Winner of the 2024 William Mills Prize for Non-Fiction Polar Books
One of the few biographies of an Inuk man from the 19th Century—separated from his family, community, and language—finding his place ...
A motley group’s long trek across the prairies, witnessing the land, reflecting on the past, and creating new paths for the future
Equal parts memoir, travelogue, and manifesto, The Good Walk recounts ...
An exposé of the reality of Saskatchewan’s potash industry management—prioritizing private profit over public interest
A single province in Canada—Saskatchewan—is blessed with a remarkable ...
Winner of the 2023 Sowell Emerging Writers Prize
An abandoned place, a disheveled person, a shabby or deteriorating state: we describe such ruin colloquially as “going to seed.” But gardeners will ...
Explores the integral roles that Métis women assumed to ensure the survival of their communities during the fur trade era and onward
Métis Matriarchs examines the impact of prominent Métis women from ...
A scathing critique of the colonial legal system’s denial of children’s rights
One afternoon in 2016, law professor Robin Hansen receives a call. On the other end of the line is “Jacquie”—a pregnant ...
Harold Rhenisch’s poems balance the settler and Indigenous experiences of land and water in the Pacific Northwest
A collection of shanties laid out in couplets that move between English and Chinook Wawa, ...
Uncut explores the significance of the foreskin in contemporary culture
The “uncut” penis is viewed by some as attractive or erotic, and by others as ugly or undesirable. Secular parents of male infants ...
A guide from bestselling author Alice Kuipers on how to write for children and young adults—from igniting an initial idea to creating a finished draft
In Spark, acclaimed children’s and YA author Alice ...
A collection of memories chronicling love, grief, and a life lived on and off stage
Raised on a farm and educated in a prairie Bible school, Layne Coleman escapes the confines of his stiflingly religious ...