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Saturday, July 6, 2024

New book: A Sea of Spectres by Nancy Taber

 A Sea of Spectres by Nancy Taber

On the choppy coastline of Prince Edward Island, an ocean-phobic detective evades the deadly lure of a phantom ship by delving into her family’s history and harnessing her matrilineal powers of premonition.

Raina is an accomplished detective working against smugglers and traffickers on PEI, and she’s eager for an imminent promotion. But there’s a catch: she has to go work on a Coast Guard ship for a week. And Raina, though Island born and raised, loathes the sea. When she gets too close to it, the phantom ship starts calling to her, and the lure of its deadly cold flames threatens to overwhelm her.

When she starts pulling the threads of a missing-person case, she discovers how Doiron women’s uncanny abilities have impacted her ancestral line: Madeleine’s powers tried to keep her family safe during the Expulsion of the Acadians in 1758; Celeste’s tempted her to take back what was rightfully hers in 1864.

Generation after generation of women have had to reckon with what their abilities can and can’t do to protect their families. And now it’s Raina’s turn. Is she strong enough to carry her family’s legacy? Or will that legacy carry her out into the burning sea of spectres?

Debut novelist Nancy Taber deftly braids three timelines together, each as engaging and fully drawn as the other. With whip-smart contemporary dialogue and moving, evocative historical writing, she brings to life three different generations of Acadian women in a riveting, crackling, chilling mystery.

Nancy Taber is a former Canadian military officer. Part of her job once included leaping out of a helicopter into the ocean. Now, most of her job includes sitting at a computer, drinking massive amounts of coffee and dropping her characters into wild and sometimes weird circumstances. 

Currently a professor at Brock University, Nancy has published research on the intersection of gender, war, and militarism in academic books and journals. Her short stories have appeared in journals such as The South Shore Review and Atlantis: Critical Studies in Gender, Culture and Social Justice, among others. 

A Sea of Spectres is her debut novel. It's available through Nimbus Publishing here or through Chapters/Indigo here.

Visit Nancy at https://www.nancytaber.ca/

See Brian Henry's upcoming weekly writing classes, one-day workshops, and weekend retreats here.  

For more about new books from your fellow authors, see here {and scroll down}.

Friday, July 5, 2024

“Every day, here in Canada, extemists try to incite violence” by Brian Henry

 

MP Julie Dzerowicz's office defaced. It's not only Jews being threatened

I’m worried. Not for myself. I believe my odds of being hit in a terrorist attack here in Canada are still low, as of yet not much worse than the odds of being struck by lightning. But the odds of some Hamas wannabe randomly murdering someone res every day.

We know terrorist groups are active in Canada. They don’t even make a secret of it. The Samidoun Prisoners Solidarity Network organizes many of the anti-Israel–pro-Hamas protests across Canada (and the U.S., too).

Israel identifies Samidoun as the international recruiter and propaganda arm for the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine [PFLP], a group that Canada and the rest of the world identifies as a terrorist group because of the way they like to murder people (here).

Like Israel, Germany banned Samidoun and also its youth arm called HIRAK – Palestinian Youth Mobilization, which seems to have been the German equivalent of the Palestinian Youth Movement (PYM) active in Canada and the US (here). Germany also banned Khaled Barakat who appears to be a leader of Samidoun.

According to Israel, Barakat is a senior figure in the PFLP terrorist group.

Anti-Israel protestors often carry
the green Hamas flag 

Barakat has lived in British Columbia since 2004. He and his wife, Charlotte Kates, also a Vancouverite and the International Coordinator of Samidoun, frequently speak at anti-Israel protests, and openly endorse Hamas’s terrorism. 

At a rally at the Vancouver Art Gallery in April, Kates said: “We stand with the Palestinian resistance and their heroic and brave action on October 7. Long live October 7!” (More on Samidoun here.)

This speech finally got Kates arrested for hate speech (see here), but she’s been saying much the same ever since Hamas’s mass murder, mass rapes, and mass kidnappings of October 7.

In May, Barakat repeated his wife’s support for the October 7 atrocities and called for an intifada: “Supporting October 7 means being part of this international intifada. ... When you say with a loud and clear voice, ‘Long live October 7,’ you will understand that this great Palestinian people decided to end their miseries and end this nightmare called Israel” (here).

