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Get 25% Off All DQ Books Until November 27th!

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There's a lot to celebrate here at Drawn & Quarterly, as we welcome our brand new kids' bookstore across the street at 176 Bernard West.

And our fall titles are something to behold: Between Tom Gauld's Baking With Kafta and Brigitte Findakly's Poppies of Iraq, from R. Sikoryak's The Unquotable Trump to a beautiful reissue of Lynda Barry's The Good Times Are Killing Me (not to mention works by Leanne Shapton, Jason Lutes, Tove Jansson, and Leslie Stein), there's something for everyone.

 We want to share our excitement with you!
 We're announcing a 25% OFF Drawn+Quarterly published titles, in-store sale at both locations! The sale will end next Monday, November 27th.

New & Notable: Jaime Hernandez Fantagraphics Studio Edition

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The Jaime Hernandez: Fantagraphics Studio Edition is out this month!


Jaime Hernandez is co-creator of the beloved Love and Rockets series and one third of Los Bros Hernandez, innovators of alternative comics.


This beautiful collection features almost 200 pages of unretouched original art, an interview with the artist and a trove of unreleased material. 



Come see it for yourself at the shop! 

Staff Picks 2017: Alyssa

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Every year I dread this task: choosing, somehow, amidst all the amazing literature that came out this year, a top ten. It's a challenge I never feel up to. How does one compare a graphic novel to a poetry collection? Essays to short stories? Cookbooks to comics? And so I've selected ten titles in no particular order, books that made me fall in love, cry bitterly, or cackle to myself in public. But as for some sort of objective ranking, that I'll leave to you.


The Idiot, Elif Batuman
In Batuman's much-loved new novel, college freshman Selin has just arrived at Harvard in the 90s. Humorous, curious, and introspective, Selin finds herself immersed in Russian literature, first love, and the rather existential question of how one becomes a writer. The prose is observant, yet meditative, funny but with all the gravitas of becoming an adult and slowly, endearingly, figuring it all out.

Sour Heart, Jenny Zhang
It was a real treat to watch Jenny Zhang converse with Zadie Smith earlier this year, and there's a good reason she was chosen for the role. Her debut stories are sharply perceptive but with a tender softness, blending coming-of-age stories with tales of immigration, dreams deferred, poverty, and love. Her protagonists, daughters of artists and scholars, are delightful in their foibles, their stories, weaknesses, and aspirations a testament to Zhang's honesty and emotional range.


Mois aussi je voulais l'emporter, Julie Delporte
In her meditations on travel, art, sex, and Tove Jansson, the narrative thread holding together Julie's beautiful new graphic novel is a constant examination of what it means to be a woman. The interconnected vignettes slowly, painfully, reconcile themselves to this identity, rife with expectations and often uncomfortably constrained. The art and text work perfectly together toward the kind of clear-hearted introspection that made me sit down on a park bench in -5 weather just to finish it.

Boundless, Jillian Tamaki
I read Jillian Tamaki's spectacular set of short stories multiple times in preparation for a graphic novel book club I hosted this summer, and enjoyed them just as much each and every time. Tamaki is a consummate artist and storyteller, and Boundless's characters--who, in turn, shrink down to nothingness or become obsessed with a mysterious mirror-world Facebook--seem alive as they find themselves distanced from, or transcending, their identities, culture, relationships, and selves.


Sticks Angelica Folk Hero, Michael DeForge
When I say that this is my favourite thing Michael DeForge has published since Ant Colony, it's a meaningful sentiment. I’m always a fan of his eerie, hyper-stylized illustration and deadpan dialogue, but there’s something extra special about the story of Sticks Angelica, former Canadian heiress and force of nature. Running away from a family scandal, Sticks goes to live in the wilderness among animals like a lonely electric eel and a moose named Lisa Hanawalt who dreams of becoming a big shot lawyer in the bustling metropolis of Ottawa. They’re only a few of the characters that fill the pages of this enchanting graphic novel, with a story that had me chuckling with every new page.

Baking with Kafka, Tom Gauld
Definitely one of the books that had me laughing at increasingly inappropriate times, Baking with Kafka is the perfect continuation of You're All Just Jealous of My Jetpack, the first installment of Gauld's collected Guardian comic strips. Intelligent, absurd, and not a little irreverent, this new collection is funnier, more succinct, and just as enjoyable as its predecessor. 


Hunger, Roxane Gay
Back in 2015, we had the pleasure of welcoming Roxane Gay here in Montreal. During that event she mentioned her new project: a memoir of her body, her relationship to food, her history of trauma. Well worth that long anticipation, Hunger is a harrowing story: a chronicle of childhood rape, silent shame, eating, weight gain, and self-preservation, told unflinchingly, honestly, and with undeniable care. Gay is a master writer, adding to her years writing about feminism and women's bodies with this deeply personal work that is not to be missed.

Tropico, Marcela Huerta
It's always a little embarrassing when such a little book will make me cry, but I suppose that's what I get for reading books like Tropico. An intimate portrayal of the grief and love that arise from parental relationships and shared trauma, Tropico is all the best parts of the memoir, the poem, and the short story. The daughter of Chilean political refugees, Marcela has crafted a careful but uncompromising testament to how families can at once soothe and hurt each other, and how one can hope to cope with that lasting pain.


Delete, Daphné B.
I fell totally in love with Daphné's 2015 poetry collection Bluetiful, but this new work--ambitious, tightly woven, utterly relatable--is something else entirely. A reclamation of self in the face of love that threatens to swallow you whole, Delete works its way through email correspondence never sent, the disconnectedness of living abroad, the ennui of a changed home. Calm and considered, the deeply felt words give meaning to moments of loneliness, of inaction, of loss.

Wild Beauty, Ntozake Shange
Having had the opportunity to see one of my favourite plays, Shange's seminal For Colored Girls, performed recently, it was only natural that I would turn to this new work: a splendid English/Spanish collection of the writer's best and newest poems. There's always a living immediacy to Shange's work, a richness and breath to it that invites an out-loud reading, a rhythm, a dance. At times painful, always beautiful, I'm very grateful for the timing of this book's release. It's allowed me to immerse myself fully in a writer I love. 

And make sure to check out all the other staff picks when they come out:
Kate \\ Luke \\ Kennedy \\ Saelan \\ Chantal \\ Arizona \\ Chantale \\ Ben \\ Kalliopé \\ Anna \\ Sophie \\ Eli





Event recap: Daphné B. & Kathy L. launch I Love Dick, a fanfic w/ Marcela Huerta & Julie Delporte

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This past Friday, the 1st of December, we had the pleasure of hosting the launch of I Love Dick, a fanfic!


The zine is a collaboration between Daphné B. (poet and translator, and author of Bluetiful and Delete), and Kathy L. (part-time bookseller and artist based in Montréal). Back in the summer, Daphné and Kathy exchanged letters in the style of Chris Kraus' feminist cult classic written in the 90s, addressed to the eponymous Dick. 


The letters analyze a variety of contemporary phenomena and cultural objects such as celebrity, memes, Google Translate, pop songs, and Vegas, through the lens of female desire and feminism. The text is interwoven with images: screenshots of internet image browsing and Youtube playlists. At the intersection of artist book, zine, and fanfiction, it is a funny, subversive, and thoughtful reflection on love, desire, and art.


Daphné and Kathy took turns reading their letters, accompanied by some Lynchian mood music. The two were then joined onstage by Marcela Huerta (former assistant editor of Drawn & Quarterly and author of Tropico), and Julie Delporte (prolific cartoonist, essayist, and author of Moi aussi je voulais l'emporter), who each read from new works. Marcela even wrote her own letter to Dick!


After the readings, Kathy screened a film entitled "Last Looks", which chopped'n'screwed footage from a Harlequin-produced TV show to map the various gazes of contempt, desire, and searching. 


The readers—all D+Q staffers past and present—then partook in a "great provocative discussion about unrequited love as cultural practice, unknown terrain of female desire and selfies of crying girls" (per Heather O'Neill). Later, the conversation was further fueled by the audience in a stirring Q&A. 


Thank you to everyone for packing the house, and thank you to our wonderful readers for such a memorable event!

Staff Picks 2017: Kennedy

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As an English student and a bookseller, I spend a lot of time around books. When I wasn't reading textbooks of Romantic poetry or writing essays on post-war British novels, I read the books I've compiled here - my favourites! I've also spent a lot of time leafing through picture books since the opening of our new children's store, La Petite D+Q, and I couldn't enjoy it more. It was tough to pick just a few but I've included some picture books that I loved this year.


