Sunday, December 19, 2021

The Strangers by Katherena Vermette

A special thank you to Penguin Random House Canada for a copy of the book in exchange for an honest review. 

Cedar has nearly forgotten what her family looks like. Phoenix has nearly forgotten what freedom feels like. And Elsie has nearly given up hope. Nearly.

After time spent in foster homes, Cedar goes to live with her estranged father. Although she grapples with the pain of being separated from her mother, Elsie, and sister, Phoenix, she's hoping for a new chapter in her life, only to find herself once again in a strange house surrounded by strangers. From a youth detention centre, Phoenix gives birth to a baby she'll never get to raise and tries to forgive herself for all the harm she's caused (while wondering if she even should). Elsie, struggling with addiction and determined to turn her life around, is buoyed by the idea of being reunited with her daughters and strives to be someone they can depend on, unlike her own distant mother. These are the Strangers, each haunted in her own way. Between flickering moments of warmth and support, the women diverge and reconnect, fighting to survive in a fractured system that pretends to offer success but expects them to fail. Facing the distinct blade of racism from those they trusted most, they urge one another to move through the darkness, all the while wondering if they'll ever emerge safely on the other side.

The Strangers is a story about a family who are deeply connected despite being fractured. Taking place a few months after The Break, Vermette continues with Phoenix's story. Failed by her addict mother, her school, and the system, she is now in custody. Phoenix's life is filled with violence, pain, and anger. 

Told from each of the women's perspective, Vermette deftly explores themes of disconnection, racism, trauma, and pain which often takes the form of rage. Margaret, the grandmother, is fuelled by her rage that stems from being an Indigenous woman in a world where the norm is being white. Her reaction to trauma is to fight. This response is to preserve herself, only she doesn't know where to stop. Margaret and her daughter Elsie are estranged because of their arguments. And by extension, Elsie's children, Phoenix and Cedar, are estranged because of her addiction, which is the conduit of her pain. Cedar Sage is the very heart of the story. No matter what Phoenix does, Cedar remembers that Phoenix was a good sister who always took care of her—she is Cedar's home.

The relationships between the women are complex and fragile. Although they are connected by blood, it is their sorrow that they pass down to one another. Some of this sadness is a result of a system that has been imposed upon these women, one that is designed to separate them as well as traumatize them. Phoenix's child is taken from her and is a mirror of her own experience of being taken from her mother and put into foster care with her younger sisters. This is also symbolic of the history of separating Indigenous children from their families, culture, and religion in order to assimilate them into the dominant "Canadian" culture. 

Searing, poignant, and raw. The Strangers is an exploration of race, class, and trauma as told by four unforgettable women who are bound by their unbreakable matrilineal bonds. Highly recommend!



KATHERENA VERMETTE is a Red River Métis (Michif) writer from Treaty 1 territory, the heart of the Métis Nation. She holds a Master of Fine Arts from the University of British Columbia and has worked in poetry, novels, children’s literature, and film.

Born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, her father’s roots run deep in St. Boniface, St. Norbert and beyond. Her mother’s side is Mennonite from the Altona and Rosenfeld area (Treaty 1).

Vermette received the Governor General’s Literary Award for Poetry for her first book, North End Love Songs. Her first novel, The Break, won several awards including the Amazon.ca First Novel Award, and was a bestseller in Canada. Her second novel, The Strangers, won the Atwood Gibson Writers Trust Fiction Prize and was named Chapters Indigo’s Book of the Year 2021. It was also longlisted for the Giller Prize.

Katherena lives with her family in a cranky old house within skipping distance of the temperamental Red River. 


Q & A with Katherena Vermette*

GWR: How many hours a day do you write? What does your writing process look like?

KV: In a true writing time, I am writing about 3-4 hours a day. But what I call true writing time doesn’t happen constantly, or very often some seasons. For novels, my process is pretty research/thinking/planning heavy for a few weeks, if not years or decades. I like to use things like maps and genealogies and post it notes as tools and places to put my thoughts. After I do this for a while, there is a moment I finally decide it is time! (to stop procrastinating!) and then the writing happens. I write pretty intensely when I get down to it, and I write as much as I can until I have to pause (if I made a mess and have to plan some more) and eventually until I finish. 
 
GWR: What comes first for you—the overall idea or the characters?

KV: Definitely the characters. I live and breathe characters and for me, they make everything else. They are what decides the plot, theme, idea and embodiment of the story. 
 
GWR: How do you choose the names for your characters?

KV: In different ways. I usually have themes for families or groups. For my first novel, several characters are actually named after streets they live on, others are named after historical figures. Other names seem to come from more ethereal places, like Echo who is the time traveling young person who very much is the echo of her ancestors.
 