A month later, we’re still waiting for the police to charge Barakat, but then, we’ve been waiting for Canadian authorities to do something about him for years, as noted in this piece by Terry Glavin from 2022 here.

The Palestinian Youth Movement [PYM] also organizes many of the anti-Israelpro-Hamas protests. As noted above, the PYM seems to be Samidoun’s youth arm. It’s also active in high schools and seems to be dedicated to recruiting young people into the pro-terrorism orbit (here).

PYM also makes it clear that they stand with “our heroic resistance in Gaza” (more here).

Students for Justice in Palestine is another group organizing anti-Israelpro-terrorism protests; on university campuses across North America, they’re the biggest organizer.  A lawsuit launched in the US follows the money of who’s bankrolling this group and helping them organize and says SJP has a direct line to Hamas.

Like the rest of these “pro-Palestinian” groups (as the media likes to call them), SJP openly endorses Hamas’s terrorism, calling October 7, “a historic win for Palestinian resistance” (more here).

Other groups organizing anti-Israel protests have no known ties to terror groups but still endorse terrorism. At McGill University, for example, Students in Solidarity for Palestinian Human Rights [SPHR], describes Hamas’s October 7 atrocities as “heroic” (here). SPHR apparently believes that human rights include getting to murder, rape, and kidnap people, at least for Palestinians.

This summer, the SPHR is offering a summer camp at the site of their on-going anti-Israel encampment at McGill to educate the youth of Montreal in revolution. And to think, before this, you had to go all the way to Gaza to attend a terrorism summer camp.

Summer camp in Gaza, 2008

Read more on SPHR McGill here. Read more on the terrorism camps Hamas has been running for children in a piece I wrote for the Jewish Tribune 16 years ago here. Doubtless many of the kids Hamas taught to hate through summer camps, children’s TV and the United Nations schools in Gaza, grew up to join Hamas brigades. Indeed, that was the point; ever since it took over Gaza, Hamas has been bringing up children to be martyrs in its war against the Jews.

Summer camp at McGill, 2024 

Like the McGill encampment, the anti-Israel campers occupying Kings College Circle at the University of Toronto also endorse terrorism, with everyone entering the encampment required to affirm they support a “Palestinian right to resistance” (here). “Resistance” – that’s what Hamas calls murder, rape, and kidnapping.

Signs at the U of T encampment also proclaim “Glory to All Martyrs” and “This is the intifada” (here).

The (second) intifada was the Palestinian terror war against Israel that started in 2000 and which Israel finally defeated in 2005. It’s signature feature was Palestinian suicide bombers blowing up as many innocent civilians as possible.

Anti-Israel demonstrators call for intifada, not just in Israel, but also in Canada, and not just at the U of T encampment, but at all their demonstrations. 

They called for intifada while protesting at Mount Sinai hospital (here).

Hamilton MPP Sarah Jama yelled out, “Globalize the intifada” when she spoke to the anti-                Israel encampment at McMaster University (here).”

The NDP had the decency to kick Jama out of its caucus in October (here), but many in the NDP still love her. Indeed, at the anti-Israel rally at McMaster where she called for intifada. Mathew Green, the federal NDP MP for Hamilton Centre, shared the stage with her.

Green and Jama also both spoke in Toronto at an anti-Israel rally in Nov 2023 organized by Toronto4Palestine – yet another “pro-Palestinian” group that openly celebrates Hamas’s atrocities of October 7 (see here).

In March, I heard anti-Israel protesters calling for intifada for myself at the protest outside the BAYT synagogue in Toronto (here).

I’m not the only one who’s worried. CSIS has warned the government that “violent rhetoric” from extremists could prompt violence in Canada (here). But already, the extremists have already gone way past “violent rhetoric.”

Toronto police report that six months into 2024, hate crimes are up 55% from last year, and while Jews make up about 6% of Toronto’s population, we’re the targets of 45% of the hate crimes (here).

Most incidents don’t amount to much. For example, someone scribbled a red triangle on a sign advertising the annual Walk with Israel out front of a synagogue I walk by twice a day. I had to research what that was all about. Turns out Hamas uses the red triangle on photos of people they want to kill. Its popularity has spread so the red triangle is now the global intifada’s version of the swastika – different cultural source, but same meaning: Kill the Jews.