Too Much and Not the Mood, Durga Chew-Bose
After feeling like I had spent an eternity in a reading slump, Durga Chew-Bose’s debut collection of essays completely lifted my spirits. She puts such care into every detail of her essays that reading them felt like being hugged. She has an incredible eye for details and carves them out so perfectly that I felt like I could hold each moment in my hands.



Boundless, Jillian Tamaki
Jillian Tamaki's collection of short stories is full of emotion, wit, and of course Tamaki's beautiful illustrations. Each story feels so special and delicate that I return to these stories anytime when I'm in need of some comfort reading. Wholly unique and engaging, Tamaki secures her spot as one of my favourite writers and artists.

Spaniel Rage, Vanessa Davis
I picked up this book after reading a recommendation from one of my favourite artists, Lisa Hanawalt, on the back cover, and I was not disappointed. Davis' collection of daily sketches is delightfully funny and comforting and I devoured it in one sitting before returning to my favourite pages again and again.



Lincoln in the Bardo, George Saunders
I finally got around to reading George Saunders’ first novel a few weeks ago and I was floored. Narrated by a group of eccentric ghosts, the novel jumps off from a historical fact: after the death of his ten year old son, Abraham Lincoln returned to the crypt several times to hold his son’s body. The book had me crying within the first few chapters and laughing mere paragraphs later. I have loved every George Saunders book that I’ve read, but I think this may be my all-time favourite.



Uncomfortably Happily, Yeon-Sik Hong
This graphic memoir follows a young couple as they move from the busy streets of Seoul to the mountainous countryside in an attempt to escape chaos and expenses of the city. They find, however, that their new pastoral life is not exactly what they had imagined. The beauty in the minute details of this book kept me hanging on in a way that I never thought possible. I could read about the couple making dinner, warming their home, gardening, and all the rest of the mundanity of daily life for a thousand more pages.




Hunger, Roxane Gay
Roxane Gay’s deeply personal memoir chronicles her relationship with her body from childhood, adolescence, and adulthood. Through this she meditates on family, loneliness, and trauma in ways that feel both solely personal but intensely familiar.



Theft by Finding, David Sedaris
I usually have a David Sedaris book going at all times. I read a story or two anytime I need a pick-me-up, a palate cleanser, or just a brief moment of escape from it all. Theft By Finding, a collection of his diary entries from 1977 to 2002, is the perfect book for this. This book is a true deep-dive into Sedaris’ career, and full of his incomparable wit.



Here We Are, Oliver Jeffers
The latest from the wonderful author and illustrator Oliver Jeffers, this beautiful book provides ''notes for living on planet earth''. He tours the entire world, land, sea, and stars in all its beautiful, illustrated glory.

The Golden Leaf, Kristen Hall and Matthew Forsythe
In this picture book written by Kristen Hall and beautifully illustrated by Montreal artist Matthew Forsythe, a group of animals chase an elusive gold leaf throughout the forest. Using actual gold leafing technique, this is one of the most gorgeous picture books I’ve read in a long time. Pairs well with the Matthew Forsythe designed wrapping paper available at La Petite D+Q!



Saisons de Montréal, Raphaelle Barbanègre
Each page in this book takes you to a new corner of Montreal. Filled with colour and charm, just like the city, this book makes a perfect gift for anyone visiting Montreal, living in Montreal, or missing Montreal. It makes me eager to get out and explore as much of the city as I can.

More staff picks are on their way! Look out for favourites from:

Kate // Luke // Saelan // Chantal // Arizona // Chantale // Benjamin // Kalliopé // Anna // Sophie // Eli



Staff Picks 2017: Saelan

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Every year, I complain about how grad school and parenthood keep me from reading for pleasure as much as I'd like. Well, this year my partner and I had our second child, so suffice it to say that not much has changed as far as my reading habits go, though I did manage to find time for a lot of graphic novels. As for the rest, I'll leave you guessing as to which titles I've actually read and which are patiently waiting on my desk or night table.

DRAWN & QUARTERLY
Jillian Tamaki - Boundless and Tove Jansson - Moomin and the Brigands

I'm going to limit myself to two books, here. Jillian Tamaki's Boundless was my favourite graphic novel of 2017 pretty much hands-down (see my mid-year round-up for a longer write-up) and Moomin and the Brigands (just re-issued!) is the very first of Tove Jansson's almost unspeakably charming Moomin comics -- an absolute treasure for readers of any age.

OTHER GRAPHIC
Sophie Goldstein - House of Women; Jaakko Pallasvuo - Mirror Stage& Easy Rider; Patrik Kyle - Everywhere Disappeared; Jesse Jacobs - Crawl Space; Sophia Foster-Dimino - Sex Fantasy

Look at this bumper crop! I remember a few years ago when Sophie Goldstein (then an intern at the D&Q office) brought in House of Women as a zine for consignment and it blew me away. Now this fabulous feminist sci-fi horror comic is available in a gorgeous hardcover from Fantagraphics! Jaakko Pallasvuo, one of my favourite artists (full stop) had two comics this year: a little one from Latvian press Mini Kuš, and a longer one from Landfill Editions (sadly, his book from 2dcloud is postponed, hopefully not indefinitely). Koyama Press also had a fantastic year, with stellar titles from Patrick Kyle, Sophia Foster-Dimino, and Jesse Jacobs.

An honourable mention goes to Manuele Fior's The Interview (not pictured), an interesting near-future sci-fi romance.

FICTION
Matthias Enard - Compass; Otessa Moshfegh - Homesick for Another World; Laurent Binet - The Seventh Function of Language; Elif Batuman - The Idiot; Leanne Betasamosake Simpson - This Accident of Being Lost

I'll refrain from individually pitching you these five excellent books. Mathias Enard's Middle-Eastern fantasia, Compass, already comes decorated with the Prix Goncourt, while Moshfegh and Batuman's books will likely appear on many of my coworkers' lists, too. You can look here for my earlier praise of Leanne Simpson. As for Laurent Binet, The Seventh Function of Language is a madcap, postmodern detective novel in the vein of Umberto Eco's Foucault's Pendulum. We all know that Roland Barthes died in 1980 after being struck by a laundry van -- what Binet's novel presupposes is...maybe he was murdered?

I KNOW YOU
Naben Ruthnum - Curry: Eating, Reading, and Race; Daphné B. & Kathy L. - I Love Dick (a fanfic); Marcela Huerta - Tropico

It's a special pleasure to read books written by people you know, especially when the books are personal, as each of these are. This year, my friend Naben published a long essay (via Coach House's Exploded Views imprint) on the idea of the ''currybook,'' the literary subgenre of the South Asian diaspora in which food is so often a metaphor for the irretrievable homeland. My current and former coworkers Kate and Daphne published a fan-fictional take on Chris Kraus' iconic I Love Dick that examines the trope of unrequited love as a spur to creativity. And, finally, another former coworker, Marcela Huerta, wrote a poignant collection of poems mostly inspired by her late father, a Chilean political refugee.

Honourable mention, as well, to Daphné's Delete and to Julie Delporte's Moi aussi je voulais l'emporter, both of which I have to miss out on, since my French reading skills aren't really up to par.

NON-FICTION
Hito Steyerl - Duty Free Art; Michael Robbins - Equipment for Living; Chris Kraus - After Kathy Acker

Three of my favourite living cultural critics published book this year! Hito Steyerl's Duty Free Art is an anthology of her indispensable essays on contemporary art (mostly drawn from e-flux journal) and Equipment for Living  collects Michael Robbin's adroit essays on pop music and poetry. Chris Kraus'After Kathy Acker is a frank, critical biography of the late punk-postmodernist writer that avoids the usual hagiography and romanticization that tends to accrue to accounts of 1980s New York.

An honourable mention goes to Malcolm Harris's Kids These Days: Human Capital and the Making of Millennials (not pictured).

NEW EDITIONS
Raymond Roussel - Locus Solus; Leonora Carrington - Complete Stories; Robert Musil - The Man Without Qualities

You can look here for my recommendations of this year's reissued works by Raymond Roussel and Leonora Carrington. Kudos as well to Picador for finally putting a decent English edition of Robert Musil's classic modernist novel of fin-de-siecle Austria back in print. An honourable mention goes to New Direction' handsome new edition of Fernando Pessoa's Book of Disquiet (not pictured).

