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#canadianauthor — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #canadianauthor, aggregated by home.social.

  1. A thorough review for the first Detective Robert Lui novel, in this 5 book series (eBook just $1.99).

    Burwell "has a deep understanding of the development industry, its players, and its impacts, which shows through in both character and plot."

    eBooks available from all retailers, paperbacks can be ordered from any bookstore and in stock at Dartmouth Book Exchange.

    Average Goodreads rating 4 stars.

    #books #Canadianauthor

    amazon.ca/gp/customer-reviews/

  2. I’m home recovering after a bug, post-finishing my doctorate, post-finishing-school-vacation-trip, and in that in‑between space where I’m figuring out how to bring my doctoral thesis into the world as a book while preparing to release the third ecofiction novel in my trilogy.

    I’ll share the trilogy more on Instagram soon; but of course I’ll talk about it here too.

    While I’m resting, I’ve been thinking about two things:

    1. How to share what I’ve learned from writing visionary ecofiction; not as formal tutorials, but as small, generous micro‑snippets of thought.
    2. How much I enjoy posting Three Good Things here on Mastodon.

    This led me to realize that the micro‑tutorials can become Three Good Things. A small, informal, unstructured series about what I’ve learned so far.

    Here we go.

    ---

    Three Good Things I’ve Learned About Writing Visionary Ecofiction

    1. It brings community together; even when people disagree.
    Across all three novels, I learned so much from people with different perspectives:
    • fracking / hydraulic fracturing (Book 1)
    • medical marijuana (Book 2)
    • high‑speed rail (Book 3).
    Ecofiction is a meeting place; not a consensus.

    2. Writing is solitary; but you don’t have to be lonely in it.
    Anything that helps you contextualize yourself in your larger community is healthy;
    walks, cafés, writing groups, reading groups, sharing drafts.
    People’s commentary is subjective but sharing your work is grounding.
    Place yourself in your wider spheres; it helps.

    3. Take joy in the finishing and sharing stages.
    There’s real pleasure in thinking about the special parts of your process and how you want to share them.
    I love outlining, first drafting, sculpting, revising, hearing the text read back to me, and working with an editor and designer, but also, imagining the visual vignettes that accompany the trilogy. I’m figuring out a visual narrative to share the trilogy on Instagram.
    Finishing is its own creative act.

    Working in a genre that’s still emerging (visionary ecology or visionary ecofiction) gives me freedom to genre‑bend fearlessly.
    Book 1 is a love story (but not a romance).
    Book 2 is a mystery (but not a cozy).
    Book 3 is an adventure (but not Indiana Jones).
    The elasticity is part of the joy.

    These are my three good things today, the first in what I hope will become an informal series of micro‑tutorials on writing visionary ecofiction.

    What lights are you up? When you write, how do you define yourself within your genre?

    Keep writing and share!

    PS, the photo was taken at Giverny, Monet’s Garden in France, on my recent trip.

    #VisionaryFiction #VisionaryEcoFiction #VancouverAuthor #TransportationFiction #ThreeGoodThings #NewYorkAuthor #NewJerseyAuthor #MetaphysicalFiction #MedicalMarijuanaFiction #LiteraryFiction #IndiePublisher #IndieAuthor #FrackingFiction #EcoFiction #CreativeWriting #CanadianAuthor #CanLit #BritishColumbiaAuthor #Bookstodon #AmericanAuthor

  3. I’m home recovering after a bug, post-finishing my doctorate, post-finishing-school-vacation-trip, and in that in‑between space where I’m figuring out how to bring my doctoral thesis into the world as a book while preparing to release the third ecofiction novel in my trilogy.

    I’ll share the trilogy more on Instagram soon; but of course I’ll talk about it here too.

    While I’m resting, I’ve been thinking about two things:

    1. How to share what I’ve learned from writing visionary ecofiction; not as formal tutorials, but as small, generous micro‑snippets of thought.
    2. How much I enjoy posting Three Good Things here on Mastodon.

    This led me to realize that the micro‑tutorials can become Three Good Things. A small, informal, unstructured series about what I’ve learned so far.

    Here we go.