"Walk with Israel" sign outside synagogue on Sheppard Ave W in Toronto defaced with red triangle
 
The familiarity kind of comforted me, in a “more things change, the more they stay the same” kind of way. The synagogue took down the Walk with Israel sign, but was that bit of defacement ever reported to the police? I doubt it.

Also in the neighbourhood, up the street from my climbing gym and down the street from a kosher shawarma place I’m partial to, a Jewish elementary school for girls got shot up. No one was hurt because it was after hours. Also, the school has a high security fence and the windows are armoured glass. Why? Because the Jewish community has learned to expect this sort of thing.

Video frame of men shooting at Jewish elementary girls' school in Toronto

Three Jewish schools in Montreal have also been shot at, one of them twice, plus the haters have made arson attacks on Jewish schools, synagogues, community centres and stores; they’ve physically assaulted people, smashed windows, and Jewish kids are bullied at school and harassed at university. (See a few of the more well-known incidents here.)

And so far, we’ve been lucky.

But every day that protesters incite hatred against Israel and against Jews, the danger level rises. And every day, I worry a little more that some deranged individual will decide to do his part for the global intifada, and rather than shoot at a Jewish school, he’s going to shoot at some Jews.

Does the media do enough to expose the hatred? A few outlets deserve praise, the National Post, for starters. But for the most part, the media spreads incitement more than tamping it down.

Do politicians do enough? A few deserve praise, Melissa Lantsman, MP for Thornhill, for starters. But other politicians actively add to the incitement while most say nothing until someone actually shoots at a Jewish school – and even after that, they do nothing.

Canada has zero influence over what happens in the Middle East. But our government does bear responsibility for what happens here. It bears responsibility for what’s happened in the streets to date and it will bear responsibility if things get worse or, God forbid, much worse.

This piece was originally published on the Canadian Zionist Forum.

Read more of my essays here (and scroll down).

Thursday, July 4, 2024

Three agents at kt Literary want your manuscripts ~ everything from picture books to adult fiction & nonfiction

On the Bright Side by Anna Sortino
represented by kt Literary

kt Literary

Highlands Ranch,
Denver, Colorado

https://ktliterary.com/

Note: You can now get new postings on Quick Brown Fox delivered straight to your Inbox as I publish them. Subscribe to the new Quick Brown Fox page on Substack here: https://brian999.substack.com/

kt literary is a full-service literary agency. It was founded by Kate Testerman in 2008 when she moved to Colorado after a dozen years working in publishing in New York City. kt literary has fourteen agents. Three of them are currently open to queries:

Kari Sutherland is a literary agent based out of Southern California. She began on the editorial side of publishing, first at Disney Press, then HarperCollins Children’s Books where she had the honor of editing many talented authors, including Victoria Aveyard and Sara Shepard. 

Kari graduated from Williams College with a B.A. in English and Psychology and received a Masters in Forensic Psychology from John Jay College of Criminal Justice before pivoting back to her first love–books.

With her editorial insight and experience with the entire publishing process, Kari is passionate about helping to polish each manuscript and equip her clients for success.

Middle grade and YA are at the heart of her list, but Kari also represents picture books, chapter books, graphic novels, and upmarket fiction.

Query Kari through her query manager here.

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Note: If you’re interested in meeting an agent and in getting published, don’t miss our online How to get Published workshop Sunday, July 21, with guest speaker Gordon Warnock of the Fuse Agency (see here).

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Chelsea Hensley is an agent at kt literary where she represents a varied list of clients writing across ages and genres and a few who are also illustrating. She began her agenting career in 2020 at kt literary and continues to build a list that reflects her own diverse tastes.

In fiction, she wants the lushest of fantasies, the tensest thrillers, steamy, hilarious romcoms, smart sci-fi, and imaginative, innovative horror.

In Kid Lit, she seeks lyrical picture books and plucky middle grade.

She’s also eager to build up her list of Young Adult authors. She wants mysteries, thrillers and suspense and is looking for layered, tricky stories loaded with twists, turns, and red herrings. She’d love to see some confident projects with intense protagonists who aren't very concerned with being liked, and mysteries that could become series. She loves stories with complicated teenage girls, revenge arcs, puzzles, and games.

In YA she also wants horror, realistic fiction, and Fantasy/Sci-Fi.

She’s open to select nonfiction and is seeking projects in the areas of women’s sports (particularly women’s soccer), pop culture and media criticism, astrology, and tarot (including tarot decks). She’s only interested in takes that are intersectional, affirming and socially-conscious from writers who are experts in their fields, have fun and interesting platforms and something interesting to say.