READING FOR LIFE
bell hooks - The Will to Change; Sarah Schulman - Conflict is Not Abuse

I feel like the most important book I've read this year is bell hooks'The Will to Change, which was published in 2004. Even at that date, hook was lamenting the lack of serious efforts by men (as well as by female-identified feminist thinkers) to understand how patriarchy (aside from the obvious harm it does to women and gender-nonconforming people) also harms men and boys, and what a non-patriarchal masculinity not based on domination and repression might look like. Thirteen years later, we need that analysis more than ever, though it's tragic that we've made so little progress on this front. Conflict is Not Abuse, meanwhile, instructs us on how to avoid reinforcing toxic behaviour patterns even as we seek to confront abuse in our communities.



Staff Picks 2017: Chantale

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While on maternity leave this year, I read most moments when I wasn't caring for the baby. And once he was in daycare, I read even more! I found myself attracted to books that surprised me in ways that I didn't know I wanted to be surprised, and those that revealed fresh insightful histories, voices, and stories. I didn't want the comfort of the expected. This year, I wanted wild, playful, and intelligent books that saved me from ruminating on the cloudy cold darkened reality.

STRANGE STORIES



The Doll's Alphabet, Camilla Grudova
Think of this astounding collection of short stories as Angela Carter meets Nell Zink meets George Saunders, bumping up against Gothic moodiness and childlike innocence. I was immersed in the Toronto-based writer's off-kilter world from the first line: "One afternoon, after finishing a cup of coffee in her living room, Greta discovered how to unstitch herself."

Mrs Caliban, Sarah Ingalls
A housewife begins an affair with a large green alien. The premise is wacky, but it is delivered with such tenderness and poise. Originally written in 1982, this unclassifiable new New Directions edition mixes domestic realism with sci-fi strangeness, camp with romance, desire with sadness.

Fever Dream, Samantha Schweblin, translated by Megan McDowell (not pictured)
Here is a breathless short novel about a mother trying to recall a key event with her child in a rush of urgency. In trying to recollect what has happened, she must be observant as she thinks back to all that has lead up to the event. The reader too is trying to make sense of what has happened, and it arrives in fragments: a young boy, worms, contamination, the rescue distance. To be read in one sitting.

POETIC



Nature Poem, Tommy Pico
As an indigenous writer, Pico is expected to write on, connect with, and respond to nature in predictable and clear ways. But he reminds me, as a reader, that the world is immense and unimaginable, with greater breadth than colonial-white stereotypes allow. This is an epic poem that grapples with the poet's ambivalence to nature with truth and vulnerability.

Whereas, Layli Long Soldier
Reading this extra-ordinary book of poetry had me stunned. It halted my rhythm. It caused me to stop, slow down, stop, re-read, stop, and interpret words and forms anew. I heard Long Soldier read earlier this year and her firm patient oral voice comes through so clearly in these poems. One for the ages.

DIARIES; LIVES OF AMAZING PEOPLE





Being Here Is Everything: The Life of Paula Modersohn-Becker,Marie Darrieussecq
This book is everything! I want to shove it in the hands of everyone I meet. Darrieussecq's writing on the life of painter Paula Modersohn-Becker (1876-1907) is tender, so attentive to the Paula's detailed expressions of desires in her letters, diary entries, and paintings. And Paula's life, full of self-assured ambition and intense love, is familiar. She wanted so much, did so much, yet ended up dying at 31, nineteen days after her first child was born.

Difficult Women: A Memoir of Three, David Plante
This new NYRB edition details the lives of utterly singular women in older age, women who had no intentions of following along the pre-described written lines for women. Plante spent time with three women who didn't receive the recognition and results they desired: novelist Jean Rhys, activist Germaine Greer, and Sonia Orwell. He recorded every moment of his time with them in his diary. What results is a sharp account of exceptional lives, arguably too difficult to reckon with.

Theft & Finding, David Sedaris
This collection of diary entries is a real treat as someone who has been reading Sedaris for nearly 10 years, having started with Me Talk Pretty One Day. Is it strange to say that he was my introduction to good literature, as goofy and playful as his stories were? Well. He was. And this book of diary entries reminds me just why he spoke to me so clearly all those years ago. These are entries of eccentric events and moments and conversations, rather than recordings of feelings and inner monologues. Each entry is a gem, catching the out-there kooky nuttiness of the world we live in.

DRAWN & QUARTRERLY



Uncomfortably Happy, Yeon-Sik Hong
It is a familiar story: a young couple moves to the countryside to get away from the hustle and bustle, and it turns out to be so far away from the paradise they expected. In this version, with two artists along a Korean mountainside, the story is told with clear specificity and visceral expression. It is also a story of creativity, artists block, and creating one's vocation. I fell in love with this couple, and I rooted for them! I wanted them to make it, because I knew I wouldn't have been able to.

Boundless, Jillian Tamaki
I'm convinced Jillian Tamaki can do no wrong. Her drawings, her storytelling, her writings, her imaginations, her intelligence, her restraint, her style, her spunk! This out-of-sight collection of stories is for anyone who appreciates stories from the outskirts of the familiar.

GRAPHIC



Everything Is Flammable, Gabrielle Bell
Like Tamaki, I love everything Gabrielle Bell puts out. I love the honesty, vulnerability, and humor she puts out in her personal stories. This one is about her relationship with her aging mother, who lives in the wilderness and can no longer survive as independently as she wished. Their relationship is warm, intimate, and equitable, making me think not only on my own parental relationships but about how I want to foster my ever-developing relationship with my own children.

The Hand and Other Stories, Nicole Claveloux
This new NYRC collection offers us the first ever English translation of French artist Nicole Claveloux's 1970's surreal kooky out-of-this-world comics. Turn to this spectacular collection for talking plants, depressed birds, sassy babies, and the most amazing array of colours you can handle. To quote the artist, these stories are "smiles that bite."

JEUNESSE



Feather, Rémi Courgeon
A young girl named Feather develops a strategy to defend herself against taking on the brunt of domestic work left to her by her three brothers and father. She learns to box, so to speak to the brute physical masculine energy and demands of her family. In turn, they listen and hear her. Told simply and poetically, this picture book is compelling, affirming, and satisfying. n.b. not just for girls! It's a story that all children can appreciate and take from without being hit over the head with its politics.

Le facteur de l'espace, Guillaume Perreault
I fell in love with this comic for kids, about a mailman in space who is suddenly re-routed off his usual comfortable route. He ends up delivering strange mail to strange residents on strange planets. He's annoyed, exhausted, and scared, eagerly awaiting for the horrible day to end. Oh, but the adventure!! It's kind of exciting. Perhaps he'll stick with this new route after all... ;)

ADDITIONAL LOVES



She was called successively Rachel, Monique, Szyndler, Calle, Pagliero, Gonthier, Sindler. My mother did not appear in my work and that annoyed her., Sophie Calle
Moi aussi je voulais l'emporter, Julie Delporte
I'm Not Here,  GG

TO READ IN 2018, KNOWING I'LL LOVE THEM


Working Woman, Elvira Navarro
Her Body & Other Parties, Carmen Maria Machado
In the Distance, Hernan Diaz
Modern LoveConstance Dejong (not pictured)



The Gift, Barbara Browning
Whatever Happened to Interracial Love?, Kathleen Collin
Bridge Retakes, Angela Lopes
Swallow the Fish, Gabrielle Civil

And make sure to check out all the other staff picks as they come out:
Alyssa \\ Kennedy \\ Saelan \\ Kate \\ Luke \\ Chantal \\ Arizona \\ Ben \\ Kalliopé \\ Anna \\ Sophie \\ Eli \\

Staff Picks 2017: Arizona

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This year I have been attracted to a common theme in literature: loneliness. My top three books of the year focus on big cities and the lonely people lost among the crowds. There is something so beautiful about reading startlingly accurate portrayals of your own sense of alienation reflected in others. However, 2017 was not a lonely year for me, even though I indulged in its literature. It has been six months since I started working at Drawn and Quarterly and it has enriched my life with real life and fictional friends. I also started my own book club, which I suggest everyone do with their friends. It opened me up to new and old books that I never would have read or known about.