    ---

    Three Good Things I’ve Learned About Writing Visionary Ecofiction

    1. It brings community together; even when people disagree.
    Across all three novels, I learned so much from people with different perspectives:
    • fracking / hydraulic fracturing (Book 1)
    • medical marijuana (Book 2)
    • high‑speed rail (Book 3).
    Ecofiction is a meeting place; not a consensus.

    2. Writing is solitary; but you don’t have to be lonely in it.
    Anything that helps you contextualize yourself in your larger community is healthy;
    walks, cafés, writing groups, reading groups, sharing drafts.
    People’s commentary is subjective but sharing your work is grounding.
    Place yourself in your wider spheres; it helps.

    3. Take joy in the finishing and sharing stages.
    There’s real pleasure in thinking about the special parts of your process and how you want to share them.
    I love outlining, first drafting, sculpting, revising, hearing the text read back to me, and working with an editor and designer, but also, imagining the visual vignettes that accompany the trilogy. I’m figuring out a visual narrative to share the trilogy on Instagram.
    Finishing is its own creative act.

    Working in a genre that’s still emerging (visionary ecology or visionary ecofiction) gives me freedom to genre‑bend fearlessly.
    Book 1 is a love story (but not a romance).
    Book 2 is a mystery (but not a cozy).
    Book 3 is an adventure (but not Indiana Jones).
    The elasticity is part of the joy.

    These are my three good things today, the first in what I hope will become an informal series of micro‑tutorials on writing visionary ecofiction.

    What lights are you up? When you write, how do you define yourself within your genre?

    Keep writing and share!

    PS, the photo was taken at Giverny, Monet’s Garden in France, on my recent trip.

    #VisionaryFiction #VisionaryEcoFiction #VancouverAuthor #TransportationFiction #ThreeGoodThings #NewYorkAuthor #NewJerseyAuthor #MetaphysicalFiction #MedicalMarijuanaFiction #LiteraryFiction #IndiePublisher #IndieAuthor #FrackingFiction #EcoFiction #CreativeWriting #CanadianAuthor #CanLit #BritishColumbiaAuthor #Bookstodon #AmericanAuthor

  4. I’m home recovering after a bug, post-finishing my doctorate, post-finishing-school-vacation-trip, and in that in‑between space where I’m figuring out how to bring my doctoral thesis into the world as a book while preparing to release the third ecofiction novel in my trilogy.

    I’ll share the trilogy more on Instagram soon; but of course I’ll talk about it here too.

    While I’m resting, I’ve been thinking about two things:

    1. How to share what I’ve learned from writing visionary ecofiction; not as formal tutorials, but as small, generous micro‑snippets of thought.
    2. How much I enjoy posting Three Good Things here on Mastodon.

    This led me to realize that the micro‑tutorials can become Three Good Things. A small, informal, unstructured series about what I’ve learned so far.

    Here we go.

    ---

    Three Good Things I’ve Learned About Writing Visionary Ecofiction

    1. It brings community together; even when people disagree.
    Across all three novels, I learned so much from people with different perspectives:
    • fracking / hydraulic fracturing (Book 1)
    • medical marijuana (Book 2)
    • high‑speed rail (Book 3).
    Ecofiction is a meeting place; not a consensus.

    2. Writing is solitary; but you don’t have to be lonely in it.
    Anything that helps you contextualize yourself in your larger community is healthy;
    walks, cafés, writing groups, reading groups, sharing drafts.
    People’s commentary is subjective but sharing your work is grounding.
    Place yourself in your wider spheres; it helps.

    3. Take joy in the finishing and sharing stages.
    There’s real pleasure in thinking about the special parts of your process and how you want to share them.
    I love outlining, first drafting, sculpting, revising, hearing the text read back to me, and working with an editor and designer, but also, imagining the visual vignettes that accompany the trilogy. I’m figuring out a visual narrative to share the trilogy on Instagram.
    Finishing is its own creative act.

    Working in a genre that’s still emerging (visionary ecology or visionary ecofiction) gives me freedom to genre‑bend fearlessly.
    Book 1 is a love story (but not a romance).
    Book 2 is a mystery (but not a cozy).
    Book 3 is an adventure (but not Indiana Jones).
    The elasticity is part of the joy.

