Staff Reviews

Staff Reviews

Adult June 2026

In Trees: An Exploration by Robert Moor

A wonderfully broad and digressive look at trees in biology, history and culture. This nature writing at its finest, comparable to Charles Bowden, and Barry Lopez, that combines philosophy, biology and reportage, in original ways.

Note that while American by birth, Moor lives in Halfmoon Bay, BC and hopes to stay forever. In Trees includes chapters on an environmental tree-sit protest in Burnaby, as well as at Fairy Creek BC.

Adult Non-Fiction pr8197144

  

Kids / YA Review 2026

Young World by Soman Chainani

As a teenager, I can remember imagining who I’d thank if I won an Academy Award. To be clear, I had no ambition then or ever, to be an actor. Still, one daydreams…

Imagine a teenager daydreaming about being in charge… say President of the United States. Then imagine the light bulb moment – why wait? Why not a 17-year-old president?

That is what Soman Chainani imagined. The already extremely accomplished author of The School for Good and Evil series, among others, imagined Benton Young. In a near future, where climate change is worse, and politicians are about the same, Benton decides to try.

A Revolting Youth movement - fantastic name - starts with Benton in the United States and spreads across the G7. Suddenly, the leaders of the free world are all teenagers. They sweep into office on their promises to be different. They promise to think about the planet and future generations, instead of accumulating short-term wealth and power for themselves.

In their first week as leaders, these teenagers gather for a G7 meeting. Huge issues are on the agenda, and President Benton Young is still working out the names of each of the other leaders, and trying to wrest power away from American politicians.

That premise had me reading late into the night, as it was. Then – THEN! – one of the teenage leaders is murdered. The suspects? The other teenage leaders!

As Benton and his team (his two best friends, his poli-sci teacher and one or two trustworthy U.S. government officials) navigate the other G7 leaders, murder charges, impeachment in the U.S., unhelpful parents, and the inevitable international conspiracy – they gradually figure out what’s going on, and what to do. This book is the definition of action packed. It is an ode to the vitality, optimism, authenticity and creativity of young people. And who knows? If they had control, maybe they would rule the world better than grown-up politicians. They probably wouldn’t make it any worse.

Young Adult Fiction pr8246495

London Falling: A Mysterious Death in a Gilded City and a Family's Search for Truth by Patrick Radden Keefe

A melange of true crime, history, political science and the portrait of a family, London Falling is another masterclass in narrative non-fiction from the author of Say Nothing.

A young man leaves the balcony of a luxury apartment building in central London; did he commit suicide, was he coerced or murdered? Zac Brettler clips the embankment and ends up on in the mud, rather than the River Thames. The story of what lead up to this moment and its aftermath is filled with fascinating and insightful twists, turns and backgrounds, not just into the life of Brettler and his family, but “the glitzy, mercenary aspirational culture of modern London.” A fascinating read.

Adult Non-Fiction pr8247277

  

Villain Hitting for Vicious Little Nobodies: A Novel by Lindsay Wong

An utterly original work of social satire and horror, leavened with dark humour, by the author of The Woo-Woo, a Canada Reads nominee.

A 25 year old single woman signs away her life to a matchmaking service that caters to the ancient tradition of corpse marriages. We learn what lead her to this decision, her training and experiences waiting for a match while being held captive in the gloomy Zhong caves of Beijing, and the story of her grandmother, from 1920s China to the occupation of the Japanese in Hong Kong and time spent in Manhattan’s Lower East Side.

“Villain Hitting” looks at the cultural hopes and expectations placed on Chinese women, and the constant struggles of economic precarity within a framework that defies genre boundaries. While this will likely be too dark and weird for many, I’d call it an immediate cult classic.


Adult Fiction pr8121339

 

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