GWR: What character did you sympathize with the most and did that change while writing The Strangers? Do you have a favourite character?

KV: My favourite character, hands down and without shame, is Cedar Sage Stranger. She is the best person in every way and poured all my mama love into her. She was actually pretty difficult to write. She came out pretty slowly, and then I went back and changed her story completely. And then, I switched her to first person and she really, finally started to sing. 
 
GWR: What was the hardest scene to write?

KV: The Strangers was so much easier on me compared to my last book, in terms of bad horrible sad scenes anyway. The first chapter was pretty difficult emotionally, as it is about a traumatic birth. That one was hard. It was also the first chapter I wrote for this book, so made for a shaky beginning. 

GWR: Was it easier or more challenging to explore the matrilineal parallel storyline? Why did you decide to write The Strangers from multiple and generational points of view?
 
KV: I love multiple POV books. I knew the story of family would have to be from different points of view. I have only written multi-POV novels so don’t know if it’s more challenging. I can say the second novel was way easier to organize than the first. That one was a mess for years. This one, I went in knowing what I wanted and kept the mess pretty contained. 

GWR: Can you speak to the pressures and hardships placed on Indigenous women both from within their families and from society and why this is so integral to the story and to your writing as a whole. 

KV: I don’t know how to answer this. My questions going into this book, into the storylines my characters set for me, were about how we affect and reject each other, how the insidious nature of mother to daughter abuse is so hard to define and therefore equally hard to catch and cure. I wanted to explore rage! Rage is such a valid feeling in this sh*tstorm of a world, and that feeling can be so understandable but violence never is. How family is literally made by pregnant persons and their ability, hopefully, to choose. I wanted to talk about how the state has devastated Indigenous families in various ways, and is still very much doing this. I especially I wanted to think about how even when we are separated, even when we cannot be together for whatever reason, we are still so very much a part of each other. 
 
GWR: Is there a particular author/work that inspired you to become a writer or the way you write?

KV: Ah, these days I’m thinking a lot about Lee Maracle and how she literally kicked open doors and stormed the stage for people like me. She was a great mentor. I was lucky to be one of so very many she mentored and set on this path. 
 
GWR: What books are you reading and recommending?

KV: I read so many weird and old things. This past year I absolutely loved Ghost Lake by Nathan Niigaan Noodin Alder and Probably Ruby by Lisa Bird-Wilson.
 
GWR: Can you share what you are working on now?

KV: I’m working on the next book in this series. It starts right about where The Strangers ends and includes many of the character from the two previous books. I can say that much, sure. 

*A version of this post was published on STYLE Canada.

Sunday, December 5, 2021

The Holiday Swap by Maggie Knox

A special thank you to Edelweiss and G.P. Putnam's Sons for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

All they want for Christmas is a different life.

When chef Charlie Goodwin gets hit on the head on the L.A. set of her reality baking show, she loses a lot more than consciousness; she also loses her ability to taste and smell--both of which are critical to her success as one of the show's judges. Meanwhile, Charlie's identical twin, Cass, is frantically trying to hold her own life together back in their quaint mountain hometown while running the family's bustling bakery and dealing with her ex, who won't get the memo that they're over.

With only days until Christmas, a desperate Charlie asks Cass to do something they haven't done since they were kids: switch places. Looking for her own escape from reality, Cass agrees. But temporarily trading lives proves more complicated than they imagined, especially when rugged firefighter Jake Greenman and gorgeous physician's assistant Miguel Rodriguez are thrown into the mix. Will the twins' identity swap be a recipe for disaster, or does it have all the right ingredients for getting their lives back on track?

The Holiday Swap is the first offering from Maggie Knox which is the powerhouse duo of Karma Brown and Marissa Stapley. Perfectly paced for a holiday read, it strikes the right balance between banter and charm. With a dusting of decadent baking and themes of sisterhood and empowerment, this book is a gift (and perfect for gift-giving). 

Complimented by two festive romances and a delightful small-town setting that's like living in a snow globe, The Holiday Swap is the quintessential seasonal rom-com to give you all the Christmas feels. 

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KARMA BROWN is an award-winning journalist and author of the bestsellers Come Away With MeThe Choices We MakeIn This MomentThe Life Lucy Knew, and Recipe for a Perfect Wife. Her first non-fiction book, The 4% Fix, published in 2020. Karma's writing has appeared in publications such as RedbookSELF, and Chatelaine

Brown lives just outside Toronto, Canada with her husband, daughter, and their adorably handsome labradoodle, Fred.

MARISSA STAPLEY is a journalist and the bestselling author of Mating for LifeThings to Do When It's RainingThe Last Resort and Lucky which has been optioned for television. 

