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The Blue House
Rupert Goldmann’s “memoirs” trace the story of his life as a child-prodigy cello virtuoso, his flirtations and relationships, his experiences as an unrewarded composer, and his eventual, much-interrupted attempt to retreat into the world of his imagination.
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Girl Gangs, Zines, and Powerslides
A lifelong skateboarder and librarian, Porter scoured old zines and media for photos or mentions of women riders. Often, they went uncredited, unnamed, or were mentioned only in passing, as footnotes to the men dominating the culture. This book carves out space for the women who loved to kickflip, even if the boys never invited…
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Tell Me I Can’t
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To Linger With You
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Wrestling with Cadence
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Unorganized Territory
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Marrow Memory
In Marrow Memory: Essays of Discovery Margaret Nowaczyk explores different facets of her life, from listening to the radio dramas of her childhood in Communist Poland to her work now as a pediatric clinical geneticist. These are beautifully crafted essays, full of hard-won truths and insights, generously shared with the reader.
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52 Things to Do in Hamilton
A wide-ranging mix of activities sure to keep visitors, newcomers to the city and even long-time residents heading out to explore all through the year.
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Billy Crawford’s Double Play
In this wise-cracking, fast-paced novel, Brad Smith lampoons today’s scandal-ridden politics and politicians. But among the laughter, Smith also shows us there can be hope, and even integrity, where we least expect it.
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The Wonder Lands War
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Syncopation
In this speculative and intoxicating novel, French offers readers an intricate future-world that resonates so powerfully with our own, as it explores a people gripped in the war-torn politics of migration, memory-keeping, labour, and survival.
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Ladder to Heaven
In 2045 an earthquake ravages the Pacific Coast of North America and the world shifts. Suddenly people and animals can understand each other, while the chaos of climate change combines with the destruction of the earthquake in terrifying ways.
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What We Know So Far Is …
In a powerful long poem that captures the disquiet of our age with cinematic language and imagery, Conor Mc Donnell’s What We Know So Far Is … harkens back to the previous century in its daring.
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The Book of Interruptions
Infused with “pre-emptive violence” these poems mark the intersection of war, immigration, sexuality and history, with lines often placed at the crossroads of Perso-Islamic and Western thought.