14 Canadian short story collections to read for Short Story Month | CBC Books
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14 Canadian short story collections to read for Short Story Month

May is Short Story Month. Celebrate by checking out one of these great Canadian short story collections.

May is Short Story Month. Celebrate by checking out one of these great Canadian short story collections.

Cocktail by Lisa Alward

An illustrated yellow book cover with the image of a woman superimposed onto the shape of a flower. A black and white portrait of a woman with bangs smiling to the camera
Cocktail is a short story collection by Lisa Alward. (Biblioasis, Maria Cardoso Grant)

Cocktail is a short story collection that explores some of life's watershed moments and the tiny horrors of domestic life. Beginning in the 1960s and moving forward through the decades, Cocktail tells intimate and immersive stories about the power of desire — and the cost of pursuing it.

Cocktail was longlisted for the Carol Shields Prize and shortlisted for the Danuta Gleed Literary Award

Lisa Alward's short fiction has appeared in The Journey Prize Stories 2017, Best Canadian Stories 2017 and Best Canadian Stories 2016. She is the winner of the New Quarterly's 2016 Peter Hinchcliffe Short Fiction Award as well as the 2015 Fiddlehead Short Fiction Prize. She lives in Fredericton. She was on the 2018 CBC Short Story Prize longlist for Orlando 1974 which is included in Cocktail

LISTEN | Lisa Alward on her short story collection Cocktail
<p>Lisa Alward's new book is called Cocktail.</p><p><br></p>

Death by a Thousand Cuts by Shashi Bhat

A book cover of a half-eaten beach with a bee near the juice. A woman with long Black hair smiles.
Death By A Thousand Cuts is a short story collection by Shashi Bhat. (McClelland & Stewart, Olivia Li)

Death by a Thousand Cuts traces the funny, honest and difficult parts of womanhood. From a writer whose ex published a book about their breakup to the confession wrought by a Reddit post, these stories probe rage, loneliness, bodily autonomy and these women's relationships with themselves just as much as those around them. 

Shashi Bhat's previous novels include The Family Took Shape, a finalist for the Thomas Raddall Atlantic Fiction Award and The Most Precious Substance on Earthwhich was also a finalist for the Governor General's Literary Award for fiction in 2022. Her short stories won the Writers' Trust/McClelland & Stewart Journey Prize and been shortlisted for a National Magazine Award and the RBC Bronwen Wallace Award for Emerging Writers. Bhat lives in New Westminster, B.C.

LISTEN | Shashi Bhat discusses Death by a Thousand Cuts on The Early Edition
Shashi Bhat writes about the South Asian female experience in her collection of short stories.

The Syrian Ladies Benevolent Society by Christine Estima

A composite image featuring A book cover with a shirtless woman laying down looking into the camera and a portrait of a woman with dark hair.
The Syrian Ladies Benevolent Society is a novel by Christine Estima. (House of Anansi Press, Panther Sohi)

The Syrian Ladies Benevolent Society is a collection of connected stories that traces the immigrant experience of an Arab family through multiple generations. From brave Syrian refugees to trailblazing Lebanese freedom fighters, Azuree knows she comes from a long line of daring Arab women. These stories follow her as she explores ideas of love, faith, despair and the effects of war — and what those family histories mean for her as an Arab woman in the 21st century. 

Christine Estima is a writer, playwright and journalist living in Toronto. Her writing has appeared in numerous publications and she was longlisted for the 2015 CBC Nonfiction PrizeThe Syrian Ladies Benevolant Society is her first book. 

LISTEN | Christine Estima on The Next Chapter
The Syrian Ladies Benevolent Society is a collection of connected stories that trace the immigrant experience through multiple generations.

Her Body Among Animals by Paola Ferrante

Her Body Among Animals is a novel by Paola Ferrante. Her Body Among Animals by Paola Ferrante. An illustrated book cover with a silhouette of a dog jumping over a mermaid's fin. A portrait of a white woman with short brown hair looking into the camera.
Her Body Among Animals is short story collection by Paola Ferrante. (Book*hug Press)

Her Body Among Animals is a genre-bending collection of short stories that merges sci-fi, horror, fairy tales and pop culture to examine the challenges and boundaries society places on women's bodies. 

Her Body Among Animals is shortlisted for the Danuta Gleed Literary Award

Paola Ferrante is a poet and fiction writer from Toronto. Her books include the poetry collection What to Wear When Surviving A Lion Attack and the poetry chapbook The Dark Unwind. She was longlisted for the 2020 Journey Prize and won Room's 2018 prize for fiction.

Soft Serve by Allison Graves

A book cover with a photo of a red plastic chair with a soft serve ice cream melting on it.
Soft Serve is a novel by Allison Graves. (Breakwater Books)

Soft Serve is an edgy short story collection all about unconventional attachments between people and the reasons they endure. Through random encounters on highways, dating apps and fast food chains, the characters in these stories connect as they wander through the spaces — real and virtual — of our modern lives. 