    These are my three good things today, the first in what I hope will become an informal series of micro‑tutorials on writing visionary ecofiction.

    What lights are you up? When you write, how do you define yourself within your genre?

    Keep writing and share!

    PS, the photo was taken at Giverny, Monet’s Garden in France, on my recent trip.

    #VisionaryFiction #VisionaryEcoFiction #VancouverAuthor #TransportationFiction #ThreeGoodThings #NewYorkAuthor #NewJerseyAuthor #MetaphysicalFiction #MedicalMarijuanaFiction #LiteraryFiction #IndiePublisher #IndieAuthor #FrackingFiction #EcoFiction #CreativeWriting #CanadianAuthor #CanLit #BritishColumbiaAuthor #Bookstodon #AmericanAuthor

  5. I’m home recovering after a bug, post-finishing my doctorate, post-finishing-school-vacation-trip, and in that in‑between space where I’m figuring out how to bring my doctoral thesis into the world as a book while preparing to release the third ecofiction novel in my trilogy.

    I’ll share the trilogy more on Instagram soon; but of course I’ll talk about it here too.

    While I’m resting, I’ve been thinking about two things:

    1. How to share what I’ve learned from writing visionary ecofiction; not as formal tutorials, but as small, generous micro‑snippets of thought.
    2. How much I enjoy posting Three Good Things here on Mastodon.

    This led me to realize that the micro‑tutorials can become Three Good Things. A small, informal, unstructured series about what I’ve learned so far.

    Here we go.

    ---

    Three Good Things I’ve Learned About Writing Visionary Ecofiction

    1. It brings community together; even when people disagree.
    Across all three novels, I learned so much from people with different perspectives:
    • fracking / hydraulic fracturing (Book 1)
    • medical marijuana (Book 2)
    • high‑speed rail (Book 3).
    Ecofiction is a meeting place; not a consensus.

    2. Writing is solitary; but you don’t have to be lonely in it.
    Anything that helps you contextualize yourself in your larger community is healthy;
    walks, cafés, writing groups, reading groups, sharing drafts.
    People’s commentary is subjective but sharing your work is grounding.
    Place yourself in your wider spheres; it helps.

    3. Take joy in the finishing and sharing stages.
    There’s real pleasure in thinking about the special parts of your process and how you want to share them.
    I love outlining, first drafting, sculpting, revising, hearing the text read back to me, and working with an editor and designer, but also, imagining the visual vignettes that accompany the trilogy. I’m figuring out a visual narrative to share the trilogy on Instagram.
    Finishing is its own creative act.

    Working in a genre that’s still emerging (visionary ecology or visionary ecofiction) gives me freedom to genre‑bend fearlessly.
    Book 1 is a love story (but not a romance).
    Book 2 is a mystery (but not a cozy).
    Book 3 is an adventure (but not Indiana Jones).
    The elasticity is part of the joy.

    These are my three good things today, the first in what I hope will become an informal series of micro‑tutorials on writing visionary ecofiction.

    What lights are you up? When you write, how do you define yourself within your genre?

    Keep writing and share!

    PS, the photo was taken at Giverny, Monet’s Garden in France, on my recent trip.

    #VisionaryFiction #VisionaryEcoFiction #VancouverAuthor #TransportationFiction #ThreeGoodThings #NewYorkAuthor #NewJerseyAuthor #MetaphysicalFiction #MedicalMarijuanaFiction #LiteraryFiction #IndiePublisher #IndieAuthor #FrackingFiction #EcoFiction #CreativeWriting #CanadianAuthor #CanLit #BritishColumbiaAuthor #Bookstodon #AmericanAuthor

  6. I’m home recovering after a bug, post-finishing my doctorate, post-finishing-school-vacation-trip, and in that in‑between space where I’m figuring out how to bring my doctoral thesis into the world as a book while preparing to release the third ecofiction novel in my trilogy.

    I’ll share the trilogy more on Instagram soon; but of course I’ll talk about it here too.

