of a trilogy, is properly irreverent where necessary, but never blasphemous. It is scripture become what it always is, really, anyway: Poetry.

To everything, there’s first flourishing, then withering; stints of Authority and periods of Abdication; the echo of light be shadow. ~from “ecclesiastes -- III”

The 4th Poet Laureate of Toronto and the 7th Parliamentary Poet Laureate, George Elliott Clarke is a pioneering scholar of African-Canadian literature. His recognitions include the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Fellows Prize, the Governor-General’s Award for Poetry, the National Magazine Gold Award for Poetry, and the Eric Hoffer Book Award for Poetry. He lives in Toronto.

Dark humour and cheeky philosophy in 33 stories.

A tour guide leads a Valentine’s Day-themed ghost walk, visiting the sites of horrific, yet romantic, deaths. A homicide cop solves tough cases using tips from his plants. Scientists discover a new species of religiously observant gophers, and a young math whiz, on the hunt for her escaped boa constrictor, ponders the theory of mul-tiple worlds. Replete with dark humour and cheeky interrogations of philosophy and metaphysics, the thirty-three stories in How to Tell if Your Frog is Dead expose the fundamental absurdity of the human condition.

Gloria sits upright. She hasn’t seen Lucifer since she was sixteen years old. On that occasion, he didn’t bother to knock first. He simply ma-terialized behind her, as she peered into the mirror of her improvised dressing table. ~from “Story Title”

Julie Roorda is the author of six previous books of poetry and fiction, most recently the novel A Thousand Consolations. Her work has appeared in numerous periodicals, including the Malahat Review and TNQ. “How to Tell if Your Frog is Dead” was included in the 2014 Journey Prize Anthology. She lives in St. Catharines, ON.

Canticles II MMXIX GeorGe elliott clarKe

How to Tell if Your Frog is Dead Stories Julie roorda

FALL & WINTER FRONTLIST

898989GUERNICA EDITIONS | UTP DISTRIBUTION

Poetry | Narrative ISBN-13: 978-1-771833868 ISBN-10: 1-771833866 $20.00 | trade paperback 5" x 8" | 65pp September 2019

Fiction | Short Stories ISBN-13: 978-1-771834285 ISBN-10: 1-771834285 $20.00 | trade paperback 5" x 8" | 220pp October 2019

Literary Fiction ISBN-13: 978-1-771834216 ISBN-10: 1-771834218 $20.00 | trade paperback 5" x 8" | 200pp October 2019

Transforming killers into saints and torture into veneration. The voices in this collection come from the deep past when war began, and span the centuries to now, with war still raging. We hear the ancient story of how violent killers became heroes and then saints, how the picture of torture became an icon to be venerated, salvation achieved through the instruments of pain and death. In these poems the disappeared and nameless dead tell their stories. As Joseph Brodsky said: “Poetry is … the only form of moral insurance that a society has.”

Realizing New York had reached its apotheosis after the Mets won the World Series in 1986, Niki Lambros left for Athens, Greece, eventually becoming a Greek Orthodox nun. In 2000 she left the order and returned briefly to NY before immigrating to Canada. She lives in Montreal.

Of families, friends and other distant objects.

Telescope is a story cycle about Lawrence Teitel, the protagonist of Living Room (Boheme Press, 2001). The collection deals with seeing distances: above all, the growing distancing of Lawrence’s family as they cope with new challenges and Lawrence’s own maturation, physical and spiritual. The cycle is made up of nine stories, each covering a different stage in Lawrence’s development after his family has moved from their old neighbourhood in Montreal to a somewhat wealthier suburb, Ville St. Laurent.

Toronto author Allan Weiss’ story cycle Living Room appeared in 2001, and another, Making the Rounds, was published in 2016. A professor at York University, Weiss’ scholarly publications include A Comprehensive Bibliography of English-Canadian Short Stories, 1950-1983 and The Canadian Fantastic in Focus.

When talent and self-worth become commodities.

Charlotte—a gifted but broken jazz singer—has found security and support under the roof of an overbearing French patroness of the arts, only to become trapped by her own dependence. There are no bars on the windows and no locks on the doors, but Charlotte is very much a prisoner in an opulent but unsympathetic world in which her self-worth is contingent on her voice. When the irresponsible and headstrong Theo re-enters her life after thirteen years, she is compelled, finally, to choose between complacency and autonomy. A Vancouver novelist and poet, Suzanne Chiasson has written for the New Play Centre, Vancouver Fringe Festival and Peace Arch Performing Arts Academy. Tacet is her first novel. She has also completed a novella entitled Hand and is working on a poetry collection.