Allison Graves is a Newfoundland-based writer and musician. Her work has appeared in The Antigonish Review, Riddle Fence Magazine and Room Magazine. Her fiction has been longlisted for prizes in Prism, The Fiddlehead and The Newfoundland Quarterly. Soft Serve is her debut fiction collection. 

LISTEN | Allison Graves on The Next Chapter
The Newfoundlander talks about getting her start in writing, and her first short story collection titled Soft Serve. The collection features millennial characters navigating the weird and uncomfortable aspects of life, while exploring what she likes to call “non-places.”

Tales for Late Night Bonfires by G.A. Grisenthwaite

A composite image featuring a green and red illustrated book cover with various animals on it and a portrait of an Indigenous man wearing a fedora and looking into the camera.
Tales for Late Night Bonfires is a short story collection by G.A. Grisenthwaite. (Freehand Books, G.A. Grisenthwaite)

In Tales for Late Night Bonfires, writer G.A. Grisenthwaite blends the Indigenous tradition of oral storytelling with his own unique literary style. From tales about an impossible moose hunt to tales about the "Real Santa," Grisenthwaite crafts witty stories — each more uncanny than the last.

Grisenthwaite is Nłeʔkepmx, a member of the Lytton First Nation who currently lives in Kingsville, Ont. He made the 2021 CBC Short Story Prize longlist and his 2020 debut novel Home Waltz was shortlisted for the Governor General's Literary Award for fiction.

Stray Dogs by Rawi Hage

Stray Dogs is a book by Rawi Hage.
Stray Dogs is a book by Rawi Hage. (Knopf Canada, Madeleine Thien)

The characters in Stray Dogs are restless travellers, moving between nation states and states of mind, seeking connection and trying to escape the past. Set in Montreal, Beirut, Tokyo and more, these stories highlight the often random ways our fragile modern identities are constructed, destroyed and reborn. 

Stray Dogs was on the 2022 shortlist for the Scotiabank Giller Prize

Rawi Hage is a Montreal-based writer. His books include De Niro's Gamewhich won the International Dublin Literary Award in 2008; Cockroach, which received the Hugh MacLennan Prize for fiction, was defended by Samantha Bee on Canada Reads in 2014, and was shortlisted for the Scotiabank Giller Prize and the Governor General's Literary Award; Carnivalwhich was a finalist for the Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize; and Beirut Hellfire Society, which was on the shortlist for the Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize and the Governor General's Literary Award for fiction

LISTEN | Rawi Hage on The Next Chapter
Rawi Hage talks to Shelagh Rogers about his book Stray Dogs and Other Stories.

The Islands by Dionne Irving

The Islands by Dionne Irving. Illustrated book cover of palm leaves on a metal roof sheet.
The Islands is a collection of stories by Dionne Irving. (Catapult Books, Myriam Nicodemus)

Set across the United States, Jamaica and Europe from the 1950s to present day, The Islands details the migration stories of Jamaican women and their descendants. Each short story explores colonialism and its impact as women experience the on-going tensions between identity and the place they long to call home.

The Islands was shortlisted for the 2023 Scotiabank Giller Prize.

Dionne Irving is a writer and creative writing teacher from Toronto. She released her first novel, Quint, in 2021 and her work has been featured in journals and magazines like LitHub, Missouri Review and New Delta Review. The Islands is her debut short story collection. 

LISTEN | Dionne Irving discusses The Islands
Dionne Irving grew up working at her family's Caribbean grocery store in Toronto, and it was where she found inspiration for some of the stories in her Scotiabank Giller Prize-shortlisted collection The Islands.

Animal Person by Alexander MacLeod

A man with greying hair wearing two collared shirts. A black book cover with white writing and colourful lines.
Animal Person is a short story collection by Alexander MacLeod. (Animal Person by Alexander MacLeod, Penguin Random House)

The stories in Alexander MacLeod's latest collection, Animal Person, explore the struggle for meaning and connection in an age where many of us feel cut off from so much, including ourselves. From two sisters having a petty argument to a family on the brink of a new life, these stories pick at the complexity of our shared human experience.

MacLeod is a short story writer and academic from Cape Breton and raised in Windsor, Ont. MacLeod's debut short story collection Light Lifting was shortlisted for the 2010 Scotiabank Giller Prize, the 2011 Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award and the Commonwealth Prize. It also won the Atlantic Book Award. In 2019, he won an O. Henry Award for his short story Lagomorph. He currently lives in Dartmouth, N.S.

LISTEN | Alexander MacLeod on The Next Chapter
Alexander MacLeod talks to Shelagh Rogers about his new collection of short stories, Animal Person.