    While I’m resting, I’ve been thinking about two things:

    1. How to share what I’ve learned from writing visionary ecofiction; not as formal tutorials, but as small, generous micro‑snippets of thought.
    2. How much I enjoy posting Three Good Things here on Mastodon.

    This led me to realize that the micro‑tutorials can become Three Good Things. A small, informal, unstructured series about what I’ve learned so far.

    Here we go.

    ---

    Three Good Things I’ve Learned About Writing Visionary Ecofiction

    1. It brings community together; even when people disagree.
    Across all three novels, I learned so much from people with different perspectives:
    • fracking / hydraulic fracturing (Book 1)
    • medical marijuana (Book 2)
    • high‑speed rail (Book 3).
    Ecofiction is a meeting place; not a consensus.

    2. Writing is solitary; but you don’t have to be lonely in it.
    Anything that helps you contextualize yourself in your larger community is healthy;
    walks, cafés, writing groups, reading groups, sharing drafts.
    People’s commentary is subjective but sharing your work is grounding.
    Place yourself in your wider spheres; it helps.

    3. Take joy in the finishing and sharing stages.
    There’s real pleasure in thinking about the special parts of your process and how you want to share them.
    I love outlining, first drafting, sculpting, revising, hearing the text read back to me, and working with an editor and designer, but also, imagining the visual vignettes that accompany the trilogy. I’m figuring out a visual narrative to share the trilogy on Instagram.
    Finishing is its own creative act.

    Working in a genre that’s still emerging (visionary ecology or visionary ecofiction) gives me freedom to genre‑bend fearlessly.
    Book 1 is a love story (but not a romance).
    Book 2 is a mystery (but not a cozy).
    Book 3 is an adventure (but not Indiana Jones).
    The elasticity is part of the joy.

    These are my three good things today, the first in what I hope will become an informal series of micro‑tutorials on writing visionary ecofiction.

    What lights are you up? When you write, how do you define yourself within your genre?

    Keep writing and share!

    PS, the photo was taken at Giverny, Monet’s Garden in France, on my recent trip.

    #VisionaryFiction #VisionaryEcoFiction #VancouverAuthor #TransportationFiction #ThreeGoodThings #NewYorkAuthor #NewJerseyAuthor #MetaphysicalFiction #MedicalMarijuanaFiction #LiteraryFiction #IndiePublisher #IndieAuthor #FrackingFiction #EcoFiction #CreativeWriting #CanadianAuthor #CanLit #BritishColumbiaAuthor #Bookstodon #AmericanAuthor

  7. A book with a character who has curly hair - January 7, 2026 - Bridget, the BFF, has blonde curly hair. This is a cute romance novel set in Prince Edward Island. I enjoyed all the references to places and landmarks that I've actually seen and experienced myself.

    Rating ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ 1/2

    #popsugarreadingchallenge #bookstodon #bookstodoner #canadianauthor #romance #princeedwardisland #summerbooks

  8. The City & The City posted their 2025 bestsellers and we love to see a Stelliform book on the list! Also of note: the book is on the list because it is great, yes, but also because The City & The City read and loved it and recommended it and made it a bookclub feature. Indie bookstores are THE BEST.

    #indiebooks #indiebookstores #bestseller #lynnhutchinsonlee #originsofdesireinorchidfens #bestof2025 #canadianbooks #canadianliterature #canlit #canadianauthor #books #bookstodon #booklover

  9. A book you meant to read in 2025 - January 4, 2026 - I didn't quite have time to finish this one before the new year. It's the second of the Saga of the Unfated series and it is full of adventure. There are some great plot twists and a satisfying ending.

    Rating ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ 1/2

    #popsugarreadingchallenge #bookstodon #bookstodoner #fantasy #romantasy #canadianauthor #sagaoftheunfated

  10. ICYMI: there was a lovely review of Rebecca Campbell's THE OTHER SHORE in Brief Ecology, a newsletter focusing on environmental news - not just what's happening but also what we can do. It's definitely worth checking out.

