A brilliant telling of a post-apocalyptic future after a virus rapidly kills >99% of the world’s population. The story alternates between the present which is 20 years after the plague, and the back-story of the key characters. There are some very satisfying inter-relationships between characters that are revealed slowly, including the importance of an unpublished graphic novel. This is an excellent entertaining book.
Amy notes: Later on the CBC Canada Reads long list 2016

First novel by a creative writing professor at UBC (her first
A very tough story about the kidnapping of a young woman (wife/mother) in Haiti and the horrifying aftermath of 13 days in captivity, and her ongoing trauma (classic PTSD) after her release.
This is a brilliant
This is the companion
A Giller finalist and another
This is a very different
This is a story of two men: one is blind but has “vision”, to study the biology of bees; the other has sight, his manservant/assistant. The context is fascinating, an estate outside Geneva in the 1780-90s. So, like Darwin, the
A brilliant story about a 28 year-old woman who flees her husband and her NY life, to go to New Zealand. She continues to be lost. The writing is amazing, long disjointed sentences to mirror her aimless thoughts. And the ending is intriguing.