The Lonely Hearts Hotel by Heather O’Neill


I’ve never read a book that was quite so pretty and dark and funny and sad all at once. It tells the story of Rose and Pierrot, two talented circus performers who are separated as children, and go on strange journeys through the underworld before meeting again. Just the descriptions of hotels alone made this book worthwhile. I think an illustrator should draw them all. Or they should make them into maquettes and make an exhibit out of them. Seriously. And the stuff that happens in those hotel rooms!!!



I’ve read all of O’Neill’s previous works. And I think this may be my favourite one. It really stays with and haunts you.


The Lonely City by Olivia Laing


The subtitle for this book is ‘Adventures in the Art of being Alone.’ This book looks at New York City and the artists that have lived there from Edward Hopper to Andy Warhol to Henry Darger, and tries to answer the question: ‘What does it mean to be lonely?’ Laing manages to capture each artist’s style on the page and how each expressed their pain and isolation through their art. This book will bring you to tears, but will leave you feeling enlightened by its final message. One of the best non-fiction books I read this year.


My Lesbian Experience with Loneliness by Kabi Nagata


The title and the bright pink cover captured my attention immediately and I knew I had to take it home. It is an autobiographical manga that is an honest look at a young woman’s exploration of sexuality, and her mental health. It is incredibly refreshing to see someone so honest about being a young adult in our modern age. The book opens up on Nagata with a female escort, and you are instantly hooked. The story will make you laugh and cringe and feel warmth and disgust, get ready for the journey.


Drawn and Quarterly published books:



Goliath by Tom Gauld


Now this is not a new publication, it dates back to 2012, but the soft cover has finally come out in 2017. So I thought I would add it to my list anyways since after five years it is still hilarious. This is a comic retelling of the story of David and Goliath, but from Goliath’s perspective. Goliath of Gath isn’t much of a fighter it turns out. He would actually rather stay home and do paper work then go out and fight. Goliath’s battle is simultaneously tragic and funny. Fans of Tom Gauld will not be disappointed. Combined with awkward silences, Gauld’s drawing style, and the minimalist scenery, this story is worth reading.

Uncomfortable Happily by Yeon-Sik Hong



This is on a lot of my colleagues’ 2017 lists, so I am sure that after this third recommendation you’ll finally be convinced to read it. This graphic novel is inspired by Yeon-sik Hong’s attempt to move away from the city and out to the country with his girlfriend. He thinks that once he is away from the traffic and in the fresh air he will finally be able to write his comics. We’ve all thought of escaping to the country at one time or another. It is fun to read a story of someone who actually does it!


If Found Please Return to Elise Gravel



Welcome to the world inside of Elise Gravel’s head! We have all fallen in love with Gravel’s quirky creatures, and now we get a sneak peek inside of her notebook. This is a perfect book for someone who is creative and loves to draw. This book inspires you to try to keep a little black sketchbook of your own and to create your own monsters. And it is accessible for artists of all ages.


Graphic Novels:



Crawl Space by Jesse Jacobs



I am a huge fan of Jesse Jacobs! You can always be sure that his work will be like nothing you’ve ever read before, and Crawl Space is no exception. Two girls climb inside a washing machine where they discover another dimension full of psychedelic visuals and friendly creatures. Are you hooked? I don’t even feel like I need to say more.


Tomie by Junji Ito



Japanese manga artist Junji Ito is known for his horror stories such as Uzumaki and Gyo. This book is a collection of short stories Ito started to write in the late 80s about a girl named Tomie. In each of the gruesome stories, Tomie is brutally murdered by different men who claim to be in love with her. Tomie has the power to come back to life and to drive men mad. There is something so fascinating and divisive about Tomie’s character to me. Here we have a girl who desperately wants to be loved by the male gaze, but ends up punished for it repeatedly. This book is controversial, to say the least.


Satania by Fabien Vehlmann



Fabien Vehlmann is the author of one of my favourite graphic novels, Beautiful Darkness. So needless to say I was very excited when I came into the store one morning to see this beauty in the window. An expedition of people go deep into a cave underground to find Hell. They end up in an underground city where creepy and crazy things start to happen. If you are a fan of Vehlmann’s unsettling story lines, Satania will not disappoint.



Children's Books:

This summer we open our own Children's store at 176 Bernard Ouest!! And it has been an amazing experience being the coordinator of the store. Here is a taste of the great books you can find at the new location.




When We Were Alone by David Alexander Robertson



This children’s book won the Governor General’s Award for telling an important heart wrenching story. While a young girl is alone with her grandmother, she remarks on the differences of the woman: She grows her hair long, wears colourful clothing, and speaks another language. Her grandmother tells her a story about life in a residential school a long time ago, where all of these cultural markers were taken away from the children there: "They wanted us to look like everyone else."


Nightlights by Lorena Alvarez



I do not think that you will ever see illustrations in a children’s graphic novel as enchanting and imaginative as those of Colombian artist, Lorena Alvarez Gomez. A little shy girl draws her own world that comes to life at night. One day a mysterious pale girl appears at her school and is very interested in her drawings. I can tell you the story starts to get kind of twisted from there.


Leaf by Sandra Dieckmann



This children’s picture book broke my heart. A polar bear floating on a small piece of ice arrives unexpectedly on a wooded island. The resident animals are afraid of him, believing him to be dangerous. But after a while the animals realize that all the polar bear wants is to go back home, so all the birds get together and fly him back. It is a beautiful allegory for global warming.

HAPPY 2018!!






Staff Picks 2017: Benjamin

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Well, here we go again. My second go at a D+Q staff picks list did not prove any easier, as I was fortunate enough to read many incredible books this year. Please indulge an incorrigible bibliophile as I proclaim my love for these booksmy favourites to be published in 2017.

DRAWN & QUARTERLY




Boundless - Jillian Tamaki
Boundless is an instant classic. In this freewheeling collection of short stories, we catch up with an aging producer of a canned sitcom-porno, drift on a six-hour atonal drone, and do battle with bedbugs. Daring and full of pizzazz, Jillian Tamaki's comics possess that rare quality in which the intimately familiar coalesces with inscrutable otherness.

Sticks Angelica, Folk Hero - Michael Deforge
A short summary of Sticks Angelica's bailiwick: Olympian, poet, scholar, headmistress, cellist, entrepreneur, sculpter. This multi-talented prima donna is at the fore of Michael Deforge's wonderfully weird graphic novel, in which a rabbit wallows in its unrequited love for a human and a moose (named Lisa Hanawalt!) struggles with feelings of body imprisonment.


OTHER GRAPHIC




Yokai - Shigeru Mizuki
I have long been a fan of Shigeru Mizuki's Kitaro series, so I jumped at this gorgeous collection of over 200 of the master mangaka's hypnagogic and elegant illustrations of various yōkai (supernatural beings borne of Japanese folklore).


POETRY





While Standing in Line for Death - CAConrad
There have been some significant elegiac books published in recent memoryAnne Carson's Nox springs to mindbut While Standing in Line for Death by CAConrad, written in the wake of his boyfriend Earth's murder, stands apart from its ilk. "the tongue gives / the mind a chance to get / thunderstruck reading a / poem aloud you know how it is"


Delete - Daphné B.
In Daphné B.'s sophomore poetry collection, the Montreal poet maps the crevices and pitfalls in the language of love—as she states in Delete: "Quand j'ai dit que je t'aimais, c'est que je ne savais pas quoi dire." Daphné B., whom I had the pleasure of working with at the bookstore, had a busy 2017, also appearing in Tristesse Magazine, and collaborating with Kathy L. on an I Love Dick (Chris Kraus) fanfiction, both of which I enjoyed immensely.




Whereas - Layli Long Soldier
"Today she stood sunlight on her shoulders lean and straight to share a song in Diné, her father’s language. To sing she motions simultaneously with her hands; I watch her be in multiple musics." In Whereas, the remarkable debut poetry collection from Layli Long Soldier, the Oglala Lakota poet confronts colonial language in its various manifestations—most poignantly in the responses, treaties and apologies made by the American government to Native American peoples and tribes.


Debths - Susan Howe
Never have I felt simultaneously so bewildered and so absorbed—as the poet herself would put it, "a not-being-in-the-no."than when reading Susan Howe's Debths. The title, borrowed from Joyce's Finnegans Wake, is emblematic of the richness within, itself a triple-entendre suggesting depth, debt, and death. Across the five-part collection of verse and collage-poems, Howe employs a lyrical rigor and intertextual consonance that is utterly stunning.


