New ebooks From Canadian Indies

Literary

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The Blue Books

The Blue Books

by Nicole Brossard
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
tagged : literary
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The Bone Cage

The Bone Cage

by Angie Abdou
edition:eBook
tagged : sports, literary
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The Breaking Words

The Breaking Words

by Gilaine Mitchell
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
tagged : literary, contemporary women, small town & rural
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The Breakwater Book of Contemporary Newfoundland Short Fiction

The Breakwater Book of Contemporary Newfoundland Short Fiction

edited by Larry Matthews
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
tagged : anthologies (multiple authors), literary, cultural heritage
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The Breakwater House

The Breakwater House

by Pascale Quiviger
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
tagged : literary, visionary & metaphysical
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The Brink of Freedom

The Brink of Freedom

by Stella Leventoyannis Harvey
edition:eBook
tagged : literary
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Excerpt

Christos and his family continued to survive, despite the ongoing recession, thanks to God, his mother-in-law and Tia’s cousin with government connections. When he’d worked at OTE, Christos used to say corruption and nepotism were Greece’s biggest problems. If they could rid the country of the rot, they’d be better off. But that was before he found himself out of work.

His wife’s cousin had told him the only places hiring these days were police departments and security companies. He had a few connections in the police department. "These days with the migrants and the Golden Dawn racists and the protests in the streets it’s a booming industry. The only one. Go in there and show them you’re tough enough for the job," Petros said. "And keep your liberal ideas to yourself. These people don’t care about such things."

As much as he hated the new order–daily riots in the streets, violence by and against foreigners−it had provided him with work.

Christos stuck the key for the safe into his pocket.

"You’re home," Tia said as she walked into the kitchen. "How was the night? Has Kefalas’s head shrunk any?" She smiled.

"It is always the same." He shrugged now. "People don’t change."

She swung quickly towards the stove, turning down the element beneath the bubbling broth. "Too much on my mind and the day hasn’t even begun."

"How was he last night?" Christos asked. He left a trace of a kiss on Tia’s cheek. Standing at the stove, a ladle in her hand, she leaned into him.

"He ate a little. More than the first night," she said. "Yiayia tells me he doesn’t say much during the day, sits by himself, doesn’t bother with any of the toys, even when Alexandra tries to interest him in her doll or pesters him."

"How is Alexandra getting along with him?"

"She thinks she has a new brother," Tia said, "who doesn’t have to go to school with her other brothers." Tia stirred the soup. "The boys don’t know why you brought him here. They wonder what their friends will say when they find out a child such as this is living with them. I’ve told the boys we have to help where we can. Where is their filόtimo? They need to be reminded of what it means to be honourable."

"If they knew the way the Roma live," he said.

"The boy needs his mother," Tia said. "What kind of monster sells his own son?"

"We don’t know he’s done that. We only suspect it. Maybe it’s a simple misunderstanding. We don’t know."

"The child was found in the woman’s apartment. Distraught. You told me so yourself." She turned and pointed the ladle at him. He watched as a few drops of soup dripped to the floor. She didn’t seem to notice. "What was he doing there if his father didn’t sell him? Thank God for the honest Greeks in the woman’s building. It is nice to know there are still good people left in this country."

Yes, good Greeks, Christos thought. He saw again how the old woman had whispered and pointed to the Canadian woman’s apartment door. Her husband stood behind her, his hands over his ears. Neither looked him in the eye. "What are we to do with these foreigners?" the old woman had said. "They are taking over our country. Ruining it. And our leaders let them in so they can walk all over us. When will it stop?"

"What will happen to that poor child?" Tia asked now. "What kind of life could he have with the person who calls himself his father?"

"We’ll find his mother."

"And if you don’t? Will he stay with us? I’m telling you now." She pointed at him. "We have to think of our own family first."

"Tia, I know this," Christos said.

Her jaw tightened; her eyes blazed through him as they did whenever she was trying to make a point. "What if the mother is worse than the father? At least the father went looking for him. We know nothing about the mother." Her voice rose; her shoulders hunched up, her posture stiffened.

"I don’t have answers right now." Christos said. "I’m trying to understand what happened. I’m trying. That’s all." He knew what she was thinking. You are so methodical, so slow to come to a decision. So unwilling to push things. Sometimes you have to decide things without thinking. You have to take action.

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The Butcher of Penetang

The Butcher of Penetang

by Betsy Trumpener
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
tagged : short stories (single author), literary
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The Butcher's Hook

The Butcher's Hook

by Janet Ellis
edition:eBook
tagged : literary, crime
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