Stapley lives in Toronto with her family. 


Q & A with Maggie Knox*

GWR: How did the partnership come about?

MK: Back in November 2019 we were both at different stages in our publishing schedules—Karma was hard at work on the publicity for Recipe for a Perfect Wife and Marissa was deep into  edits for Lucky. On the phone or by text we would share when we hit a pitfall in our respective processes. Until one of us quipped: “Wouldn’t it be great if we could just swap places whenever we felt like it?” 


This conversation quickly morphed from a bit of a joke to something more serious—but still very fun! What would it be like to work as a team? And, what would it be like to write a twin swap, one of the tropes we consider the most fun (Parent Trap, anyone?). It went from there!

GWR: Is there any significance to the name Maggie Knox?

MK: We wanted to use the initials MK (or KM, it didn’t really matter!) to represent both our names. Maggie is Marissa’s paternal grandmother’s name—her Grannie Maggie was a writer and she thought if using a pen name it would be a nice nod to her heritage to use that name. And the K in Knox is for Karma, of course—but we took a bit of a circuitous route to settling on that name that had a little to do with the needs of our publisher, as well as how we wanted the name to sound and look. 

GWR: What sparked the idea for The Holiday Swap?

MK: As we mentioned above, the idea came about when we were joking around about writing something fun together. We had a great time going back and forth about the most charming, feel-good, festive, Hallmark movie-esque novel we could think of writing, something that would make us feel so happy to write. And the next thing we knew, we were writing it! We are similarly ambitious and driven when it comes to our writing careers, so once we got going, there was really no stopping us. We got our agents on board right away, and just went for it. 

GWR: Writing a rom-com is a bit of a departure for both of you. Were you inspired by any other rom-com or holiday romance books/authors?  

MK: Absolutely. We both love losing ourselves in a light, romantic and joyful holiday romance story during the holiday season, whether its relaxing with a novel after a long day of shopping, or watching holiday rom coms on television while wrapping presents. We were definitely inspired by our enjoyment of novels by Josie Silver, Mary Kay Andrews, Karen Swan, Karen Schaler and by moves like The Holiday, Let It Snow, and basically anything on the Hallmark Channel! 

GWR: Tell us about the writing process—with two main characters, did you each tackle one? 

MK: We decided we each needed to have an equal investment in the twins’ storylines—and also that one of the benefits of working with a partner was being able to trade off when the going got tough. That meant we did not each take on one twin but instead wrote a very detailed outline and then divided up the chapters and spent an equal amount of time with each twin, in each setting. This really worked for The Holiday Swap, and meant the writing was seamless. It also means when our friends and loved ones read the novel, they have a hard time figuring out who wrote which chapter. Sometimes we can’t even remember! 

GWR: Let’s talk about the food! Are any of Charlie and Cass’ recipes inspired by your own holiday baking? Do either of you have a family recipe that could rival Starlight Bread? 

MK: Marissa got really into baking sourdough bread during the pandemic, while Karma watched, mystified (how often are you supposed to feed a starter?) from the sidelines, so that’s why there is so much sourdough in the book. It was partly Marissa trying to explain to Karma exactly how it all worked. And both our grandmothers had a Christmas cake they always made that inspired the flavours of the Starlight Bread. 

GWR: What did you have the most fun with, character development or plot? 

MK: We both like different aspects of the writing process best: Marissa loves writing early drafts and having fun getting to know the characters, while Karma enjoys the editing and fine-tuning stage of things. While we both enjoyed the plot and character of this book, Marissa probably enjoyed the outlining and drafting and figuring out all the fun twists and turns, while Karma enjoyed digging in and layering in our edits and little details that made the twins feel like real people. 

GWR: If your book was a beverage, what would it be?

MK: An Aperol Spritz! Light, fizzy, bright, and festive! 

GWR: What’s next for Maggie Knox?

MK: We’ve got our second holiday rom com, All I Want for Christmas, coming out next fall. Right now we’re in the editing phase (meaning Karma is happy and Marissa is missing the writing stage!). This novel is like The Hating Game meets the show Nashville and we love it! It’s a festive and sexy enemies to lovers story about singer/songwriters Sadie Hunter and Max Brody, who are paired up to sing a duet while competing in a Nashville-set reality singing competition show. Sparks fly when they perform together, so much so that everyone thinks they must be in love—and the world falls for the idea of them as a couple. (They even get a hashtag: #Saxie). But in truth, they can hardly stand each other. In the interests of launching their careers and winning the competition they agree to pose as a couple for one year, but as Christmas—and the deadline for the dissolution of their fake relationship—approaches and they come together to write an original holiday love song, they start to realize that their intense feelings might be very real…

*A version of this post was published on STYLE Canada.