FICTION




The Book of Disquiet - Fernando Pessoa (trans. Margaret Jull Costa)
This refurbished—and dare I say definitive—edition of The Book of Disquiet features a new arrangement and translation of Pessoa's fragmentary masterwork in a stylish, cloth-bound package.

Fever Dream - Samanta Schweblin (trans. Megan McDowell) (not pictured)
I am still yet to shake the first book I read this year. A novel that is best consumed in one sitting, Samanta Schweblin’s Fever Dream—her first to be translated into English—is precisely wrought and frenetically paced. A woman named Amanda lies dying in a hospital bed, ravaged by an unknown ailment. What follows is a portrait of psychological menace, a narrative which intensifies as the subject deteriorates.


NONFICTION




Afterglow - Eileen Myles
Our event with the incomparable Eileen Myles was a personal highlight of the year, as was reading their remarkable "dog memoir". In an impressionistic, elusive cadence, Myles recounts their formative years spent with a pitbull named Rosie. Poets write the best prose!

Literature Class, Berkeley 1980 - Julio Cortázar (not pictured)
In 2017, my obsession with Julio Cortázar has built a head of steam—the Argentine is a bonafide dazzler! In 1980, Cortázar delivered a series of lectures to literature students at UC Berkeley. The novelist was a delightful teacher—patient, curious, and very funny. An unparalleled observer of both the literary and historical moment in which he lived, Cortázar's wisdom is invaluable to 1980s students and 2017s readers alike. I also highly recommend his hypnotic prose-poem From the Observatory (Archipelago, 2011), which is now, sadly, out of print.


+++++++++++++


I LOVE THESE BOOKS, TOO



Fail Better - Beyza Ozer
Baking with Kafka - Tom Gauld
Tropico - Marcela Huerta
These Possible Lives - Fleur Jaeggy
So Many Olympic Exertions - Anelise Chen
I Love Dick, a fanfic - Kathy L. & Daphné B.
Penelope - Sue Goyette
Extended Play - Jake Terrell
Moi aussi je voulais l’emporter - Julie Delporte
Rag Cosmology - Erin Robinsong
As We Have Always Done - Leanne Simpson
The Idiot - Elif Batuman

Take a peek at other staff picks:
Alyssa \\ Kennedy \\ Saelan \\ Kate \\ Luke \\ Chantal \\ Arizona \\ Chantale \\ Kalliopé \\ Anna \\ Sophie \\ Eli \\

Staff Picks 2017: Luke

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What a year it has been at the Librairie(s) Drawn and Quarterly. There are so many authors I've discovered. There were so many amazing events, so many wonderful people I've met and so many great books! Here are some 2017 selections with which I felt particular kinship:

Non-Fiction

The Mother of All Questions - Rebecca Solnit
It is perhaps because she speaks with such directness, sagacity and depth
of understanding that these essays are as brutal as they are uplifting. They describe despicable acts in an upsetting world, yet Solnit speaks truth and in this way the book feels celebratory. As Solnit analyzes current events and shows us rage-inducing-faults, we feel as though we are getting somewhere. Her essay "80 Books No Woman Should Read" tears into the "western canon" in the
best way. Ferrante, Lessing & Erdrich are held up, while a several supposed must-reads go high on her no-go list.

We Were Eight Years in Power - Ta-Nahesi Coates
There is a part in the book where Ta-Nahesi Coates says that James Baldwin’s writing “wasn’t just style or ornament but an unparalleled ability to see what was before him clearly and then lay that vision, with that same clarity, before the world.” One could say the same about Ta-Nahesi Coates’s
writing while reading this book. It is a collection of essays from years one through eight of the Obama presidency interspersed with present day reflections between each chapter. Coates eloquently expresses that although many of the ideas in the essays may seem radical, they really should not be.

No Is Not Enough - Naomi Klein
Like We Were Eight Years in Power, this book is crucial for understanding the present moment, and where to go next. Naomi Klein links her three previous works books about the climate crisis, shock, and superbrands in the comparatively concise No Is Not Enough. The book is a call to action "as the climate clock strikes zero." She lays out how middle-of-the-road, incremental change is woefully inadequate for today’s plethora of crises. She so aptly describes why colonialism, racism, misogyny,  corporate greed, superbrands and climate catastrophe, are linked, and how we must act to solve many crises at once.

Graphic

Boundless - Jillian Tamaki 
There is a strong sense of wonder and irreverence in Tamaki’s writing. She captures interpersonal relationships, strong emotions, and the minutiae of our daily lives in such a fascinating way. Tamaki’s
stunning and constantly changing drawing style pairs well with her beautiful prose. The short stories “Half-Life”, “Sexcoven”, “Jenny” and “Boundless” are particularly imaginative. “Darla” so hilarious. I love her commitment to showcasing diversity in her comics. She is able to capture movement masterfully with simple lines. Boundless is experimental and it feels as though she is exploring the full spectrum of drawing styles.

Moi aussi je voulais l’emporter - Julie Delporte
The latest from Julie Delporte is a tour de force: a profound meditation on gender and a strong feminist text. The voice is honest, poignant, and full of feeling. The images are beautifully rendered in full colour. Delporte explores creativity, isolation, loss, and personal and societal trauma with great care. Tove Jansson and Moomin occupy an important place in the text. There are references to many other other artists, writers and filmmakers and an examination of society’s treatment of female artists. The book is evocative and imaginative and the montage of text and images allow for profound reflections.

Poppies of Iraq - Brigitte Findakly and Lewis Trondheim - Translated by Helge Dascher 
Absolutely loved this book which tells the story of a childhood in Mosul, Iraq. Over 50 years of contemporary Iraqi history and personal narratives expertly play with the reader’s expectations. The minimal images combined with the text are replete with visual metaphor and parable. Use of real photos is reminiscent of Sebald as is the exploration of memory, identity and belonging. Poppies of Iraq is superb indeed.


Hostage - Guy Delisle - Translated by Helge Dascher 
This psychologically intense page-turner is dynamite. The reader is trapped with humanitarian worker Chistophe André when he is taken hostage near Chechnya. Though much of the narrative takes place in a limited physical space, the world we witness in André’s mind is broad. We experience his anguish and euphoric joy at the most minimal pleasure. We have compassion for his mixed emotions towards his captors, his only human contact. We can almost feel his physical pain. This work of deep feeling is another triumph from Delisle.

Fiction

Jenny Zhang - Sour Heart
Zhang’s honesty is startling at times. She is able to capture intimate moments and describe the thinking behind these moments so well. These short stories are engrossing, hilarious, sad, buoyant and eminently relatable. Loved the interwoven nature of the book.

Brother - David Chariandy
Swift character development, great metaphors, a use of language that is surprising, very-little-to-no superfluous detail: Chariandy’s Brother has got the makings of a superb work of fiction. The prose is fluid and lucid. The content of the book feels so relevant. It is engrossing in its structure, from the way people and events are revealed right down to how Chariandy’s constructs sentences.

Picture Books

I Am Life - Elisabeth Helland Larsen, Illustrated by Marine Schneider
Adored this book which is a follow up to Life and I: A Story about Death. In the second book, I Am Life we meet the character Life. The book is a celebration of this figure—Life—but at certain point the characters bleed into each other, and we see that Life and Death are together. The emotional effect of the book is heightened if one reads both the first and second book, but the profundity of the work is felt either way.


Marianne Dubuc - Le chemin de la montagne
A delicate book which also deals with death, but in a subtle way, as well as themes empathy, teaching, companionship and what we pass along to others. Dubuc places the text next to the images in a very playful manner. The turns of phrase are tender, the images stunning. Another grand accomplishment, as we’ve come to expect from Dubuc. 

Staff Picks 2017: Anna

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D+Q 

The Good Times Are Killing Me - Lynda Barry

I read this in one sitting. For both adults and younger ones. Barry recounts a friendship from her childhood torn apart by race and class relations in late 1960s Seattle. Find beautiful portraits of her favorite musicians at the end.



Moomin and the Brigands - Tove Jansson

To get rid of demanding guests, Moomin invites Stinky over...who wants to eat all the furniture. With salt. I'm already laughing just thinking about it.




Non-Fiction

After Kathy Acker - Chris Kraus

Holland Cotter is on point to describe this book as a surgery. Having read Acker intuitively in my early 20s, I appreciated the insight into her formal writing processes most.