    Here's a link to Brief Ecology #22, where you can find more about THE OTHER SHORE: briefecology.com/p/no-desert-d

    #rebeccacampbell #theothershore #shortstories #shortstorycollection #canlit #canadianliterature #canadianauthor #speculativefiction #sffh #bookstodon #books

  11. ICYMI: there was a lovely review of Rebecca Campbell's THE OTHER SHORE in Brief Ecology, a newsletter focusing on environmental news - not just what's happening but also what we can do. It's definitely worth checking out.

    Here's a link to Brief Ecology #22, where you can find more about THE OTHER SHORE: briefecology.com/p/no-desert-d

    #rebeccacampbell #theothershore #shortstories #shortstorycollection #canlit #canadianliterature #canadianauthor #speculativefiction #sffh #bookstodon #books

  12. ICYMI: there was a lovely review of Rebecca Campbell's THE OTHER SHORE in Brief Ecology, a newsletter focusing on environmental news - not just what's happening but also what we can do. It's definitely worth checking out.

    Here's a link to Brief Ecology #22, where you can find more about THE OTHER SHORE: briefecology.com/p/no-desert-d

    #rebeccacampbell #theothershore #shortstories #shortstorycollection #canlit #canadianliterature #canadianauthor #speculativefiction #sffh #bookstodon #books

  13. ICYMI: there was a lovely review of Rebecca Campbell's THE OTHER SHORE in Brief Ecology, a newsletter focusing on environmental news - not just what's happening but also what we can do. It's definitely worth checking out.

    Here's a link to Brief Ecology #22, where you can find more about THE OTHER SHORE: briefecology.com/p/no-desert-d

    #rebeccacampbell #theothershore #shortstories #shortstorycollection #canlit #canadianliterature #canadianauthor #speculativefiction #sffh #bookstodon #books

  14. ICYMI: there was a lovely review of Rebecca Campbell's THE OTHER SHORE in Brief Ecology, a newsletter focusing on environmental news - not just what's happening but also what we can do. It's definitely worth checking out.

    Here's a link to Brief Ecology #22, where you can find more about THE OTHER SHORE: briefecology.com/p/no-desert-d

    #rebeccacampbell #theothershore #shortstories #shortstorycollection #canlit #canadianliterature #canadianauthor #speculativefiction #sffh #bookstodon #books

  15. ICYMI, The Woodlot published a thoroughly delightful review by Pearl Pirie of Mahaila Smith's SEED BEETLE. If you still haven't picked up your copy, you truly can't miss with this debut collection.

    Read the whole review here: the-wood-lot.ca/2025/09/29/see

    #poetry #canlit #canadianauthor #speculativepoetry #sfpoetry #poetrycollection #debutcollection #books #bookstodon

  16. ICYMI, The Woodlot published a thoroughly delightful review by Pearl Pirie of Mahaila Smith's SEED BEETLE. If you still haven't picked up your copy, you truly can't miss with this debut collection.

    Read the whole review here: the-wood-lot.ca/2025/09/29/see

    #poetry #canlit #canadianauthor #speculativepoetry #sfpoetry #poetrycollection #debutcollection #books #bookstodon

  17. ICYMI, The Woodlot published a thoroughly delightful review by Pearl Pirie of Mahaila Smith's SEED BEETLE. If you still haven't picked up your copy, you truly can't miss with this debut collection.

    Read the whole review here: the-wood-lot.ca/2025/09/29/see

    #poetry #canlit #canadianauthor #speculativepoetry #sfpoetry #poetrycollection #debutcollection #books #bookstodon

  18. ICYMI, The Woodlot published a thoroughly delightful review by Pearl Pirie of Mahaila Smith's SEED BEETLE. If you still haven't picked up your copy, you truly can't miss with this debut collection.

    Read the whole review here: the-wood-lot.ca/2025/09/29/see

    #poetry #canlit #canadianauthor #speculativepoetry #sfpoetry #poetrycollection #debutcollection #books #bookstodon

  19. ICYMI, The Woodlot published a thoroughly delightful review by Pearl Pirie of Mahaila Smith's SEED BEETLE. If you still haven't picked up your copy, you truly can't miss with this debut collection.

