Canada Reads

Miss the Canada Reads contenders on The Next Chapter? Catch up here

Ahead of the great Canadian book debate, each author and contender duo discussed their book on The Next Chapter with Ali Hassan. Canada Reads 2024 will air on March 4-7.

Each author and contender duo discussed their book on The Next Chapter with Ali Hassan

Five people sitting on brightly coloured stairs, each holding up a book.
(CBC)

With Canada Reads less than two weeks away, our champions are in full swing preparing for the great Canadian book debate. 

To help them get ready, they've chatted with the author of the book they're bringing to the table — and those conversations aired on The Next Chapter

Featuring powerful moments of connection, discussion and excitement, these segments dive deep into the five books and the reasons they resonated with the panellists. 

You can listen to these interviews below. 

Dallas Soonias & Jessica Johns

a bald brown man with arms crossed stands next to a tall brown-haired man in a moustache holding out the novel Bad Cree.
Dallas Soonias champions Jessica John's novel Bad Cree, which will be hosted by Ali Hassan on Canada Reads 2024. (Bridget Raymundo)

Bad Cree is a horror-infused novel that centres around a young woman named Mackenzie, who is haunted by terrifying nightmares and wracked with guilt about her sister Sabrina's untimely death. The lines between her dreams and reality start to blur when she begins seeing a murder of crows following her around the city — and starts getting threatening text messages from someone claiming to be her dead sister.

Looking to escape, Mackenzie heads back to her hometown in rural Alberta where she finds her family still entrenched in their grief. With her dreams intensifying and getting more dangerous, Mackenzie must confront a violent family legacy and reconcile with the land and her community.

"I knew that in centring family and love and dreams as well, that it had to come from a place of compassion and true joy of storytelling," said Johns on The Next Chapter

"There's so much of this book that everybody can just chew into and then learn about this other way of life, this other way of living," said Soonias. 

LISTEN | Jessica Johns and Dallas Soonias discuss Bad Cree
Former professional volleyball player and filmmaker Dallas Soonias explore why he chose the novel Bad Cree by Jessica Johns as Canada’s must-read book. The Indigenous author gives us a glimpse into the tense and often terrifying world of her novel.

Naheed Nenshi & Christina Wong

A South Asian man takes a selfie with an east Asian woman at a table with Chinese food.
Naheed Nenshi, left, and Christina Wong eating noodles together in Toronto. (Submitted by Naheed Nenshi)

Set in Toronto's Chinatown and Kensington Market, Denison Avenue is a moving portrait of a city undergoing mass gentrification and a Chinese Canadian elder experiencing the existential challenges of getting old and being Asian in North America. Recently widowed, Wong Cho Sum takes long walks through the city, collecting bottles and cans and meeting people on her journeys in a bid to ease her grief.

"[Chinatown/Kensington Market is] a neighborhood that I've pretty much grown up with," said Wong in an interview on The Next Chapter"My parents and my grandparents, our family, we would just go there on Sundays and go for dim sum and go grocery shopping. So it's a place that's like home for me."

"[Denison Avenue is] an extraordinary work. It is a gorgeous and beautiful book," said Nenshi. "It is written with incredible skill and I think it tells a story that's going to cause people to think differently about the cities they live in." 

LISTEN | Naheed Nenshi and Christina Wong discuss Denison Avenue
Former three-term mayor of Calgary and community builder Naheed Nenshi explains why he chose to champion Christina Wong and Daniel Innes’s Denison Avenue. Wong talks about her deep personal connection to the Kensington Market area of Toronto, and why it was the perfect setting for her novel.

Mirian Njoh & Carley Fortune

A white woman wearing a white jumpsuit stands next to a Black woman with albinism holding a pink book cover.
Carley Fortune, left, and Mirian Njoh in The Next Chapter studio. (Bridget Raymundo/CBC)

Meet Me at the Lake finds 32-year-old Fern Brookbanks stuck — she can't quite stop thinking about one perfect day she spent in her 20s. By chance, she met a man named Will Baxter and the two spent a romantic 24 hours in Toronto, after which they promised to meet up one year later. But Will never showed up.