Extraordinary Renditions niKi laMbros

Telescope A Story Cycle allan weiss

Tacet suzanne cHiasson

90

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9090GUERNICA EDITIONS | UTP DISTRIBUTION

Poetry | Epic Poetry ISBN-13: 978-1-771834278ISBN-10: 1-771834277 $20.00 | trade paperback 6" x 9" | 140pp September 2019

Poetry | Prose Poetry ISBN-13: 978-1-771833998 ISBN-10: 1-771833998 $20.00 | trade paperback 5" x 8" | 80pp September 2019

Poetry | Conceptual ISBN-13: 978-1-771833721 ISBN-10: 1-771833726 $20.00 | trade paperback 5" x 8" | 110pp September 2019

Of epic journeys and the challenge of being human.

The title poem of this collection takes us on an epic journey across past and present historical events and through spaces defined by the natural sciences, as it explores the challenges of being human in these troubled times. It is accompanied by a gathering of shorter poems that confront the dark forces in our world as they struggle for the light at the end of the tunnel. In stark imagery, these poems turn words into music to celebrate the anguish and the glory of being alive.

Henry Beissel is an award-winning poet, playwright, essayist, translator and editor with more than thirty publications to his credit, including twenty volumes of poetry. His work has been translated into more than a dozen languages. He lives in Ottawa.

Urban and suburban landscapes: mundane and magical places.

Bewilderness explores urban and suburban wildernesses—threshold places—in a darkly comedic, surreal set of prose poems. In Bewilderness, urban and suburban landscapes come to life as shape-shifting places, enchanted places, mundane places of magical thinking, as the reader explores the heterotopias of playgrounds and backyards, lakefront parks, splintery subdivisions, and semi-industrial wastelands. Creatures that inhabit these edged-out corners of land take on the features and neuroses of their human co-habitants in poems that are direct, declarative missives with offbeat instructions for navigating and inhabiting these liminal worlds.

Catherine Black has published two books of prose poetry, Lessons of Chaos and Disaster and Bewilderness, and an experimental mem-oir, ReLit-nominated A Hard Gold Thread. An Oakville resident, Catherine teaches in OCAD University’s BFA Creative Writing program in Toronto.

Poetic revolt against tyranny: Questioning the nature of information.

The Perfect Archive is the story of an archivist who moves beyond his role to become an author of texts on archival theory. In his work, he processes the flow and retention of government information, and he begins to question the very nature of a “pure and accurate” archive. He is embroiled in a complex story that sends him into hiding, engages him in love, and has him grappling with tyranny, injustice, the suppression of information, and the strength and the futility of resistance, except in the form of poetry.

Paul Lisson was born in Hamilton’s gritty north end beside the Coca-Cola bottling plant, the sound of the bottles like the rattling of bones. Paul is a poet, archivist, and librarian, and co-founder of Hamilton Arts & Letters magazine.

Footprints of Dark Energy & Other Poems Henry beissel

Bewilderness catHerine blacK

The Perfect Archive Paul lisson

FALL & WINTER FRONTLIST

919191GUERNICA EDITIONS | UTP DISTRIBUTION

Poetry | Lyric Poetry ISBN-13: 978-1-771834667 ISBN-10: 1-771834668 $25.00 | trade paperback6" x 9" | 175pp October 2019

Poetry | Lyric Poetry ISBN-13: 978-1-771834100ISBN-10: 1-771834102 $20.00 | trade paperback 5" x 8" | 140pp October 2019

Poetry | Lyric Poetry ISBN-13: 978-1-771834063 ISBN-10: 1-771834064 $20.00 | trade paperback 5" x 8" | 90pp October 2019

Exploring friendship, the natural world, science and spirituality.

The Long Bond is a gathering of the finest work from six books over four decades by a widely respected and remarkably versatile poet. It spans a massive range of subjects and styles, encompassing the Canadian landscape, music and art, love and family, science, technology, and the manifold challenges to a questioning mind on our anxious planet.

Allan Briesmaster has been a readings organizer, freelance editor, and a founding partner at Quattro Books. The author of seven books of poetry, he has read his work, given talks, and hosted literary events across Canada. He lives in Thornhill, Ontario.

