ZOOMER Magazine

LIT CANLIT

Rake in Autumn’s hottest Canuck reads, and visit ZED: The Zoomer Book Club at everything­zoomer.com/book-club

- By Mike Crisolago

The Testaments by Margaret Atwood Thirty-four years after the release of The Handmaid’s Tale – which has been adapted into everything from a graphic novel to an opera to an awardwinni­ng TV series – Canada’s Queen of Letters returns with its long-awaited sequel, which brings readers back to Gilead 15 years after the events of the original book.

Akin by Emma Donoghue The best-selling Room author offers up an intergener­ational tale that follows a retired professor as he heads to France to uncover his family’s troubled history, all the while caring for an 11-year-old great-nephew he just met.

Talking to Strangers by Malcolm Gladwell One of the leading intellectu­als of his age, Gladwell uses examples from history to today’s headlines to explore how our inability to understand people we don’t know can dramatical­ly affect our perspectiv­es on the world around us.

The Innocents by Michael Crummey Celebrated East Coast scribe Michael Crummey returns to his native Newfoundla­nd for his latest tome, in which orphaned siblings must endure storms both environmen­tal and personal to survive on the Rock.

The Wake by Linden MacIntyre The Giller Prize-winning author returns to his journalist­ic roots in recounting the deadly 1929 tsunami that devastated Newfoundla­nd, including the town where he was born, and how its consequenc­es rippled for decades after the tragedy.

The Wagers by Sean Michaels Yet another Giller winner, Michaels’ second novel follows a Montreal comic who can’t catch a break, until he discovers a secret organizati­on that chooses who’ll receive good luck and another group that takes fortune back from the too-lucky.

A Better Man by Louise Penny Beloved detective Chief Inspector Armand Gamache is back, and this time he’s searching for a missing young woman while both rising Quebec floodwater­s and negative public opinion threaten to sink the sleuth for good.

A Delhi Obsession by M.G. Vassanji Vassanji’s claimed the Giller Prize twice in his celebrated career and could aim for a third with this tale of love and nationalis­m in which a Canadian widower travels to Delhi for the first time and falls for a local journalist.

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