    Read the whole review here: the-wood-lot.ca/2025/09/29/see

    #poetry #canlit #canadianauthor #speculativepoetry #sfpoetry #poetrycollection #debutcollection #books #bookstodon

  20. ICYMI, we’re thrilled to see The BC Review’s thoughtful look at Rebecca Campbell’s The Other Shore. Reviewer Dana McFarland explores how these west-coast stories of transformation and haunting reveal what it means to live on changing ground, ecologically, emotionally, and historically.

    Read the full review: thebcreview.ca/2025/10/15/2692

    #rebeccacampbell #theothershore #arboreality #shortstories #canlit #canadianauthor #thebcreview #thebritishcolumbiareivew #danamcfarland #books #bookstodon

  21. ICYMI, we’re thrilled to see The BC Review’s thoughtful look at Rebecca Campbell’s The Other Shore. Reviewer Dana McFarland explores how these west-coast stories of transformation and haunting reveal what it means to live on changing ground, ecologically, emotionally, and historically.

    Read the full review: thebcreview.ca/2025/10/15/2692

    #rebeccacampbell #theothershore #arboreality #shortstories #canlit #canadianauthor #thebcreview #thebritishcolumbiareivew #danamcfarland #books #bookstodon

  22. ICYMI, we’re thrilled to see The BC Review’s thoughtful look at Rebecca Campbell’s The Other Shore. Reviewer Dana McFarland explores how these west-coast stories of transformation and haunting reveal what it means to live on changing ground, ecologically, emotionally, and historically.

    Read the full review: thebcreview.ca/2025/10/15/2692

    #rebeccacampbell #theothershore #arboreality #shortstories #canlit #canadianauthor #thebcreview #thebritishcolumbiareivew #danamcfarland #books #bookstodon

  23. ICYMI, we’re thrilled to see The BC Review’s thoughtful look at Rebecca Campbell’s The Other Shore. Reviewer Dana McFarland explores how these west-coast stories of transformation and haunting reveal what it means to live on changing ground, ecologically, emotionally, and historically.

    Read the full review: thebcreview.ca/2025/10/15/2692

    #rebeccacampbell #theothershore #arboreality #shortstories #canlit #canadianauthor #thebcreview #thebritishcolumbiareivew #danamcfarland #books #bookstodon

  24. ICYMI, we’re thrilled to see The BC Review’s thoughtful look at Rebecca Campbell’s The Other Shore. Reviewer Dana McFarland explores how these west-coast stories of transformation and haunting reveal what it means to live on changing ground, ecologically, emotionally, and historically.

    Read the full review: thebcreview.ca/2025/10/15/2692

    #rebeccacampbell #theothershore #arboreality #shortstories #canlit #canadianauthor #thebcreview #thebritishcolumbiareivew #danamcfarland #books #bookstodon

  25. For your weekend reading pleasure, another review of Rebecca Campbell's collection, THE OTHER SHORE. Thanks to Jan Priddy for walking into this dark forest.

    "Rebecca Campbell, who labels herself “a Canadian writer of weird fiction,” sometimes leads readers gently into the hearts of troubled and lost souls, sometimes pushes us with ferocious energy into terrifying futures."

    calyxpress.org/reviews/the-oth

    #canadianauthor #canlit #sciencefiction #fantasy #horror #books

  26. It's pub day for THE OTHER SHORE, Ursula K. Le Guin winner Rebecca Campbell's ARBOREALITY follow-up and debut collection. In 10 stories set in dark west coast forests and their ruins, this book is exquisite literary spec fic perfect for spooky season. It got a PW star!

    stelliform.press/index.php/pro

    #theothershore #rebeccacampbell #arboreality #ursulakleguin #ursulakleguinprize #debutcollection #shortstories #canadianauthor #canlit #sciencefiction #sffh #horror #horrorbooks #fantasybooks

  27. It's pub day for THE OTHER SHORE, Ursula K. Le Guin winner Rebecca Campbell's ARBOREALITY follow-up and debut collection. In 10 stories set in dark west coast forests and their ruins, this book is exquisite literary spec fic perfect for spooky season. It got a PW star!

    stelliform.press/index.php/pro

    #theothershore #rebeccacampbell #arboreality #ursulakleguin #ursulakleguinprize #debutcollection #shortstories #canadianauthor #canlit #sciencefiction #sffh #horror #horrorbooks #fantasybooks

