New ebooks From Canadian Indies

Literary

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Dry Water

Dry Water

A Novel by Robert J.C. Stead
by Robert J.C. Stead, edited by Neil Querengesser & Jean Horton
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
tagged : literary, biographical
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Earth and High Heaven

Earth and High Heaven

by Gwethalyn Graham
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
tagged : historical, literary, jewish
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Easy to Like

Easy to Like

by Edward Riche
edition:eBook
also available: Hardcover Paperback
tagged : literary, humorous, satire
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Eat Your Heart Out

Eat Your Heart Out

by Katie Boland
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
tagged : short stories (single author), literary, coming of age
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El Niño

El Niño

by Nadia Bozak
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
tagged : literary, hispanic & latino, contemporary women
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Elle

Elle

by Douglas Glover, afterword by Lawrence Mathews
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
tagged : literary, historical
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English Lessons and Other Stories

English Lessons and Other Stories

by Shauna Singh Baldwin
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback Paperback Paperback
tagged : short stories (single author), literary
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Entropic

Entropic

by R.W. Gray
edition:eBook
tagged : short stories (single author), gay, literary
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Excerpt

Excerpt from “Blink”

You’d understand if you could see her. Here, in the Saturday morning street market, a black coffee in one hand, the other gently running over the spines of tattered books on a book table. Everything about her conspires toward composure. Each strand of hair flowing with the others, the perfectly cut line where her hairline parts. She’s not a woman who fidgets. She has the composure of the stone women who hold up temple roofs.

Do the melancholy candle vendor, the grim Belgian chocolatier, the slow grazing market goers feel this way around her? Redundant. Untethered, wanting to hold her hand so as to not float away.

Lost. I’ve lost sight of her.

The market air shudders. Oceans lie down on me. A flock of wingless, cawless birds fling themselves over the buildings, the Saturday shoppers motionless, paper thin and oblivious. Lost.

She turns then and I see her in profile, eating caramelized ginger delicately from a paper bag like it’s a secret between her and the ginger. Not lost.

Silly. I think, silly. Like a child. My mother must have used this word once. Many times. Don’t be silly.

I mention this to my therapist, how I lose her. It’s not the first time. He, predictably, asks how it makes me feel. Silly, I say. He, predictably, looks concerned.

I don’t tell him how I am braced for this pain now, braced waiting for the next sinkhole, for the sound to suck out of the room, and the deep, sea-floor silence to press in.

She’ll turn then, colour gushing back in, and see my furrowed forehead, throw me a subtle lift of her eyebrows to ask what’s up, as if nothing. Silly.

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