On the beauty of love and the sideroads of life.

Travelling The Lost Highway contains themes central to James Deahl’s poetry: the poet’s responsibility to nature, the necessity and beauty of love, elegies, and the vulnerability, yet surprising resilience, of all life. Central to the book is a series twenty-two travel pieces, written off the grid of main highways in Canada and the United States. Although not usually a political poet, the collection closes with a section of poems personally responding to the advent of President Donald Trump, an electoral result that, unlike most elections, changed everything.

James Deahl is the author or editor of forty literary titles, recently his two prior collections from Guernica, Rooms the Wind Makes and Red Haws to Light the Field, as well as Tamaracks: Canadian poetry for the 21st century. He lives in Sarnia.

Finding purpose in the small and the commonplace: a paean.

If we are to live in this world and share in its experience, we must have patience. In McLuhan’s Canary, Bruce Meyer examines the questions of how we wait to find love, why we love and show courage to the people and things that are important to us, and how we find purpose in the small, commonplace, and almost insignificant things that help us to endure with dignity. In these poems, paeans to the virtue of patience, Meyer listens as the world sings to us and awakens us to the perpetuity and strength in which we live and love. Bruce Meyer is author of more than sixty books of poetry, short fiction, non-fiction, literary journalism, and portraiture. He has won numerous awards. He teaches at Georgian College in Barrie, Ontario, and at Victoria College in the University of Toronto, and lives in Barrie.

The Long Bond Selected and New Poems allan briesMaster

Travelling The Lost Highway JaMes deaHl

McLuhan’s Canary bruce Meyer

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9292GUERNICA EDITIONS | UTP DISTRIBUTION

Non-Fiction | Interviews ISBN-13: 978-1-771833936 ISBN-10: 1-771833939 $25.00 | trade paperback 5" x 8" | 300pp 14 colour photos throughout September 2019

Non-FictionISBN-13: 978-1-771833875 ISBN-10: 1-771833874 $25.00 | trade paperback 5" x 8" | 240pp 12 colour photos throughout September 2019

Literary Fiction ISBN-13: 978-1-771834674 ISBN-10: 1-771834676 $20.00 | trade paperback 5" x 8" | 240pp October 2019

Interpreting the Bard: Canadian actors have their say.

The first work of its kind in Canada, this book explores 11 first-rate actors’ perceptions and comments in relation to performing Shakespeare in order to offer a sense of what these actors mean by “the work.” Colourful, lively, with strong considerations of technique and interpretation, this book gives Canadian actors a rare and generous opportunity to explore the highest reaches of their art in relation to Shakespearean acting.

Keith Garebian has an international reputation in theatre writing, particularly for The Making of ‘Cabaret’ (Oxford University Press) and his definitive biography, William Hutt: Soldier Actor (Guernica). Colours to the Chameleon is his 25th book overall. Keith lives in Mississauga, Ontario.

Interviews with the refugee: war and displacement, a five-act play.

Asylum/Ransomed features interviews with sixteen Canadian refugees from around the world. The interviews are shaped into a five-act play in the likeness of Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream to address poignant questions about what is true, what is real. Philosophers, artists, and politicians take the stage alongside the refugees to highlight stories of war, displacement, and being other.

Laura Swart has taught academic writing to post-secondary students for over twenty years, encouraging them to find and raise their writing voices. As a novelist and playwright, she was shortlisted for the 2018 ReLit Award. She lives in Calgary.

Around the world to explore abandonment and betrayal.

Tragedy at Montreal’s End of the World restaurant. A little marriage fatigue, a cottage to sell and a woman in cashmere: suddenly twenty-seven years of conjugal life are swept away. Jean-Charles has left his wife. And with her goes the charm the restaurant possessed, where simple food was served to simple people. Sleepless Nights and Days of Glory, the third volume in Hélène Rioux’s Fragments of the World series, opens with the theme of abandonment and betrayal, and then takes the reader around the world.

Montrealer Hélène Rioux has published poetry, news articles, short stories, translations, and seven novels. Her novels have been translated into English, Spanish, and Bulgarian.

Jonathan Kaplansky has translated works by Hélène Rioux, Hélène Dorion and Annie Ernaux. Originally from New Brunswick, he lives in Montreal.