Riot Days - Maria Alyokhina

Reading through Riot Days is like catching snowflakes on your tongue. Aphoristic and spliced with media fragments and court documents, we follow Maria in her everyday life through the beginning of Pussy Riot's performances to the subsequent repression of the group, her hunger strikes in prison and trial.



Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City - Matthew Desmond

From 2016, but new this year in paperback, Desmond writes with the eye of both a novelist and a sociologist, sharply depicting Milwaukee's low-income housing communities and multi-layered economies at the start of the 2008 crisis (still reverberating into our present.)




Translations

Go, Went, Gone - Jenny Erpenbeck translated by Susan Bernofsky

A retired classics professor from the former GDR, Richard, gets increasingly involved with a group of migrants in contemporary Berlin as they face the city's bureaucratic violence. Historical--and actual unfolding--tensions are brought bluntly alive under Erpenbeck's philosophical thumb (and Bernofsky's immaculate translation.)



The Odyssey - newly translated by Emily Wilson

The first translation ever by a woman. You know how the story goes, but do you really?



Fiction

Modern Love - Constance De Jong

Recently republished with Ugly Duckling Press, I picked up this book after reading about De Jong and Acker's friendship in After Kathy Acker. Dreamlike, layered and kooky, this book made me want to write. Jabs at patriarchal norms of 'modern love' are subtly smart, often made by way of courtly tropes, all the while time traveling in and out of different 1970s metropoles, pseudonyms and moods.



The City Always Wins - Omar Robert Hamilton

Hamilton loosely fictionalizes his involvement in Mosireen during Cairo's 2011 uprising through the character of Khalil, weaving Twitter posts, text messages and other documentary material with his own experiences (and those of his comrades.) Hamilton tells the story of the revolution not just as it played out on the streets but in the media war, Cairo’s cafés, morgues, domestic spaces and interpersonal relations.




Poetry 

Heaven is All Goodbyes - Tongo Eisen-Martin

As Claudia Rankine's description goes: "this is resistance as sound." And the sound is immense, it will have your feet first tapping, then running, then collapsing, only to start all over again. Resistant.




To read:

Extreme Cities - Ashley Dawson
Policing Black Lives - Robyn Maynard
As We Have Always Done - Leanne Simpson

Graphic Novel Book Club: Perfect Hair by Tommi Parrish

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Each month we host a Graphic Novel Book Club meeting, open to all, during which we hang out and informally discuss a featured graphic novel. Our pick for this January is Perfect Hair by Tommi Parrish. We will meet at La Petite Librairie Drawn & Quarterly (176 av Bernard Ouest) on Wednesday, January 17th at 7 p.m. The discussion will be hosted by Librairie Drawn & Quarterly staff member Anna De Filippi. Join us for refreshments and collective insights!


***We are offering a 20% discount on Perfect Hair from now until the meeting date!*** 


In Tommi Parrish's Perfect Hair figures form and re-form. And just that, on repeat, although sometimes with space in between. Stylistically, Parrish couples selective detailing with an equally precise sense of abstraction. The narratives bring to life both the construction of norms—sexual, gendered and familial—and their tentative undoings.

Watch out for the February 2018 release of Parrish's The Lie and How We Told It with Fantagraphics!

Staff Picks 2017: Lauriane

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Pax par Sara Pennypacker, illustré par Jon Klassen 




Ce roman de Sara Pennypacker a su se tailler une place parmi mes coups de cœur littéraires de l’année grâce à sa trame narrative captivante, à sa plume riche, à ses personnages attachants et aux magnifiques illustrations de Jon Klassen.
Pour les 9 ans et plus



Les marées par Brigitte Vaillancourt


La plume poétique de Brigitte Vaillancourt dresse l’histoire réaliste d’une famille sur le point d’éclater. Un livre sublime, empreint de douceur et d’images percutantes, qui plairait autant aux adolescents qu’aux parents.
Pour les 12 ans et plus

Souffler dans la cassette par Jonathan Bécotte



Rares sont les poètes qui savent s’adresser au public jeunesse avec leur art. Jonathan Bécotte a su brillamment décrire l’amitié particulière entre deux garçons avec sa poésie nostalgique d’une enfance naïve, aux prises avec les premiers émois amoureux.
Pour les 12 ans et plus

La légende de Carcajou par Renée Robitaille, illustré par Slavka Kolesar



Ce conte traditionnel déné, interprété par Renée Robitaille et magnifiquement illustré par Slavka Kolesar porte sur l’origine du carcajou, cet animal sauvage mythique des grandes forêts canadiennes. La magie de cette légende m’a transportée au cœur de l’univers amérindien dont nous ignorons trop souvent la fascinante et grandiose mémoire.
À partir de 5 ans 


Le dernier qui sort éteint la lumière et Mon cœur pédale par Simon Boulerice


Ceux qui connaissent les œuvres de Simon Boulerice reconnaîtront dans ces deux romans la prose emprunte de douceur et aussi de dureté de cet auteur québécois qui sait si habilement manier les mots et transporter ses lecteurs dans un tourbillon d’émotions.
À partir de 10 ans

Mammouth Rock par Évelyne Payette, illustré par Guillaume Perrault



Ce roman graphique, le premier d’une collection destinée aux sept ans et plus, est un incontournable grâce à sa structure dynamique, au texte hilarant d’Éveline Payette et aux illustrations vivantes de Guillaume Perreault, à qui l’on doit Le Facteur de l’espace. Petits et grands curieux à l’imagination intarissable se plairont à embarquer dans l’univers de Mammouth Rock !
À partir de 7 ans

Les mures par Olivier de Solminihac, illustré par Stéphane Poulin



Cet album, magnifiquement illustré par Stéphane Poulin, suit l'ours Michao, la petite chèvre Marguerite et le renardeau attachant que nous avions rencontré dans Le Bateau de fortune. L'auteur Olivier Solminihac nous plonge encore une fois dans son univers, pour notre plus grand plaisir.
À partir de 4 ans 

Les vieux livres sont dangereux par François Gravel



Avec ce roman, qui fait partie de la collection Noire chez La courte échelle, les lecteurs à la recherche de récits d'horreur et d'enquêtes seront servis ! L'auteur François Gravel qui a marqué une génération entière avec sa série Klonk sait décidément comment susciter l’intérêt littéraire des jeunes lecteurs. 
Pour les 9 ans et plus 

Maman Ours par Ryan T. Higgins 



Cet album écrit et illustré par Ryan T. Higgins suit l'histoire de Michel, un ours grincheux et solitaire qui voit avec stupeur les œufs qu'il s’apprêtait à cuisiner éclore. Michel se retrouve alors pris avec quatre oisillons persuadés que ce gros ours grognon est leur mère. Ce récit rigolo déconstruit avec brio la structure familiale habituelle et saura plaire autant aux enfants qu'aux parents avides d'histoires intelligentes qui sortent des sentiers battus. 
À partir de 3 ans 




Staff Picks 2017: Kate

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Happy winter solstice everyone. As multiple people have consoled me, whenever I complain about early northern hemisphere sunsets, the days start getting longer again today. On the other hand, it's also the official beginning of winter. Thank goodness for the deep shelves of Librairie Drawn & Quarterly keeping me supplied with books throughout this dark season. Over the past twelve months I've read a lot of good books, but these are the ones that stuck with me.   

Notes from a Crocodile - Qiu Miaojin, The Idiot - Elif Batuman, Homesick for Another World - Ottessa Moshfegh

I read Qiu Miaojin's first novel for former D&Q bookseller Helen Bradley's bimonthly meet, her stellar Reading Across Borders book club. Miaojin became a cult literary figure in 1990s Taiwan due to her transgressive writing that addressed sexuality and depression frankly. The NYRB edition of her first novel was a highlight of my reading this year. Another highlight was undoubtedly Elif Batuman's novel, The Idiot. This school days narrative, set in the heady first days of e-mail, sees protagonist Selin, an earnest undergrad, stumble her way through freshman year at Harvard.The characters that populate Moshfegh's collection of short stories are for the most part past college days, but just as fallible and complex. After reading Eileen, I have devoured everything I can get my hands on written by Ottessa Moshfegh and Homesick for Another World was as phenomenal as I anticipated.

