Here are 100 books that A Taste of Quebec fans have personally recommended if you like
A Taste of Quebec.
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I am the child of Holocaust survivors who chose not to talk about it. The effects were clear and stark â my mother crying out with nightmares, my father doing everything in his power not to be noticed by authorities â but I was not allowed to know their sources. Though my lottery number was 76, I missed going to Vietnam by a year as the draft ended; I watched so many of my peers come back either damaged or at least profoundly changed. I never wish I experienced war in all its hellaciousness, but from early adolescence, I have wondered how I would have acted.
How does one capture and transmit what the mixture of boredom and abject terror that is often a soldierâs life does to the psyche most effectively?
I had read a number of fictionalized reportages and Slaughterhouse-Five by Vonnegut, which added science fiction. Still, it wasnât until I powered through this book that I felt I could know how difficult it is for young men to try and make sense of it. The book was a puzzle with pieces that were hard to place next to each other into a coherent picture, and that felt to me like what Vietnam did to those in my generation who fought there.
Winner of the National Book Award, 'Going After Cacciato' captures the peculiar mixture of horror and hallucination that marked the Vietnam War, this strangest of wars.
In a blend of reality and fantasy, this novel tells the story of a young soldier who one day lays down his rifle and sets off on a quixotic journey from the jungles of Indochina to the streets of Paris.
In its memorable evocation of men both fleeing from and meeting the demands of battle, 'Going After Cacciato' stands as much more than just a great war novel. Ultimately it's about the forces ofâŚ
I chose these books because a theme in my writing is standing up, and being a champion for things that get forgotten â books, music, events, people. Also, for anyone who has done investigative reporting, the sense is always like youâre going down a rabbit hole and penetrating a dark, undiscovered country. Also â and I donât think many people know this â I was an English Lit major in college at the University of Toronto. In my early days I did a lot of reading, on a disparate field of interests.
Linda Wolfe is a throwback to the way true crime used to be written and should continue to be written. She was an old-school investigative reporter with an endlessly inquisitive mind and a keen sense of storytelling. Wolfe died just before the Covid pandemic broke, her passing went largely unnoticed. Sheâs chiefly known for her book about Robert Chambers, Wasted: The Preppie Murder about the 1986 Central Park strangulation murder of Jennifer Levin. The Professor and the Prostitute is a great, lurid title, and this series of essays are fascinating portraits of behavior and psychology. Included is one of her most famous pieces originally penned for New York Magazine, The Strange Death of the Twin Gynecologists about Stewart and Cyril Marcus, made famous in the David Cronenberg film, Dead Ringers.
Ten accounts exploring the psychological forces that drive affluent people to destroy themselves and others focus on a New England professor's obsession with a prostitute, the drug-related deaths of twin gynecologists, and other cases
I chose these books because a theme in my writing is standing up, and being a champion for things that get forgotten â books, music, events, people. Also, for anyone who has done investigative reporting, the sense is always like youâre going down a rabbit hole and penetrating a dark, undiscovered country. Also â and I donât think many people know this â I was an English Lit major in college at the University of Toronto. In my early days I did a lot of reading, on a disparate field of interests.
The Canadian Connection is an expose of the mafia in Canada and its implications for international crime operations. It was first published in French in the mid-1970s and immediately went on to become a national bestseller. There was a time in Quebec when you couldnât turn the page of a newspaper without seeing an ad with an order form urging you to buy this âShocking! Chilling!â book that revealed âNames! Dates! Locations!â Jean-Pierre Charbonneau is today considered one of the godfathers of Quebec writings on organized crime. The Canadian Connection is largely forgotten in English-speaking Canada and widely unknown to the rest of the world. It is essential reading for anyone with an interest in the history of the mafia, and connections to the New York Five Families of organized crime.