See more details of what she’s looking for here.

Chelsea is a Capricorn from St. Louis, where she lives with a pair of very cute, though very chaotic, dogs. She enjoys D&D, Golden Girls, women’s soccer, chocolate chip cookies, and Airtable.

She is a member of the AALA and serves on the board of the 501©3 nonprofit, Literary Agentsof Change, which is committed to the diversification of the publishing industry in general and the agenting profession in particular. She also serves as co-director of Communications and Fundraising Committees.

Query Chelsea through her query manager here.

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Note: If you’re especially interested in Kid Lit, don’t miss our one-day day “Writing for children and for young adults” workshop, with Nan Froman, editorial director at Groundwood Books, Sunday, Sept 22. Details here.

Also, be sure to check out our weekly course, “Writing Kid Lit ~ the next level,” on Monday evenings this fall. Details here.

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Maria Napolitano began her career in publishing as a book scout, where she fell in love with the process of matchmaking books with just the right editors and publishers around the world. She went on to work in subrights and as an agent, and joined kt literary as foreign rights manager and agent in 2024. In foreign rights, Maria's focus is bringing authors to international readerships and building multi-faceted careers across global markets. 

Maria is a native New Yorker and Cornell graduate who currently lives in Astoria, Queens with a sourdough starter named Ryeley.

As an agent, Maria represents a broad range of fiction, from commercial rom-coms to radical speculative fiction, subversive thrillers, and upmarket book club fiction. She is drawn to character-driven stories, unusual perspectives, genre-bending works, and supremely pitchable high concepts.

In nonfiction, she’s looking for:

Narrative nonfiction about under-discussed historical trends, events, or origin stories that have present-day consequences.

Micro-histories that use one object or topic to explore a more universal experience or theme.

Nonfiction a la Sabrina Imbler — somewhere on the axes of narrative-pop science-personal essay. Contemporary, voicey, personal while also being sneakily educational. I love weird pieces of natural history and overlooked critters, and how the natural world can be used as a way in to writing about the human condition, but if your beat is some other area of surprising and fertile ground, that’s still fair game.

Read more about Maria's wish list on her website.

Query Maria at: maria@ktliterary.com

She doesn’t say what she’d like to see, so I’d send her a query and paste a short sample into your email, say the first chapter. ~Brian

See all upcoming weekly writing classes, one-day workshops, and weekend retreats here.  

Navigation tips: Always check out the Labels underneath a post; they’ll lead you to various distinct collections of postings. If you're searching for more interviews with literary agents or a literary agent who represents a particular type of book, check out this post.

Wednesday, July 3, 2024

You're invited to "Writing Personal Stories & Other Nonfiction," an online course

Writing Personal Stories & Other Nonfiction

~ Join us for eight afternoons of writing, learning, and   sharing

Online: Tuesday afternoons, 1 – 3 p.m.
October 8 – December 3 (or to Dec 10 if the class fills up. No class Oct 22.)

If you want to write any kind of true story, this course is for you. Personal stories will be front and centre – we’ll look at memoirs, travel writing, personal essays, family history – but we’ll also look at writing feature articles, creative nonfiction and other more informational writing. Plus, of course, we’ll work on creativity and writing technique and have fun doing it. 

Whether you want to write a book or just get your thoughts down on paper, this weekly course will get you going. We'll reveal the tricks and conventions of telling true stories, and we’ll show you how to use the techniques of the novel to recount actual events. Weekly writing exercises and friendly feedback from the instructor will help you move forward on this writing adventure. Whether you want to write for your family and friends or for a wider public, don't miss this course.

Also, we’ll have a published author as a guest speaker.

Instructor Brian Henry has been a book editor and creative writing instructor for more than 25 years. He publishes Quick Brown Fox, Canada's most popular blog for writers, teaches creative writing at Ryerson University and has led workshops everywhere from Boston to Buffalo and from Sarnia to Saint John. But his proudest boast is that he’s has helped many of his students get published.  

Read reviews and other pieces inspired by Brian's retreats, courses and workshops here (and scroll down).

Fee: $220.35 plus 13% hst = $259

To reserve your spot, email: brianhenry@sympatico.ca

See all of Brian’s upcoming weekly writing classes, one-day workshops, and weekend retreathere.