 
Modern Love - Constance DeJong, After Kathy Acker - Chris Kraus, Difficult Women: A Memoir of Three - David Plante

DeJong's compulsively readable story of modern love, written circa 1975, cartwheels between downtown New York, India, and the courtly love of Elizabethan England. When I learned of its influence on Kathy Acker's work, I knew I had to read it. Chris Kraus traces this lineage and many more in her biography of Acker, which had to be one of my favorite reads in 2017. Meticulously researched from the diaries and correspondences that Acker kept herself, this intimate portrait of her life and career was completely engrossing. In other memoirs, I sped through David Plante's record of his time spent in the company of three beguiling women: Jean Rhys, Sonia Orwell, and Germaine Greer. This taut account, rendered in cinéma vérité like detail, is worthwhile for its unsentimental depiction of said luminaries.

Boundless - Jillian Tamaki, The Green Hand and other Stories - Nicole Claveloux

Boundless was hands down one of my favorite reads of the year! The collection of short stories truly showcases Tamaki's astute writing, in addition to her effortless drawing style. Stories range from the quotidian to the very strange and are at their best when they're both. NYRC's late 2017 reissue of The Green Hand also features a series of strange stories that I knew I had to read right away. Originally published in Heavy Metal magazine, these comics are stunningly evocative in the way that only the best surrealist fiction can be.

Perfect Hair - Tommi Parrish, Anti-Gone - Connor Willumsen

Both of these books are formally inventive, critical accounts of love, gender, politics, and apathy in the 21st century. Of all the cartoonists I'm excited about these days, Parrish is definitely up there. Perfect Hair, out on 2d Cloud, depicts experiences of discomfort and anxiety in a way that is both visceral and familiar to me, and I'm dying for more long-form work. Inversely, Willumsen's Anti-Gone captures the ominous serenity of escapism and alienation inside a fantastic self-enclosed world.  

Moomin and the Brigands - Tove Jansson, Moi aussi, je voulais l'emporter - Julie Delporte

Julie Delporte's introspective comics are some of my favorite, and her latest is no exception. Done in the raw style of a diary, she explores sexuality and solitude, while tracing a genealogy of female role models. One of the women she examines most thoroughly is Tove Jansson, writer, artist, and creator of the beloved Moomin series. I highly recommend picking up a copy of D&Q's latest reissue of Jansson as well, Moomin and the Brigands, in which Moomin and Snorkmaiden meet!

Nature Poem - Tommy Pico, delete - Daphné B., Tropico - Marcela Huerta

In Nature Poem, Pico's follow up to the stunning IRL, he writes against the stereotype of the "noble savage" that indigenous people are endlessly confronted with. Pico is hilarious and his insights abrasive, while he creates a space for sincere reflection. Amidst all of the great poetry this year I can'tleave out delete and Tropico. Both are written by former colleagues, Daphné B. and Marcela Huerta respectively, and both are truly excellent. Fusing fragments of past selves to circle around absence and loss, these slim volumes contain lush explorations of grief.

Staff Picks 2017: Sophie

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L'année 2017 a été riche en émotions, mais aussi en lectures tantôt déchirantes, tantôt délirantes. Les auteurs et éditeurs québécois étaient certainement en grande forme, puisqu'ils nous ont offert une littérature particulièrement engagée et surprenante. Beaucoup de deuils et de coeurs brisés, mais toujours avec un regard apaisé sur les jours à venir. Voici mes coups de coeur québécois de l'année!

Bande dessinée


Le Meilleur a Été Découvert Loin D'ici - Mélodie Vachon Boucher
Dans ce récit autobiographique, l'auteure explore avec douceur le thème du silence - celui des non-dits, de soi, et surtout des morts qui nous entourent. Faisant écho à l'excellent Moi aussi je voulais l'emporter de Julie Delporte, ce livre nous transporte dans des lieux inusités - un monastère, une maison funéraire, une salle de cinéma berlinoise - au gré des souvenirs et réflexions de la narratrice. Tout en nuances de gris, il est du genre qu'on savoure lentement pendant un après-midi enneigé.

Whitehorse. Tome 2 - Samuel Cantin
Je suis avec enthousiasme les délires de Samuel Cantin depuis ses débuts sur la blogosphère, et bien que son style et son écriture maturent comme un bon vin, je suis toujours rassurée de voir que son humour reste lui juvénile. Dans le second tome des aventures d'Henri Castagnette, le héros se rend finalement à Whitehorse pour reconquérir sa douce Laura, mais non sans difficultés. Attaque de pélicans géants, mystérieuse maladie mortelle et cousin diabolique - rien n'arrêtera Henri dans sa conquête du Grand Nord. Bien que très verbeuse, cette bd est un délire contrôlé, avec autant de punchlines que ses 300 pages.

Poésie


Brasser Le Varech - Noémi Pomerleau-Cloutier
Ce recueil est sans aucun doute mon coup de coeur de l'année. À travers le deuil de son père ingénieur forestier et une copie annotée de la Flore laurentienne qu'il lui a laissée, l'auteure part à la recherche de ses racines nordiques, délaissées au profit du béton citadin. Le vocabulaire est si riche qu'il nous fait pratiquement voir et sentir la nature entrelacée dans les réflexions de l'auteure. Une poésie qui goûte la terre, et qui donne envie d'y retourner.

Toutou Tango - Baron Marc-André Lévesque
Si la dernière année a été plutôt déprimante côté poésie (de par ses thèmes, bien sûr!), le dernier recueil de Baron Marc-André Lévesque arrive comme un vent de fraîcheur dans le paysage actuel des jeunes poètes. À la fois disjonctée et viscérale, sa poésie balance entre les références adulescentes et de douloureuses observations, mais toujours avec humour et légèreté. On y découvre de petites histoires du quotidien, ponctuées de Kraft Dinner et de chansons de Ginette Reno. Mention spéciale à la section "Jeux" du recueil!

Théâtre


J'aime Hydro - Christine Beaulieu
Le théâtre documentaire de la compagnie Porte Parole est désormais un incontournable du paysage théâtral québécois, et cette édition d'Atelier 10 rend justice à l'énorme travail qui se cache derrière la conception de leurs créations. Suivant la comédienne Christine Beaulieu dans son enquête exhaustive sur Hydro-Québec, le texte est enlevant et fascinant. Beaulieu n'a certainement pas froid aux yeux, et n'évite aucune question pour arriver le coeur du problème : qu'en est-il devenu de notre relation avec la société d'État?

Os - Steve Gagnon
Se lisant comme un douloureux poème sur le deuil et les relations humaines, ce monologue de Steve Gagnon confirme une fois de plus le talent indéniable de ce jeune dramaturge. Bien que l'édition papier ne rende pas justice à la mise en scène époustouflante du texte - où le comédien était accompagné de musiciens, avec les spectateurs déambulant tout autour - celle-ci nous permet néanmoins de plonger sans retenue dans le maelström émotionnel du narrateur, dans une intimité qui ne se crée que par la lecture.

Essais


Les Luttes Fécondes - Catherine Dorion
Dans ces temps incertains où on remet constamment en question les définitions de nos identités et relations à l'autre, l'essai de Catherine Dorion ajoute une réflexion pertinente au discours ambiant, en plongeant tête première dans le désir amoureux. Tentant de déconstruire nos préconceptions et idées reçues sur le couple, l'auteure utilise judicieusement la comparaison au monde de la politique et de courtes histoires intimes pour avancer ses idées. On n'en ressort pas indemnes - surtout si notre couple vacille.

Musiques du Diable - Alexandre Fontaine Rousseau et Vincent Giard
Bien connu pour l'incomparable Pinkerton, Alexandre Fontaine Rousseau s'associe cette fois à Vincent Giard pour illustrer ses obsessions musicales. Alliant critiques d'albums et anecdotes personnelles, le tout agrémenté des pochettes revues et dessinées par Giard, cet ovni des Éditions de ta Mère est une franchement bonne lecture, autant pour ses suggestions musicales que son humour décalé. Impossible de ne pas s'y perdre pendant de longues heures, surtout si on l'accompagne de son service de musique préféré.

Romans


Manikanetish - Naomi Fontaine
Poursuivant le travail amorcé dans Kuessipan, Fontaine livre une fois de plus un regard nécessaire et sans compromis sur les réserves amérindiennes. On suit cette fois une enseignante de français, qui tente tant bien que mal de donner espoir aux jeunes amérindiens de la réserve de la Côte-Nord où elle enseigne, en s'aidant de sa passion pour la littérature et le théâtre. Bien que la réalité décrite soit difficile et troublée, on sent toute la douceur de l'auteure et son affection pour sa communauté à travers le récit, qui ne tombe jamais dans le piège de la dénonciation ou du déni, et se présente plutôt comme une main tendue à l'autre.