Tap Dancing on Everest, part coming-of-age memoir, part true-survival adventure story, is about a young medical student, the daughter of a Holocaust survivor raised in N.Y.C., who battles self-doubt to serve as the doctorâand only womanâon a remote Everest climb in Tibet.
I chose these books because a theme in my writing is standing up, and being a champion for things that get forgotten â books, music, events, people. Also, for anyone who has done investigative reporting, the sense is always like youâre going down a rabbit hole and penetrating a dark, undiscovered country. Also â and I donât think many people know this â I was an English Lit major in college at the University of Toronto. In my early days I did a lot of reading, on a disparate field of interests.
Youâre probably picking up a theme here - I love an underdog, books that go largely unnoticed. Ron Rosenbaum spent most of his career writing for The Village Voice, Esquire, Vanity Fair, and many others. The Secret Parts of Fortune is a collection of some of his best stuff. Someone described Rosenbaum as âone part intellectual and one part private eye,â and these essays will definitely lead you down a rabbit hole, taking you places youâve never even considered to venture. My point of entry was A Killing in Camelot, about the unsolved murder of Mary Meyer, an artist and Washington socialite who turned up murdered on a D.C. canal towpath in 1964. As the title suggests, there is a Kennedy connection â isnât there always.
One part intellectual and one part private eye, Ron Rosenbaum takes readers into "the secret parts" of the great mysteries, controversies, and enigmas of our time, including:
the occult rituals of Skull and Bones, the legendary Yale secret society that has produced spies and presidents, including George Bush and George W. Bush.
the Secrets of the Little Blue Box, the classic story of "Captain Crunch" and the birth of hacker culture.
the "unorthodox" cancer-cure clinics of Tijuana.
the Great Ivy League Nude Posture Photo Scandal.
the unsolved murder of JFK's mistress.
Also including sharp, funny cultural critiques that range fromâŚ
Between the two of us, we have written over a dozen books and won numerous prizes. Wilson, when not writing critically-acclaimed music or explaining how to catch a haggis, has received the Ontario Historical Associationâs Joseph Brant Award for King Alphaâs Song in a Strange Land.Reid, who wisely passed up the chance of a law career in order to play an extra year of soccer, received the C. P. Stacey Award for African Canadians in Union Blue. Both writers believe that sports offer a valuable lens by which to examine a societyâs core values.
Canadians have long worried about their national identity. Indeed, some have considered whether or not there even is one.
Poulter, in her innovative and stimulating book, examines an early attempt in the mid-nineteenth century to create an imagined Canadian identity. Wishing to distance themselves from a quintessential âBritishâ identity, second-generation Montreal Anglophones were searching for a new way to identify. They saw themselves as ânative Canadiansâ.
To solidify this identity, they pursued, as Poulter explained, ânational attributes, or visual icons, that came to be recognized at home and abroad as distinctly âCanadian.ââ It meant, in practice, taking up propriate costumes and sports such as snowshoeing, tobogganing, winter hunting, and lacrosse. All of these activities â undertaken in sartorially correct attire â had previously been the preserve of the Indigenous and French Canadians. Here, was an Englishness reimagined on a frozen landscape.
By imposing perceived British attributes of order, discipline, andâŚ
How did British colonists in Victorian Montreal come to think of themselves as "native Canadian"? This richly illustrated work reveals that colonists adopted, then appropriated, Aboriginal and French Canadian activities such as hunting, lacrosse, snowshoeing, and tobogganing. In the process, they constructed visual icons that were recognized at home and abroad as distinctly "Canadian." This new Canadian nationality mimicked indigenous characteristics but ultimately rejected indigenous players, and championed the interests of white, middle-class, Protestant males who used their newly acquired identity to dominate the political realm. English Canadian identity was not formed solely by emulating what was British; this bookâŚ
I was fascinated by American True Crime magazines from an early age. I used to buy them with my pocket money from a second-hand bookstore near my home. I graduated to reading novels by the age of ten, sneaking my fatherâs book collection into my bedroom one at a time to read after lights out. His books covered everything from The Carpetbaggers by Harold Robbins to The Devil Rides Out by Dennis Wheatley. By seventeen, I promised myself Iâd write a novel one day. Most of my books are crime themed with a supernatural flavour. My debut, The Sister was published in 2013 and since then Iâve completed three more novels and several short stories.
