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10 Canadian poetry books to expand your mind. ‹ Literary Hub


Dawn Macdonald

July 1, 2025, 10:00am

Canadian poetry—not actually written in maple syrup! Not entirely about beavers! (Although I have certainly written about beavers.) Canada is a complicated place, living in the shadow of the U.S., proudly multicultural but aware of its assimilationist history, reckoning with colonial harms done to Indigenous peoples and called to the work of reconciliation. Canadian poetry is polyphonic, exploratory, and urgent.

10 Canadian poetry books to expand your mind. ‹ Literary Hub

Sharon Thesen, ed., The New Long Poem Anthology (2nd edition)

Is it cheating to start with an anthology? This one gives ample space to encounter literary luminaries like Anne Carson, Robert Kroetsch, bpNichol, Lisa Robertson, Fred Wah, and more.

10 Canadian poetry books to expand your mind. ‹ Literary Hub

rob mclennan, ed., Groundwork: The best of the third decade of above/ground press: 2013-2023

Chapbooks are a vital layer of the poetry ecosystem, where fresh ideas percolate and germinate. The legendary above/ground press has produced hundreds over the past 30-some years, operating out of a basement in Ottawa.

10 Canadian poetry books to expand your mind. ‹ Literary Hub

Dany Laferrière, translated from the French by David Homel, The Return

Montréal-based poet Dany Laferrière returns his father’s body to Haiti for burial. Madness ensues.

10 Canadian poetry books to expand your mind. ‹ Literary Hub

Kayla Czaga, Midway

Victoria-based poet Kayla Czaga lost both her parents, but she didn’t lose her sense of humor. Canadian humor is weird, at times off-putting. Here it’s mixed with the purest grief.

10 Canadian poetry books to expand your mind. ‹ Literary Hub

Zane Koss, Country Music

Reaching back to his origins in interior British Columbia, Zane Koss movingly captures the poetry in the voices of rural and blue-collar oldtimers and bullshitters, and how it feels to have left that way of life.

10 Canadian poetry books to expand your mind. ‹ Literary Hub

Wayde Compton, Performance Bond

Wayde Compton is a Vancouver-based poet of mixed Black and European heritage, working a space of encounter and uncertainty. Plus this book comes with a CD! I also need to plug his prose volume Toward an Anti-racist Poetics. It’s short, incisive, and essential.

10 Canadian poetry books to expand your mind. ‹ Literary Hub

Liz Howard, Letters in a Bruised Cosmos

This wide-ranging collection shines cosmic light on loss and resilience, through the dual lenses of European and Anishinaabe science.

10 Canadian poetry books to expand your mind. ‹ Literary Hub

Jaspreet Singh, Dreams of the Epoch & the Rock

Like all of us, Singh is living in the Anthropocene. Unlike many of us, he finds delight in its absurdities and solace in its interconnections.

10 Canadian poetry books to expand your mind. ‹ Literary Hub

R. Kolewe, The Absence of Zero

Through a single book-length poem, Kolowe mines Misner, Thorne and Wheeler’s classic general relativity textbook Gravitation alongside T.S. Eliot’s Four Quartets and years of his own notebooks. The result is fluid, meditative, and singular.

10 Canadian poetry books to expand your mind. ‹ Literary Hub

Karen Solie, Pigeon

There’s newer work from this Ontario-based, Saskatchewan-grown poet, but Pigeon was the first one I read and it sets the bar for brilliance. Karen Solie looks at the most mundane details of the commercialized landscape and, with a few twists, turns them to gold.



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