Colours to the Chameleon Canadian Actors on Shakespeare KeitH Garebian

Asylum/Ransomed Breaking the Fourth Wall laura swart

Sleepless Nights and Days of GloryA Novel Hélène riouXJonatHan KaPlansKy, trans.

BACKLIST HIGHLIGHTS

9393GUERNICA EDITIONS | UTP DISTRIBUTION

Plastic’s Republic Giovanna Riccio

PoetryISBN-13: 978-1-771833684 Spring 2019 | trade paperback $20.00

Insult to the Brain Nicola Vulpe

Poetry ISBN-13: 978-1-771833769 Spring 2019 | trade paperback $20.00

Revolt/ CompassionMichael Springate

Drama ISBN-13: 978-1-771833967 Spring 2019 | trade paperback $20.00

Dead Voices F.G. Paci

Fiction ISBN-13: 978-1-771833189 Spring 2019 | trade paperback $25.00

Seeker: A Sea Odyssey Rita Pomade

MiroLand | Non-Fiction ISBN-13: 978-1-771833516 Spring 2019 | trade paperback 34 b&w and colour photos $25.00

Philipovna: Daughter of Sorrow Valentina Gal

MiroLand | Non-Fiction ISBN-13: 978-1-771833691 Spring 2019 | trade paperback $25.00

Trapped: A Mother’s Quest to Reclaim Her Daughters Alexandra Karb

MiroLand | Non-Fiction ISBN-13: 978-1-771833486 Spring 2019 | trade paperback $25.00

A Voluntary Crucifixion David MacKinnon

Non-Fiction ISBN-13: 978-1-771832724 Spring 2019 | trade paperback $25.00

Bonavere Howl Caitlin Galway

FictionISBN-13: 978-1-771833547 Spring 2019 | trade paperback $20.00

Falconi’s Tractor Dave LeBlanc

Fiction ISBN-13: 978-1-771833356 Spring 2019 | trade paperback $25.00

The Afrikaner Arianna Dagnino

Fiction ISBN-13: 978-1-771833578 Spring 2019 | trade paperback $20.00

Quill of the Dove Ian Thomas Shaw

Fiction ISBN-13: 978-1-771833783 Spring 2019 | trade paperback $24.95

BACKLIST HIGHLIGHTS

9494GUERNICA EDITIONS | UTP DISTRIBUTION

Daring to DreamAngelo Bolotta

MiroLand | Non-Fiction ISBN-13: 978-1-771833417Fall 2018 | trade paperback$25.00 | 44 colour illustrations & photos

A Schizo-Philosopher’s Colouring Book Douglas Ord

MiroLand | Colouring Book ISBN-13: 978-1-771832960 Fall 2018 | trade paperback $20.00

The Lighthouse Elizabeth Macaluso

Guernica World | Poetry ISBN-13: 978-1-771833851 Spring 2019 | trade paperback $20.00

ShadowshineJohnny Armstrong

Guernica World | Fiction ISBN-13: 978-1-771834605 Spring 2019 | trade paperback $20.00

Tenacity: How Two Mums Fought a War on Drugs Julie Rose, S.J. & M.L. Cowell

Guernica World | Non-FictionISBN-13: 978-1-771834032 Spring 2019 | trade paperback $20.00 | 32 colour photos

Rosemary Bluebell Hadi Atallah

Guernica World | Fiction ISBN-13: 978-1-771834117 Spring 2019 | trade paperback $20.00 | Ages 11-16

A Day in June Marisa Labozzetta

Guernica World | Fiction ISBN-13: 978-1-771833820 Spring 2019 | trade paperback $20.00

The Oulipo Challenge Hillar Liitoja

Non-Fiction ISBN-13: 978-1-771833738 Spring 2019 | trade paperback $20.00

Antonio D’Alfonso: Essays On His Works ed. Licia Canton

Non-Fiction ISBN-13: 978-1-771833615 Spring 2019 | trade paperback $20.00

Downtown Flirt Peter Jickling

Poetry ISBN-13: 978-1-771833776 Spring 2019 | trade paperback $20.00

Rivers Applaud Forever Raymond Filip

Poetry ISBN-13: 978-1-771833608 Spring 2019 | trade paperback $20.00

Swinging Between Water and Stone Steven Mayoff

Poetry ISBN-13: 978-1-771833677 Spring 2019 | trade paperback $20.00


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