I must have read this book at least half a dozen times over the years. Trevanian was the author of The Eiger Sanction, which became a film starring Clint Eastwood and served as my introduction to Trevanian.
Set in Montreal, this character-driven novel centres around a world-weary detective named LaPointe and the characters on his beat. Close to retirement, Lapointe finds himself on the trail of a killer. Will he catch him before his own past catches up with him? Itâs a great story.
Masterpiece' WASHINGTON POST--'The Main held me from the opening page' CHICAGO TRIBUNE--'The only writer of airport paperbacks to be compared to Zola, Ian Fleming, Poe and Chaucer' NEW YORK TIMES--'A literary jester, a magnificent tale-teller, whose range of interests was vast and whose scope for bafflement was formidable.' INDEPENDENT--'Trevanian's sharply tuned sense of character and milieu gives the book a vivid life granted to only the finest of serious fiction.' WASHINGTON POST The Main is Montreal's teeming underworld, where the dark streets echo with cries in a dozen languages, with the quick footsteps of thieves and the whispers of prostitutes.âŚ
Iâm an American-born cartoonist whoâs been living and working in Montreal since 2015. My mother is from Quebec, and when I immigrated here I was looking to reconnect with my cultural roots. Reading graphic novels from here was a huge part of how I got to know my adopted community. I might be a bit biased, but I have to say Quebec has one of the worldâs most vibrant comic arts scenes; a blend of American comic books mixed with Franco-Belgian bande dessinĂŠe. With more and more graphic novels from Quebec getting translated into English youâre sure to find something youâll dig, whether youâre looking for slice-of-life or science fiction.
Whatâs worse than a Montreal winter? How about four straight years of Montreal winter! While a nuclear power plant melting down and blanketing the metropolis with irradiated snow might seem like a horrible situation, Cab plays this apocalypse for laughs. Gertrude, a superhumanly-strong, snowmobile-piloting delivery driver, has to face off against irradiated beasts, gargantuan snowflakes, and even the withering scorn of fashionable Mile End hipsters. Maniacally creative and drawn with a light touch.
Nothing's rougher than a Canadian winter . . . except maybe one that never ends!
It's been nine years since an accident at a nuclear power plant plunged Montreal into an eternal winter; the city is now blanketed 365 days a year in radioactive snow. But life goes on for folks like Flavie Beaumont, a mail courier on snowmobile who's carved out a pretty normal life for herself, despite mutant crushes, eclectic urban fauna, and unrelenting meteorological events of unprecedented force. It turns out surviving nuclear winter is hard . . . but it's possible surviving your twenties is evenâŚ
Iâm an American-born cartoonist whoâs been living and working in Montreal since 2015. My mother is from Quebec, and when I immigrated here I was looking to reconnect with my cultural roots. Reading graphic novels from here was a huge part of how I got to know my adopted community. I might be a bit biased, but I have to say Quebec has one of the worldâs most vibrant comic arts scenes; a blend of American comic books mixed with Franco-Belgian bande dessinĂŠe. With more and more graphic novels from Quebec getting translated into English youâre sure to find something youâll dig, whether youâre looking for slice-of-life or science fiction.
No list of Quebecois graphic novels would be complete without an entry from Michel Rabagliatiâs excellent Paul series, which is a beloved publishing phenomenon in the province. In all honesty, you canât go wrong with any of his books, each volume in Rabagliatiâs semi-autobiographical series offers a discrete tale of a different moment in his alter-ego Paulâs life, from light childhood adventures through very intense stories of middle age, so you can easily pick up any of them and go from there. This emotionally rich stand-alone volume (the basis of the 2015 film Paul Ă QuĂŠbec) explores the life and death of the protagonistâs gruff father-in-law and is a deep exploration of family, history, and legacy that is truly moving.
