The Current

Author Louise Penny says she didn't think twice before cancelling U.S. book-tour dates

The novelist first announced the decision last week in a social media post. She says the choice isn’t a political one, but a moral one.

The novelist first announced the cancellation in a social media post on Friday

Best-selling Canadian author Louise Penny
Bestselling Canadian author Louise Penny said although 'it was a dream' to be invited to the Kennedy Center to launch her new book, it was an easy decision to cancel on principle. (Benjamin McAuley)

Canadian novelist Louise Penny says the decision to cancel her U.S. dates for an upcoming book tour didn't take long to make.

"It was immediate," Penny told The Current's host Matt Galloway. "I just realized that when Trump brought in the 25 per cent tariffs that I … couldn't enter a country that had declared war on us."

Penny first announced the decision to scrap the U.S. dates for her forthcoming book called The Black Wolf — including the launch, which was set to take place at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. — last week in a Facebook post. It will be the first time in 20 years, she says, that one of her tours won't include stops south of the border. 

"I can hardly believe I'm saying this, but given the ongoing threat of an unprovoked trade war against Canada by the U.S. president, I do not feel I can enter the United States," she wrote in part.

While she says she regrets the impact it will have on American fans, travelling to the U.S. while fellow Canadians are facing "ruin" would have felt hypocritical.

Penny told Galloway why she thought it was important to do her part to help Canada in the trade war, and how a plot point in her forthcoming book is now more relevant than ever. Here is part of their conversation.

Canadian author Louise Penny is pictured.
Penny — a CBC reporter-turned-bestselling novelist — in the As It Happens studio in Toronto. (Nil Köksal/CBC)

You wrote also last week, "So the tariffs have come in. Support for Ukraine paused. What's next? Who's next?" How do you understand this moment?

Things are coming at us so quickly, it's hard to grasp, isn't it?

The tariffs and then that obscene event in the Oval Office happened. And then USAID and women's rights…. It's such a parade of shame.

I've been thinking about Martin Niemöller. The … Lutheran pastor in the Second World War who wrote [the poem First They Came].

WATCH: More Canadian vacationers skipping U.S. amid trade tensions

More Canadian vacationers skipping U.S. amid trade tensions

29 days ago
Duration 2:02

That's what I see happening now. I don't think, Matt, there is a single country that has ever been invaded, a single people who haven't been targeted, a single individual who hasn't been rounded up, who hasn't looked back and wondered what they missed.… What moment, what window was there where this could have been stopped? 

There's no belief in me that my … declaring grandly that I'm not going to the States and we've cancelled the tour is going to change anything. But … I can guarantee you, if we are silent, nothing is going to change. 

There are people and many, many Americans who have said this is a brave stance and that they support you. And then there are people who say that they read you because they want to be taken out of the world that we're in right now, and they're not interested in political views, and they don't want to hear those political views.

Well, then they can go elsewhere.

I don't see this as political, really. I see this as moral. I see it as ethical, which has no boundaries. If the Biden administration had done the same thing, I would have reacted in exactly the same way.

As I said in the post, this is a moral wound, and it's up to us now to stand up and do something.

[The tour] will end at a very specific place, which is in many ways symbolic of that border between Canada and the United States. This is the Haskell Free Library and Opera House that's right on the border between Quebec and Vermont. 

Yeah, it's an extraordinary place. It was built more than 100 years ago by the two communities, the United States and Canada, as a symbol…. There's a [border] line drawn straight through the opera house and free library. 

miniature canadian and american flags sit on a wood shelf in the foreground. In the background, a black line crosses the linoleum floor, where the divide between the US and canadian border sits, crossing right through the building
A black line on the floor marks the international border between the United States and Canada in the library at the Haskell Free Library and Opera House in Derby Line, Vt., in this file photo from June 2007. (Toby Talbot/Associated Press)

[The library] is symbolic of this friendship, a really important friendship between the two nations. And I would love for Americans to come to this event, and Canadians, and do what Trump is trying to destroy and to prove that he can't. 

It cannot be undone, the friendship, the profound friendship between these two nations.

This book is coming out in the fall, and am I getting this correct? That there is some hint of … this 51st state business?

It's hard to believe, but yes.

I wrote the book The Black Wolf a year ago. And in it … part of the plot [is about] what happens when a certain group decides that Canada should become the 51st state because of our resources, because of the wealth that we have in minerals and in oil and water. What happens when the nation to the south is running out of all those things, particularly water, and sees what we have? 

But you know, Matt, I have to say, my fear when I wrote that was, "have I gone too far? Are people going to believe this?" And now, obviously, I don't think I've gone far enough.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Abby Hughes

Journalist

Abby Hughes does a little bit of everything at CBC News in Toronto. She has a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Toronto Metropolitan University. You can reach her at abby.hughes@cbc.ca.

Q&A edited for length and clarity. Interview with Louise Penny produced by Cathy Simon.