  28. It's pub day for THE OTHER SHORE, Ursula K. Le Guin winner Rebecca Campbell's ARBOREALITY follow-up and debut collection. In 10 stories set in dark west coast forests and their ruins, this book is exquisite literary spec fic perfect for spooky season. It got a PW star!

    stelliform.press/index.php/pro

    #theothershore #rebeccacampbell #arboreality #ursulakleguin #ursulakleguinprize #debutcollection #shortstories #canadianauthor #canlit #sciencefiction #sffh #horror #horrorbooks #fantasybooks

  29. It's pub day for THE OTHER SHORE, Ursula K. Le Guin winner Rebecca Campbell's ARBOREALITY follow-up and debut collection. In 10 stories set in dark west coast forests and their ruins, this book is exquisite literary spec fic perfect for spooky season. It got a PW star!

    stelliform.press/index.php/pro

    #theothershore #rebeccacampbell #arboreality #ursulakleguin #ursulakleguinprize #debutcollection #shortstories #canadianauthor #canlit #sciencefiction #sffh #horror #horrorbooks #fantasybooks

  30. It's pub day for THE OTHER SHORE, Ursula K. Le Guin winner Rebecca Campbell's ARBOREALITY follow-up and debut collection. In 10 stories set in dark west coast forests and their ruins, this book is exquisite literary spec fic perfect for spooky season. It got a PW star!

    stelliform.press/index.php/pro

    #theothershore #rebeccacampbell #arboreality #ursulakleguin #ursulakleguinprize #debutcollection #shortstories #canadianauthor #canlit #sciencefiction #sffh #horror #horrorbooks #fantasybooks

  31. Le Guin Prize winner Rebecca Campbell's debut collection is out this week!

    Three-time World Fantasy Award Winner Andy Duncan says THE OTHER SHORE is “A landmark first collection from an extraordinary writer. Like an autoharpist from the hills, Campbell makes a high lonesome sound all her own.”

    #leguinprize #ursulakleguinrprize #ursulakleguinprizeforfiction #ursulakleguin #rebeccacampbell #arboreality #theothershore #debutshortstorycollection #debutcollection #canlit #canadianauthor

  32. Le Guin Prize winner Rebecca Campbell's debut collection is out this week!

    Three-time World Fantasy Award Winner Andy Duncan says THE OTHER SHORE is “A landmark first collection from an extraordinary writer. Like an autoharpist from the hills, Campbell makes a high lonesome sound all her own.”

    #leguinprize #ursulakleguinrprize #ursulakleguinprizeforfiction #ursulakleguin #rebeccacampbell #arboreality #theothershore #debutshortstorycollection #debutcollection #canlit #canadianauthor

  33. Le Guin Prize winner Rebecca Campbell's debut collection is out this week!

    Three-time World Fantasy Award Winner Andy Duncan says THE OTHER SHORE is “A landmark first collection from an extraordinary writer. Like an autoharpist from the hills, Campbell makes a high lonesome sound all her own.”

    #leguinprize #ursulakleguinrprize #ursulakleguinprizeforfiction #ursulakleguin #rebeccacampbell #arboreality #theothershore #debutshortstorycollection #debutcollection #canlit #canadianauthor

  34. Le Guin Prize winner Rebecca Campbell's debut collection is out this week!

    Three-time World Fantasy Award Winner Andy Duncan says THE OTHER SHORE is “A landmark first collection from an extraordinary writer. Like an autoharpist from the hills, Campbell makes a high lonesome sound all her own.”

    #leguinprize #ursulakleguinrprize #ursulakleguinprizeforfiction #ursulakleguin #rebeccacampbell #arboreality #theothershore #debutshortstorycollection #debutcollection #canlit #canadianauthor

  35. Le Guin Prize winner Rebecca Campbell's debut collection is out this week!

    Three-time World Fantasy Award Winner Andy Duncan says THE OTHER SHORE is “A landmark first collection from an extraordinary writer. Like an autoharpist from the hills, Campbell makes a high lonesome sound all her own.”

