Books and Beyond

The can't-miss books, podcasts, films, and multimedia with a Queen's connection.

Summer 2024

  • Stalin's Failed Alliance by Michael Jabara Carley

    Stalin 91制片厂 鈥檚 Gamble: The Search for Allies against Hitler, 1930-1936

    Michael Carley, MA鈥71, MPhil鈥76

    Understanding how Russia thinks and acts can seem perplexing to those in the West 鈥 but perhaps it 91制片厂 鈥檚 because we tend to view things from a western perspective. This is particularly evident with events leading up to the Second World War, argues Michael Carley, MA鈥71, MPhil鈥76, professor of history at the Universit茅 de Montr茅al. In Stalin 91制片厂 鈥檚 Gamble: The Search for Allies against Hitler, 1930-1936 鈥 part of a trilogy on Russia 91制片厂 鈥檚 foreign policy leading up the war 鈥 the author reveals Stalin as a foreign policy maker and examines his diplomatic manoeuvrings throughout the 1930s. is available from University of Toronto Press.

Spring 2024

  • Kettle Harbour by Kyle Vingoe-Cram

    Kettle Harbour

    Kyle Vingoe-Cram, MA鈥14

    A young artist reunites with her cousin on the muddy banks of Nova Scotia 91制片厂 鈥檚 Fundy coast where the two spent memorable summers, but the reunion reveals a shared, uncomfortable past. Kettle Harbour is the debut graphic novel by Kyle Vingoe-Cram, MA鈥14, who explores, through innovative illustrative methods, the reliability of memory and the cascading effects of trauma. is available from Conundrum Press.

  • Behind the Pickle Jar by Wendy McQuaig

    Pickle Jar

    Wendy McQuaig, Artsci鈥82

    A couple 91制片厂 鈥檚 escape from the city to a family farmhouse in northern Ontario leads to an unexpected discovery of a diary from the early 1900s. Behind the Pickle Jar, an historical novel by Wendy McQuaig, Artsci鈥82, weaves together Canadian history from the turn of the 20th century with the present, providing points of reflection for the woman, in particular, who grapples with her past and modernity. is self-published.

  • J.E.H. MacDonald Up Close: The Artist's Materials and Techniques by Kate Helwig and Alison Douglas

    J.E.H. MacDonald Up Close: The Artist 91制片厂 鈥檚 Materials and Techniques

    Kate Helwig, MAC鈥92 and Alison Douglas, BFA鈥94, MAC鈥96

    J.E.H. MacDonald, one of the members of the Group of Seven and famous for his striking landscapes and views of the Canadian wilderness, is the subject of interest for two Queen 91制片厂 鈥檚 art conservation alumni: Kate Helwig, MAC鈥92; and Alison Douglas, BFA鈥94, MAC鈥96. In J.E.H. MacDonald Up Close: The Artist 91制片厂 鈥檚 Materials and Techniques, the authors provide a fresh interpretation of the painter 91制片厂 鈥檚 artistic development, looking at questions of authenticity and dating. Excerpts from the artist 91制片厂 鈥檚 diaries, letters, and lectures are used to provide socio-historical context to their in-depth reading of the artist 91制片厂 鈥檚 paintings as physical objects. is available from Goose Lane Editions.

  • Doom Eager, Poems by Karl Meade

    doom eager

    Karl Meade, Sc鈥85

    Inspired by the Icelandic term doom eager, referring to an artist 91制片厂 鈥檚 feeling of isolation and restlessness when sick with an idea, Queen 91制片厂 鈥檚 engineer-turned-poet Karl Meade, Sc鈥85, set about penning a collection of poems about love and grief that convey an insistence that lost loves are never gone. doom eager also includes illustrations by Queen 91制片厂 鈥檚 alumna Celia Meade (Scott), Sc鈥86. is available from Raven Chapbooks.

Winter 2023

  • Just to Please You 鈥 The Gertrudes

    The Gertrudes

    Just to Please You

    One evening in 2008, a collection of Queen 91制片厂 鈥檚 students, faculty, and staff got together at the Grad Club to play music and sing. Today they still play together as The Gertrudes, a Kingston-based 鈥渇olkestra鈥 that describes itself as 鈥渁n old-time saloon party travelling through deep space.鈥 They鈥檝e been joined onstage by more than 100 local musicians over the years, and they鈥檝e performed alongside the likes of Ricky Skaggs and Sarah Harmer. Their fifth studio album, Just to Please You, was released in August.