Le Livre de Bois - Jean-Philippe Chabot
Si la plupart d'entre nous se rappelle de la littérature du terroir comme des lectures scolaires obligatoires, Jean-Philippe Chabot nous prouve dans ce premier roman qu'elle est toujours actuelle, et centrale à nos préoccupations identitaires. Créant de toutes pièces la légende de Jacques Côté et de son livre de bois - un livre maudit qui raconte en temps réel la vie du pauvre bûcheron canadien-français - l'auteur s'en donne à coeur joie pour truffer son histoire de références à notre imaginaire collectif et nos plus ridicules clichés. Un livre qui réchauffe l'esprit, livré par un conteur hors-pair - à déguster à la lumière d'un feu, un p'tit caribou à la main.

Le Nez Qui Voque - Réjean Ducharme
Une petite mention spéciale pour mon roman préféré de Réjean Ducharme, qui nous a quitté cette année. Je lis et relis l'histoire de Mille Milles et Chateaugué depuis dix ans maintenant, sans jamais me lasser de cet univers si dense et tragique. Abordant le thème du difficile passage entre l'enfance et le monde adulte, et campée dans un Montréal vaguement familier, c'est une histoire qui brise le coeur, et qui ne perd pas de sa pertinence encore aujourd'hui. Merci pour tout, Réjean.

Cuisine

Feast - Lindsay Anderson et Dana VanVeller
Une petite digression au palmarès québécois pour vous partager ma découverte culinaire de l'année - le magnifique Feast d'Anderson et VanVeller. Oui, les recettes sont délicieuses, mais on le parcourt avant tout comme un récit de voyage, qui nous transporte d'Est en Ouest, à la recherche de l'identité culinaire canadienne. On y redécouvre les classiques (bagels, barres Nanaimo, etc), mais on y fait surtout la rencontre de communautés vivantes et diversifiées, qu'elles soient amérindiennes, albertaines, ou maritimes. Un ouvrage important, qui se dévore comme un bon roman, et qui nous rappelle qu'être Canadien, c'est avant tout savoir partager.


Solde d'après Fêtes/Boxing Day Sale 2017!

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We're having a big boxing day sale in store: today only - buy one book at regular price, and get a second book of equal or lesser value at 40% off! If there are still some gaps in your holiday reading wishlist, now is the perfect time to fill 'em! Come say hello to us this boxing day, and get some great reads!

New Reads Book Club: The Idiot by Elif Batuman

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D+Q's newest book club – New Reads!

Every 4-6 weeks D+Q invites our wonderful customers to dive into the new book that everyone is talking about and we will talk about in our New Reads bookclub. This January 31st , we will be discussing Elif Batuman's The Idiot, one of 2017 most acclaimed books that made the best of the year lists of the New York Times, Elle, Vogue, NPR and more. Is THE IDIOT as good as everyone says it  is? You decide! Just come ready to talk about it.

**We offer a 15% discount on The Idiot from now until the meeting date.**

We regret that the bookstore is not accessible. There is a step at the entrance, followed by a half step and a door that opens inward. Once inside, there are no additional steps to access the bathroom, although the bathroom space is narrow. Alcohol will be served.

Reading Across Boarders Book Club: Chronicle of the Murdered House by Lúcio Cardoso

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The Reading Across Borders book club focuses on literature in English translation, with a particular interest in writers who are not (yet) well-known in the English-speaking world. Hosted by former store staffer Helen Chau Bradley, the book club meetings take place every two months, and are open to all. 

For our next meeting, on Wednesday, February 7th, we will meet at La Petite Librairie Drawn & Quarterly (176 Bernard O.) at 7 pm to discuss Lúcio Cardoso's Chronicle of the Murdered House, translated from the Portuguese by Margaret Jull Costa and Robin Patterson. Join us for discussion and drinks!

**We offer a 15% discount on Chronicle of the Murdered House from now until the meeting date.*** 

Chronicle of the Murdered House is a masterpiece of Brazilian literature, translated into English for the first time in 2016. Epic in its length and scope, it tells, in epistolary form, of the moral and financial downfall of a patriarchal bourgeois family in rural Minas Gerais. Lúcio Cardoso was a renowned writer of mid-20th century Brazil, as well as a playwright, poet, journalist, filmmaker, and painter. His work focused on the expression of the inner self, on the exploration of spiritual rather than material matters. He was among the first Brazilian postmodernist writers, alongside Clarice Lispector, his younger contemporary, who was also a close friend.

We regret that the bookstore is not wheelchair accessible. There is a step at the entrance, followed by a half step and a door that opens inward. Once inside, there are no additional steps to access the bathroom, although the bathroom space is narrow. Alcohol will be served.

Liz Howard Poetry Reading

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Co-hosted by: Études anglaises at the Université de Montréal & the Canada Council for the Arts. 

On January 19, 2018 at 7 p.m., you are invited to join 2016 Griffin Poetry Prize Winner Liz Howard for a reading and conversation with Montréal writer and professor Gail Scott at La Petite Librairie Drawn & Quarterly. 



Liz Howard’s stunning debut poetry collection, Infinite Citizen of the Shaking Tent, won the 2016 Griffin Poetry Prize. Originally from Northern Ontario, Howard, who is of Anishinaabe descent, studied cognitive neuroscience at the University of Toronto. Her work sculpts a "vocabulary that is co-extensive with the tenacious landscape of the North and the deeply resistant jurisdiction of a female natural history. Shot through too with urban furor, forest, dioxin, tern, and sulphur are syllabic elements in a passionate argument for pleasure, where pleasure is one name for a principled refusal of the colonizing machinations of the current regime. Not afraid to draw limits that are both sonic and ethical, robust and delicate, Howard listens closely to the bodies of this thinking earth."(Lisa Robertson)

This shelf belongs to...Tommi Parrish!

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Each month, Librairie Drawn & Quarterly invites a local author or artist to curate a shelf in the store. This January, we bring you recommendations from Tommi Parrish!


Tommi Parrish was born in Melbourne Australia in 1989. They currently live in Montreal in a house with six humans and two sausage dogs. Tommi has comics in the permanent collection at the gallery of western Australia, has a second book coming out with 2dcloud, a recent release with Perfectly Acceptable Press, a new book coming out with Fantagraphics, and has had comics translated into Swedish and French. They spend most days painting comics at the kitchen table.




All of Tommi's picks will be 15% off for the month of January. Here’s a sneak peek of what you’ll find:

1. Frontier #11 by Eleanor Davis
A love song about desire and the constant give and take of power in kink. I love this comic: in just a few pages, Eleanor Davis manages to build a whole vulnerable and unexpected internal world for two characters. The drawings are amazing. Also it’s super gay.



2. Your Black Friend by Ben Passmore
This comic is a letter written by your black friend to you. It’s about black alienation, racism and attempted allyship within (often largely white) rad circles. Passmore’s writing is funny and clever and basically perfect; I’m constantly lending this book to friends and you should buy it so you can too.



3. Drifter by Anna Haifisch, Perfectly Acceptable Press
This big spiral-bound floppy by Haifisch is the the most beautiful book of 2017. I have it stuck to my wall and I change the display page every few weeks – they’re all perfect so it doesn’t really make much difference. Drifter is an extended poem about an illustrator, his dog, and death.



4. Hurt or Fuck by Eleanor Davis in Now: The New Comics Anthology #1

Hurt or Fuck is about the fraught nature of intimacy. This comic is more of a teasing out of a feeling then it is a story. "Do you want to hurt me? Do you want to fuck me? Then I don’t want you to touch me."



5. Sex Fantasy by Sophia Foster Domino 
This collection was first born as a web comic years ago, fantastical hyper personal vignette’s that Koyama recently printed into a satisfying chunky book. Domino is an annoyingly good writer and I've never read anything of hers that didn’t make me want to steal all her ideas. You’ll probably feel the same.



6. Architecture of an Atom by Juliacks
This beautiful book is a painting about living. It's big and spooky and strange, just like life. I stayed in a house with Juliacks for a week once and the next time I saw her she had a baby.


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