The Hamilton Spectator

NEW AND NOTABLE

- DEBORAH DUNDAS IS THE STAR’S BOOKS EDITOR. SHE IS BASED I N TORONTO. FOLLOW HER ON TWITTER: @DEBDUNDAS

Subtitled “The Scandalous Black Suspect, the Exemplary White Son, and the Murder That Shocked Toronto,” this historical true crime book tells an intriguing story set in Toronto’s Parkdale in the late 19th century. Clara Ford of the title is an impoverish­ed Black woman, known for wearing men’s clothes. She is accused of murdering Frank Westwood, son of a rich white businessma­n. The cast of characters is wide and colourful, from different families, classes, including journalist­s, the police and an all-white, allmale jury that ultimately acquits Clara — prompting an impromptu parade on the streets. A fascinatin­g exploratio­n of a part of Toronto’s history that deserves a new telling.

Beautiful writing is the first thing that grabs a reader of “Eastbound.” First published in French in 2012, this is the short, 127-page novel’s first English translatio­n, by Toronto translator Jessica Moore. Aliocha has been drafted into the Russian army despite his efforts to avoid that fate, but decides to desert. On a Trans-Siberian train, he meets French woman Hélène, who takes him from his third-class car and hides him in her first-class sleeping car.

For the love of solitude, independen­t thought and physical books, this is a lovely, hardcover book that encourages lingering. While Analog Sea founder Simons writes in his introducti­on, titled “Toward a New Renaissanc­e,” that logging off from our digital lives can “feel like a dismal blend of exile and social irresponsi­bility,” he points out that “once we regard solitude or privacy as uncivil or counterpro­ductive, we resign ourselves to the captivity of groupthink.” Inside, Simons has collected essays and artwork and small observatio­ns from a vast range of writers, including Canadians Robert Fulford and Leonard Cohen as well as Americans Rebecca Solnit, Joan Didion and others. You can get it only at independen­t bookstores all over Canada, the U.S. and U.K. — including Ben McNally Books in Toronto. If you want to know more about Analog Sea, you can subscribe to their newsletter — by snail mail, of course, although you can get their address by going to analogsea.com.

An immersive novel set in Sápmi, north of the Arctic Circle, where Scandinavi­a’s Indigenous people the Sámi live. Award-winning writer Laestadius is of Sámi and Tornedalia­n descent, and usually writes YA and children’s books. This is her debut adult fiction and won Sweden’s book of the year in 2021. We first meet protagonis­t Elsa when she is nine years old and witness to the brutal killing of a reindeer calf, and follow her as she tries to find her own place in her maledomina­ted community, and fight for her Indigenous heritage and justice for her people.

 ?? ?? Clara at the Door With a Revolver Carolyn Whitzman, UBC Press, On Point Press, 336 pages, $24.95
Clara at the Door With a Revolver Carolyn Whitzman, UBC Press, On Point Press, 336 pages, $24.95
 ?? ?? Eastbound Maylis de Kerangal, translated by Jessica Moore, Archipelag­o Books, 127 pages, $24
Eastbound Maylis de Kerangal, translated by Jessica Moore, Archipelag­o Books, 127 pages, $24
 ?? ?? The Analog Sea Review editor Jonathan Simons, Analog
Sea
The Analog Sea Review editor Jonathan Simons, Analog Sea
 ?? ?? Stolen Ann-Helén Laestadius, Scribner Canada, 400 pages, $24.99
Stolen Ann-Helén Laestadius, Scribner Canada, 400 pages, $24.99

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