An old adage says "numbers don't lie." But how do you know if they do lie?
Organic Entrepreneurs are motivated less and less by just the bottom line.
Nominated in 1997 for a Julia Child Award, Cupboard Love is back, bigger and better than ever.
On May 7, 1978 a drunk driver ran down a mother and her two children.
Gay middle-aged hit men, a pathological interior designer, an idiot savant child.
The Fool is the eternal child beginning the journey to enlightenment.
Elegant and edgy, vixen is a tense tango cutting through the jungle of the urban underground.
Like Jamaica Kincaid's Lucy, Althea Prince's new novel beautifully traces a woman's struggle.
From Canada comes a lively sampling of short stories and poems.
This anthology offers refereshing, cogent and insightful explanations of why young poets.
Cassidy is dead and Jack is guilty, that's for sure. But of what, exactly, we're not certain.
American-born Stephen Harold Riggins and French-born Paul Bouissac have been partners.
Everyone has their Boogeyman. But who - or what - is scaring Saskatoon locals to death?
In the spirit of Susan Sontag's Illness as Metaphor or Jonathan Lethem's Fortress of Solitude.
In Contract with the World, the setting is Vancouver, and the time is the mid-1970s.
This Is Not For You, perhaps Rule's most self-consciously literary and philosophical novel.
The Insomniac Library is proud to reissue Gwendolyn MacEwen's first novel.
The Insomniac Library is proud to reissue Gwendolyn MacEwen's second novel.
Dexter Cooke: a child of privilege, loved by his parents, adored by his peers.
Telling stories of ordinary lives with extraordinary skill, Pamela Mordecai draws delicately detaile.