Shut Up You're Pretty by Téa Mutonji

A book cover of flowers with write writing. A Black woman with long brown hair rests her head on her hand.
Shut Up You're Pretty is a book by Téa Mutonji. (Arsenal Pulp Press, Yoni Mutonji)

Shut Up You're Pretty is a short fiction collection that tells stories of a young woman coming of age in the 21st century in Scarborough, Ont. The disarming, punchy and observant stories follow her as she watches someone decide to shave her head in an abortion clinic waiting room, bonds with her mother over fish and contemplates her Congolese traditions at a wedding. 

Shut Up You're Pretty was on the 2019 Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize shortlist and won the 2020 Edmund White Award for debut fiction. It was championed by Kudakwashe Rutendo on Canada Reads 2024.

Téa Mutonji was named a writer to watch in 2019 by CBC Books. Born in Congo-Kinshasa, Mutonji is also the editor of the anthology Feel Ways: A Scarborough Anthology. She currently lives in Toronto.

LISTEN | Téa Mutonji discusses Shut Up You're Pretty
Téa Mutonji talks to Shelagh Rogers about her Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize nominated novel, Shut Up You're Pretty.

Half-Wild and Other Stories of Encounter by Emily Paskevics

A composite image featuring an illustrated book cover with various animals and a woman silhouetted in the forest and a portrait of a woman with light brown hair looks into the camera.
Half-Wild and Other Stories of Encounter is a book by Emily Paskevics. (Thistledown Press)

The short stories in Half-Wild and Other Stories of Encounter use the wilderness a a backdrop to focus on the connection between humans and the natural world and the intergenerational relationships within families. From a father searching for his wife and child wondering if they're better off without him, to an old woman standing on a frozen lake contemplating her death — this collection asks what it means to be a human in nature.

Emily Paskevics is a writer and editor currently based in Montreal. She is the author of the chapbook The Night That Was Animal. Her poetry, essays and short fiction have appeared in numerous publications and she was longlisted for the 2019 CBC Short Story Prize. In 2022, Paskevics was named one of six emerging writers shortlisted for the RBC Bronwen Wallace Awards in the short fiction category

Peacocks of Instagram by Deepa Rajagopalan

An Indian woman wearing a red top with long dark hair smiles at the camera next to a colourful book cover featuring a hand holding up a mirror with several eyes in the reflection.
Peacocks of Instagram is a short story collection by Deepa Rajagopalan. (House of Anansi Press, Ema Suvajac)

The collection of stories in Peacocks of Instagram paint a tapestry of the Indian diaspora. Tales of revenge, love, desire and family explore the intense ramifications of privilege, or lack thereof. Coffee shop and hotel housekeeping employees, engineers and children show us all of themselves, flaws and all.

Deepa Rajagopalan was the 2021 RBC/PEN Canada New Voices Award winner. Born to Indian parents in Saudi Arabia, she has lived across India, the United States and Canada. Her previous writing has appeared in publications such as the Bristol Short Story Prize Anthology, the New Quarterly, Room and Arc. Rajagopalan now lives and works in Ontario.

Chrysalis Anuja Varghese

A book cover featuring an illustration of a moth on some leaves and a photo of the book's author, a South Asian woman with long black hair wearing a purple shirt.
Chrysalis is a book by Anuja Varghese. (House of Anansi Press, www.anujavarghese.com)

Chrysalis is a short story collection that centres South Asian women, showing how they reclaim their power in a world that constantly undermines them. Exploring sexuality, family and cultural norms, this collection deals with desire and  transformation. 

Chrysalis won the 2023 Governor General's Literary Award for fiction and the 2023 Dayne Ogilvie Prize.

Anuja Varghese is a Hamilton, Ont.-based writer and editor. Her stories have been recognized in the Prism International Short Fiction Contest and the Alice Munro Festival Short Story Competition and nominated for the Pushcart Prize. Chrysalis is her first book. 

LISTEN | Anuja Varghese discusses Chrysalis
Hamilton-based writer Anuja Varghese shares the inspiration behind her debut short story collection, Chrysalis.

Avalanche by Jessica Westhead

Avalanche by Jessica Westhead. An illustrated book cover featuring a giant woman standing in a lake with an avalanche behind her. A portrait of a white woman with light brown hair smiling into the camera.
Avalanche is a novel by Jessica Westhead. (Invisible Publishing, Derek Wuenschirs)

The short stories in Avalanche all take a critical look at the ideas of whiteness, identity and relationships. The characters encounter — and perpetuate — everyday racism in many of its insidious forms and reckon with the implications of that.

Jessica Westhead is the author of the novel Pulpy & Midge and the short story collection And Also Sharks. Her novel Worry was on the Canada Reads 2020 longlist. 

LISTEN | Jessica Westhead on The Next Chapter
Jessica Westhead on exploring ordinary fears in her debut novel Worry.

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