    #leguinprize #ursulakleguinrprize #ursulakleguinprizeforfiction #ursulakleguin #rebeccacampbell #arboreality #theothershore #debutshortstorycollection #debutcollection #canlit #canadianauthor

  36. Inspirational Indie Author Interview: Judith Hutchinson Lepore. Canadian Novelist Turns Real-Life Wildfire Escape into Story of Survival and Community

    My ALLi author guest this episode is Judith Hutchinson Lepore, a Canadian writer from British Columbia whose work spans fantasy,…
    selfpublishingadvice.org/podca

    #Podcast #AuthorInterview #Canadianauthor #indiepublishing #JudithHutchinsonLepore

  37. A book by a Canadian author - August 28, 2025 - This book is very disjointed. It starts seemingly a story about half-siblings, then turns to a commentary on Ponzi schemes during the market crash of 2008, and ends up a ghost story?!? The stories are sort of connected, but it doesn't flow very well.

    Rating ⭐️ ⭐️ 1/2

    #allisonpicksbooks #bookstodon #bookstodoner #canadianauthor #literaryfiction

  38. Looking for a weekend read? Rebecca Campbell's THE OTHER SHORE is now available on Netgalley. If you loved dwelling in the west coast forests of ARBOREALITY but wanted more of their dark history and their technological future, THE OTHER SHORE is a trip you shouldn't miss.

    netgalley.com/catalog/book/670

    #shortstories #arboreality #rebeccacampbell #ursulakleguinprize #leguinprize2023 #sciencefiction #horrorfiction #ecofiction #clifi #canadianfiction #canlit #canadianauthor #netgalley #theothershore

  39. Looking for a weekend read? Rebecca Campbell's THE OTHER SHORE is now available on Netgalley. If you loved dwelling in the west coast forests of ARBOREALITY but wanted more of their dark history and their technological future, THE OTHER SHORE is a trip you shouldn't miss.

    netgalley.com/catalog/book/670

    #shortstories #arboreality #rebeccacampbell #ursulakleguinprize #leguinprize2023 #sciencefiction #horrorfiction #ecofiction #clifi #canadianfiction #canlit #canadianauthor #netgalley #theothershore

  40. Looking for a weekend read? Rebecca Campbell's THE OTHER SHORE is now available on Netgalley. If you loved dwelling in the west coast forests of ARBOREALITY but wanted more of their dark history and their technological future, THE OTHER SHORE is a trip you shouldn't miss.

    netgalley.com/catalog/book/670

    #shortstories #arboreality #rebeccacampbell #ursulakleguinprize #leguinprize2023 #sciencefiction #horrorfiction #ecofiction #clifi #canadianfiction #canlit #canadianauthor #netgalley #theothershore

  41. Looking for a weekend read? Rebecca Campbell's THE OTHER SHORE is now available on Netgalley. If you loved dwelling in the west coast forests of ARBOREALITY but wanted more of their dark history and their technological future, THE OTHER SHORE is a trip you shouldn't miss.

    netgalley.com/catalog/book/670

    #shortstories #arboreality #rebeccacampbell #ursulakleguinprize #leguinprize2023 #sciencefiction #horrorfiction #ecofiction #clifi #canadianfiction #canlit #canadianauthor #netgalley #theothershore

  42. Looking for a weekend read? Rebecca Campbell's THE OTHER SHORE is now available on Netgalley. If you loved dwelling in the west coast forests of ARBOREALITY but wanted more of their dark history and their technological future, THE OTHER SHORE is a trip you shouldn't miss.

    netgalley.com/catalog/book/670

    #shortstories #arboreality #rebeccacampbell #ursulakleguinprize #leguinprize2023 #sciencefiction #horrorfiction #ecofiction #clifi #canadianfiction #canlit #canadianauthor #netgalley #theothershore

  43. Prompt 31 - a book where music plays an integral part of the storyline - June 28, 2025 - This book is a historical fiction novel about a boy in the 1930s with an exceptional talent for playing the piano. He uses his music to escape his complicated family life.

    Rating ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️

    #popsugarreadingchallenge #bookstodon #bookstodoner #historicalfiction #canadianauthor #MusicBooks