Now, instead of living in the city like she thought she would, Fern manages her mother's Muskoka resort by the lake, a role she promised herself she'd never take on.

Disillusioned with her life, Fern is shocked when Will shows up at her door, suitcase in hand, asking to help. Why is he here after all this time and more importantly, can she trust him to stay? It's clear Will has a secret but Fern isn't sure if she's ready to hear it all these years later. 

"Romance is about people," said Fortune on The Next Chapter. It's about relationships. It's about learning to love ourselves and love others. It's about the challenges we have with our emotions and with our friendships and I think a good romance is about how we live and how we empathize with others."

"This book is a beautiful way to show us who we are, who we want to be, where we come from, how we can join and meld all those things together so that when we do go forward into the future, we can confidently do that with certainty," said Njoh.

LISTEN | Mirian Njoh and Carley Fortune discuss Meet Me at the Lake
The designer and fashion influencer talks about why she wants to champion Carley Fortune’s novel, the first ever romance title to grace the Canada Reads round table. Carley Fortune weighs in on the power of love and why stories about love are stories about living.

Kudakwashe Rutendo & Téa Mutonji

Two women with long black hair pose with a book with a floral cover. One is shorter and wears a white button down, the other wears a black tube top.
Téa Mutonji, left, and Kudkwashe Rutendo pose with book Shut Up You're Pretty in the CBC Toronto Broadcast Centre. (Bridget Raymundo/CBC)

Shut Up You're Pretty is a short fiction collection that tells stories of a young woman named Loli coming of age in the 21st century in Scarborough, Ont. The disarming, punchy and observant stories follow her as she watches someone decide to shave her head in an abortion clinic waiting room, bonds with her mother over fish and contemplates her Congolese traditions at a wedding. 

"The concept of a short story gives me the possibility of individualism," said Mutonji on The Next Chapter. "And my goal was sort of to create this illusion that Loli is a different Black person, Black woman in every story. I wanted to create something that felt contained, but also individualized."

"What really connected with me is that they're just different aspects of Loli that I either see reflected in myself or reflected in the people around me," said Rutendo. "For me, a lot of it was how people reacted to Loli's Blackness, especially in her Black womanhood. So that was something that I connected with so intimately."

LISTEN | Kudakwashe Rutendo and Téa Mutonji discuss Shut Up You're Pretty
Albertan actor Kudakwashe Rutendo, known for her breakout role in the 2023 film Backspot, will be championing Toronto writer Tea Mutonji’s book Shut Up You’re Pretty in the upcoming Canada Reads debates. Shut Up You’re Pretty is a collection of loosely connected stories that follow a teenage girl and her desire for love and belonging.

Heather O'Neill & Catherine Leroux

A white woman with short grey hair and another white woman with short brown hair and glasses stand next to each other. One is holding a book,
Authors Heather O'Neill, left, and Catherine Leroux met on The Next Chapter ahead of Canada Reads 2024. (Bridget Raymundo/CBC)

The Future is set in an alternate history of Detroit where the French never surrendered the city to the U.S. Its residents deal with poverty, pollution and a legacy of racism. When Gloria, a woman looking for answers about her missing granddaughters, arrives in the city, she finds a kingdom of orphaned and abandoned children who have created their own society.

"For the most part, when something terrible happens, cooperation is the main thing that is witnessed," said Leroux on The Next Chapter. "So I think it's important to show that because I think that there's an element of self-fulfilling prophecy in terms of the stories that we tell."

"What I loved about [the setting] was that it identified this isolated group and what happens to a language when it's on its own," said O'Neill. "It also really reflected the French Canadian traditions in Quebec and how the language there has become its own dialect. And it's so unusual in its own way and it's included anglophone influences and just different sayings. So I love that parallel: what she's doing in Detroit and how it becomes this colloquial invention of language."

LISTEN | Heather O'Neill and Catherine Leroux discuss The Future
Acclaimed Montreal writer and past Canada Reads-winning author Heather O’Neill on why she chose to champion fellow Quebecer Catherine Leroux’s novel The Future in this year's debate. Leroux shares what inspired her to create a dystopian, French-speaking version of Detroit.

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