The Inferno
Lorna Goodison

“Halfway tree. The journey of our life found me / there at midnight in a ramshackle state.” So begins Lorna Goodison’s astonishing new translation of The Inferno by Dante, a poet she once described as “uncompromising as an old testament prophet, stern as a Rastafarian elder.”

For the last two decades, Goodison has translated and reimagined Dante’s cantos, setting the original poem into her native Jamaica and employing Jamaican expressions and sayings. In doing so, she has attempted to do for Caribbean vernacular what Dante did for his Italian language in the fourteenth century—endow it with an entirely new vocal music and power. In recreating the journey through the “unpaved and rocky road” of Dante’s Hell for a contemporary audience, Goodison has given us a dazzling and profound new narrative of spiritual yearning for our era.

One Long Line of Marvel
Alan Hustak

There are parades and then there is Montreal’s St. Patrick’s parade, which has marched through the streets of the city and into Canadian history for 200 years. The street carnival has outlived the Patriote Rebellion of 1837, Fenian infiltration, Orange animosity, strained relationships among Roman Catholic priests who wanted it cancelled, two world wars, two Quebec independence referendums, and two centuries of howling March winds and chilling sub zero temperatures.

With One Long Line of Marvel veteran journalist Alan Hustak has dug up untold nuggets about the parade and nested them with historical certainty and an imaginative flourish in the setting of a Montreal that he knows. Although the author is not a son of Erin, he is considered an honorary Irishman and in 2006 walked the parade route as Chief Reviewing Officer. With this book he continues to honour Montreal’s Irish community by celebrating its personalities and by telling its stories. One Long Line of Marvel enlightens, entertains, amuses and perhaps above all superbly chronicles a long and worthwhile tradition in Montreal’s history.

Subterrane
Valérie Bah

A speculative comedy comprised of a carousel of Black and Queer voices being pushed further underground by urban prosperity.

Subterrane connects us to a constellation of Black queer and trans voices, the hair braiders, tattoo artists, holistic healers, weed dealers, and sidewalk horticulturists struggling to make a life in New Stockholm. Together they illustrate how entire communities, despite being exploited in the name of prosperity, resist and enact their own freedom. New Stockholm, a settler colonial metropolis like any other, is unofficially divided between two worlds. Its upwardly mobile form the facade of its gleaming eye, but their prosperity and affluence are not the focus of hot young artiste Zeynab’s government-funded experimental documentary. Her lens trails into the city’s depths instead, to the polluted and overlooked district of Cipher Falls, one of New Stockholm’s last affordable neighbourhoods, where creatives and other anti-capitalist voices increasingly find themselves pushed into demeaning, dead-end jobs. In this sprawling underground network, Zeynab’s lens focuses on activist Doudou Laguerre, as he attempts to sabotage an insidious construction project.

Montreal Standard Time
Mavis Gallant

Edited by Neil Besner, Marta Dvorák and Bill Richardson

Preface by Mary K. MacLeod

Montreal Standard Time is drawn from Mavis Gallant’s columns in The Montreal Standard during her six-year tenure at the newspaper, beginning in 1944, when she was 22. Gallant reported on an extraordinary range of subjects: labour issues, mining, existentialism, immigration, comedy, mercy killings, feminism, and suffrage. Her journalism is peopled by a rich cast of characters: writers, painters, politicians, criminals, street kids, war brides, refugees, and unwed mothers. Eighty years after they first saw the light, the columns remain as fresh as ever.

Written with a precision, flair, and wit that would become her trademark, Montreal Standard Time is journalism of the first order. Taken together, the pieces create a remarkable portrait of Montreal in the eventful years during and after WW2, and of a young woman, fiercely independent and politically active, making her way through it. The book also corrects a long-standing gap in the Gallant oeuvre. Her celebrated reporting on the student riots in Paris in 1968 and on the Gabrielle Russier case are brilliant examples of her in-depth journalism. But that, and her insightful reviews and occasional pieces, have already been collected. Her earliest reporting from The Montreal Standard, however, has never circulated or appeared in book form.

Edited by Neil Besner, Marta Dvorak, and Bill Richardson, with a preface by Mary K. MacLeod, Montreal Standard Time is indispensable not only for the light it throws on Gallant’s time and place, but in how it reveals a major writer coming into her powers.

The Beginner’s Guide to Making Wine from Juice and Grapes
Daniel Pambianchi

From the author of Modern Home Winemaking and Techniques in Home Winemaking, Daniel Pambianchi’s The Beginner’s Guide to Making Wine from Juice and Grapes is for novices keen on making their own wine at home. It guides aspiring winemakers through the process, from crush to bottle, with step-by-step instructions using simple, modern techniques to craft consistently great wine. The book includes many illustrations, tables and examples to highlight the use of equipment and tools, and a comprehensive chapter dedicated to solving common winemaking problems.

Press

On My Brother's Keeper:

Praise for My Brother’s Keeper

On States of Emergency:
"Yoyo Comay's States of Emergency

On National Animal:
National Animal

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

News

SEPTEMBER NEWSLETTER (click for link)
We have a jam-packed fall ahead! This Thursday, September 19th, Mary Dalton will be launching Interrobang, her latest book of poetry at Cox & Palmer Second Space (Resource Centre for the Arts) in St John’s, Newfoundland. On October 3rd, Toronto friends are invited to attend the launch of One River: New and Selected Poems, a collection showcasing the best of Ricardo Sternberg. The launch will be from 6-8 p.m. at St. Matthew's Clubhouse. And Montreal Standard Time: The Early Journalism of Mavis Gallant, the first collection of Mavis Gallant's columns from The Montreal Standard, granting readers "an image of post-war Montreal through the eyes of a young woman," has been featured on CBC Books' 54 Works of Canadian Nonfiction to Check Out this Fall, as well as The Walrus's Best Books of Fall 2024! Plus many more author events, signings, and reviews!

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!
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).