Hello there! My name is Britt. I am so excited to have joined the Book*hug Press team as a Publishing Intern this Fall. For me, this co-op term is the […]
Continue readingCategory Archives: Guest Essay
Meet Our Newest Intern: Hannah
Hi everyone, my name is Hannah and I’m excited to share that I’ve joined the Book*hug Press team as a publishing intern! I had a full-circle moment the other day […]
Continue readingMeet Our Newest Team Member: Sabrina
Hello readers! My name is Sabrina, and I’m so excited to be joining the Book*hug team as the Marketing and Communications Coordinator. In 2019, I graduated from the University of […]
Continue readingBehind the Poem with Kate Cayley
Today, we’ve invited Kate Cayley to the blog to share thoughts on a poem from Lent. The poem, entitled “Of Rats and Floods,” is aptly inspired by an actual rat […]
Continue readingMeet Our Newest Intern: Miriam
Hello friends! My name is Miriam and I have been welcomed on as a Spring placement at Book*hug! It is my final step in completing the Centennial College Publishing Program […]
Continue readingMeet Our Newest Intern: Rachel!
Hello everyone! My name is Rachel and I’m delighted to announce that I am Book*hug’s newest intern. When I set out to find my place in publishing, I was […]
Continue readingThe Films in You Are Eating an Orange. You Are Naked.
Today, we’re excited to share another guest post from one of our Fall 2020 authors!
Continue readingRecommended Reading: Six Books to Help You Wrap Your Mind Around the Sixth Extinction
Today, we’re delighted to share a reading list curated and annotated by Kate Sutherland, author of The Bones Are There (published on October 13th) and How to Draw a Rhinoceros.
Continue readingMeet Our New Intern: Danielle
Hello, friends and family of Book*hug! My name is Danielle, but unless you’re a traditionalist, please feel free to call me Dani. You can also call me D, but as […]
Continue readingMobile: Who Would Hear?
Tanis MacDonald’s latest book, Mobile, is a feminist reconsideration of Dennis Lee’s Civil Elegies and Other Poems; an urban lament about female citizenship and settler culpability; an homage to working […]
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