The Song of Roland focuses on the life and death of the father-in-law of Rabagliatiâs alter-ego Paul, who has been called âThe Tintin of Quebecâ By Le Devoir. The French edition, Paul Ă QuĂŠbec, was critically hailed, winning the FNAC Audience Award at Franceâs Angouleme festival, a Shuster Award for Outstanding Cartoonist, and was nominated for the City of Montrealâs Grand Prize, and the Audience Award at Montrealâs Salon du Livre. The book is currently in production by Caramel Films. In his classic European cartooning style Rabagliati effortlessly tackles big subjects. As the family stands vigil over Roland in hisâŚ
I hold a Master of Fine Arts in Writing for Children and Young Adults. In addition to the usual two-year program, I studied an extra semester, where I read all the best childrenâs books about friendship. I wanted to learn how the great authors such as A. A. Milne, James Marshall, and Arnold Lobel wrote stories full of so much heart and humor. My love of friendship stories burgeoned from there. And now, itâs with great delight that I offer you my Best Childrenâs Books About Friendshipâand, of course, my very own friendship story, Big Bear and Little Fish.
The Lion and the Bird is the perfect friendship book for quiet times, for easing into the day after just waking up or for calming down when itâs time to say goodnight. Adults and children alike, will be drawn into this sweet story, where the lion discovers an injured bird, nurses it back to health, then waits for it to return the next year. The combination of the gentle text with the charming illustrations makes my heart swell every time.
One autumn day, a lion finds a wounded bird in his garden. With the departure of the bird's flock, the lion decides that it's up to him to care for the bird. He does and the two become fast friends. Nevertheless, the bird departs with his flock the following autumn. What will become of Lion and what will become of their friendship? Note: some pages in this book are intentionally blank to represent snow. Marianne Dubuc received her degree in graphic design from the University of Quebec, Montreal. She has created many different kinds of books for readers of allâŚ
An Italian Feast celebrates the cuisines of the Italian provinces from Como to Palermo. A culinary guide and book of ready reference meant to be the most comprehensive book on Italian cuisine, and it includes over 800 recipes from the 109 provinces of Italy's 20 regions.
I'm just a curious person. I have always been fascinated by literally everything. Everything is jaw-dropping: whether it's lying under a dark sky and marveling at the fact that what you see is the past (the time it takes for light from distant stars to reach your retina) or that your feelings for loved ones boil down to biochemistry, or thinking that intelligence is everywhereâfrom bacteria to plants and fungi, to Homo sapiens. As a university professor, I only understood later in life that I needed to leave that âivory tower,â listen to non-academics, and read popular books that, in their apparent simplicity, can reach further and deeper.
I just devoured it on a recent train trip. I found it fascinating, a little gem. OMG, it holds so much wisdom! Less is always more, and Saucier knows what sheâs doing.
The way she plays with characters: the tiniest of things compared to the magnificence of a great historical fire. I find it incredible to think how the Earthâs own dynamics and the events that occur on it can shape our personalities and the narratives of what is to come in our lives: love, which we can all find where we least expect it, and death.
A CBC CANADA READS 2015 SELECTION! FINALIST FOR THE 2013 GOVERNOR GENERAL'S LITERARY AWARD FOR FRENCH-TO-ENGLISH TRANSLATION Tom and Charlie have decided to live out the remainder of their lives on their own terms, hidden away in a remote forest, their only connection to the outside world a couple of pot growers who deliver whatever they can't eke out for themselves. But one summer two women arrive. One is a young photographer documenting a a series of catastrophic forest fires that swept Northern Ontario early in the century; she's on the trail of the recently deceased Ted Boychuck, a survivorâŚ