2021 Award Winners and Nominees

Browse the winningest books of 2021 with this handy list: Canada Reads, Governor General’s Awards, Giller Nominees…they’re all here.

All Books in this Collection

Showing 17–21 of 21 results

  • The Junta of Happenstance

    The Junta of Happenstance

    $19.95

    Personal, primordial, and pulsing with syncopated language, Tolu Oloruntoba?s poetic debut, The Junta of Happenstance, is a compendium of dis-ease. This includes disease in the traditional sense, as informed by the poet?s time as a physician, and dis-ease as a primer for family dysfunction, the (im)migrant experience, and urban / corporate anxiety. In the face of struggles against social injustice, Oloruntoba navigates the contemporary moment with empathy and intelligence, finding beauty in chaos, and strength in suffering. The Junta of Happenstance is an important and assured debut.

  • The Lover, the Lake

    The Lover, the Lake

    $21.95

    A spellbinding novel celebrating Indigenous sensuality; the first erotic novel written by an Indigenous woman in French.

    When it was first published in Quebec, The Lover, The Lake was heralded as the first erotic novel written by an Indigenous woman in French. Today, as it is translated into English for the first time, author Virginia Pesemapeo Bordeleau would rather call it a celebration of sensuality, another first. At a time when Indigenous peoples were being dispossessed of their land and history as well as their relationship to the body, the love explored by Wabougouni and Gabriel is an act of defiance. Their intimate connection plays out on the shores of Lake Abitibi in an affair as turbulent and unfathomable as the lake itself.

    “The aim here is to break free of the bonds of wounds the priests’ abuse has left on our bodies and souls, wounds linked to loss–of land, of intimate spaces, of identity both as an individual and community member, of sexual identity, of delight in the body, of innocence and the uncomplicated nature of lovemaking. My hope is that this novel will serve to unearth the seed of joy buried deep in our culture, still profoundly alive . . . The Lover, the Lake shows us that we are not just suffering and victims: we can also be pleasure.” — Virginia Pesemapeo Bordeleau, from the prologue

  • This Radiant Life

    This Radiant Life

    $20.00

    Winner of the 2021 Governor General’s Literary Award for Translation
    Winner of the 2021 Nelson Ball Poetry Prize

    In this stunning long poem, Chantal Neveu draws from the lexicons of science, art, revolution and corporeal movement to forge intense and extended rhythms that invoke the elements and spaces making up our world. This is poetry capable of holding life and death, solidarity and love. Renewal. Breathing.

    In its brevity and persistence, This Radiant Life is a material call for action: it asks us to let go, even just a little bit, of our individuality in favour of mutuality, to arrive separately yet in unison at a radiance in which all living beings can thrive.

  • Two Indians

    Two Indians

    $15.95

    Win lives on the rez and Roe lives in the city, where she fled after a terrible family tragedy. After years apart, the two cousins reunite in a Toronto alley to recreate a ceremony from their childhood, but can they remember how? Has the world changed too much? Have they? When the words “missing and murdered,” “truth and reconciliation,” “occupation and resistance” are everywhere, how do two Mohawk women stand their ground? Falen Johnson”s powerful Two Indians is a darkly comedic look at the landscape of being Indigenous.

  • You Are Eating an Orange. You Are Naked.

    You Are Eating an Orange. You Are Naked.

    $20.00

    Finalist for the 2021 Governor General’s Literary Award for Fiction
    Finalist for the 2021 Amazon Canada First Novel Award

    Longlisted for CBC Canada Reads 2021
    Globe and Mail Best Book Debut of 2020

    A young translator living in Toronto frequently travels abroad—to Hong Kong, Macau, Prague, Tokyo—often with his unnamed lover. In restaurants and hotel rooms, the couple begin telling folk tales to each other, perhaps as a way to fill the undefined space between them. Theirs is a comic and enigmatic relationship in which emotions are often muted and sometimes masked by verbal play and philosophical questions, and further complicated by the woman’s frequent unexplained disappearances.

    You Are Eating an Orange. You Are Naked. is an intimate novel of memory and longing that challenges Western tropes and Orientalism. Embracing the playful surrealism of Haruki Murakami and the atmospheric narratives of filmmaker Wong Kar-wai, Sheung-King’s debut is at once lyrical and punctuated, and wholly unique, and marks the arrival of a bold new voice in Canadian literature.