  • Michael Jabara Carley 鈥 Stalin's Gamble: The search for allies against Hitler, 1930-1936

    Stalin 91制片厂 鈥檚 Gamble

    Michael Jabara Carley, MA鈥70, PhD鈥76

    Universit茅 de Montr茅al history professor Michael Jabara Carley, MA鈥70, PhD鈥76, draws on archival evidence from the U.S., the U.K., France, and Russia to unearth new evidence of Joseph Stalin 91制片厂 鈥檚 behind-the-scenes diplomatic efforts in the years leading up to the Second World War. In Stalin 91制片厂 鈥檚 Gamble, released this summer by the University of Toronto Press, he shows how Stalin tried 鈥 and ultimately failed 鈥 to build a defensive alliance against Hitler.

  • Four Bullets, Four Witnesses, Four Liars: The True Story of a Murder and the Trial that Followed

    Four Bullets, Four Witnesses, Four Liars

    Brian Barrie, Law鈥76

    In 1988, Jimmy Strutton was shot four times in a secluded log cabin on the outskirts of Owen Sound, Ont. Each of the four witnesses at the scene told police a different story, and one of them, Mae McEachern, was charged with murder. McEachern 91制片厂 鈥檚 defence lawyer, Brian Barrie, Law鈥76, relies on his own memories, as well as trial transcripts and newspaper articles, to bring the crime and the trial to life in Four Bullets, Four Witnesses, Four Liars, now available from Delve Books.

  • David Roberts 鈥 Boosters and Bankers: Financing Canada's Involvement in the First World War

    Boosters and Barkers: Financing Canada 91制片厂 鈥檚 Involvement in the First World War

    David Roberts, Artsci鈥73, MA鈥75

    Most Canadians at the time may not have fought in the First World War, but many of them had a hand in financing it. David Roberts, Artsci鈥73, MA鈥75, explores the surprising popularity of war bonds and how the federal government used them to convince Canadians to fund Canada 91制片厂 鈥檚 military commitment in Boosters and Barkers: Financing Canada 91制片厂 鈥檚 Involvement in the First World War. It tells the story of six bond drives that together raised almost one-third of the country 91制片厂 鈥檚 total war costs. Read it now from University of British Columbia Press.

Fall 2023

  • Should I keep this record?

    Should I Keep This Record?

    Jamie Lamb, Artsci鈥96 and Michael Payne, Sc鈥99, Ed鈥00

    Jamie Lamb, Artsci鈥96 and Michael Payne, Sc鈥99, Ed鈥00, believe 鈥測ou need four people to make any decision.鈥 And so they invite two friends 鈥 often fellow Queen 91制片厂 鈥檚 alumni 鈥 to join them on each episode of their podcast to help them make some important decisions. In 鈥淪hould I Keep This Record?鈥 鈥 available for download on Spotify 鈥 the pair look at old vinyl albums and debate whether or not to keep them. Seasons 1 and 2 featured albums from the 1980s and 1990s, respectively. Season 3 is coming soon. 

  • The Legend of Baraffo

    The Legend of Baraffo

    Moez Surani, Artsci鈥03

    Is it better to enact social change by working within the system or through acts of revolution? Moez Surani, Artsci鈥03, ponders this question in The Legend of Baraffo, a book he began writing in Dr. Carolyn Smart 91制片厂 鈥檚 creative writing class. It tells the story of Mazzu, a boy who befriends a political prisoner and later grows up to become the mayor of his troubled town. The Legend of Baraffo is available through Book*hug Press. 

  • Mary Pratt, a love affair with vision

    Mary Pratt: A Love Affair with Vision

    Anne Koval, Artsci鈥84

    One of Canada 91制片厂 鈥檚 most celebrated contemporary still-life painters, Mary Pratt is best known for transforming everyday objects into iconic images of vulnerability and imperfection. Art historian Anne Koval, Artsci鈥84, interviewed Pratt extensively and used those interviews as the springboard for Mary Pratt: A Love Affair with Vision. The book is part biography and part in-depth study of Pratt 91制片厂 鈥檚 life, work, and the issues 鈥 gender, feminism, and realism in Canadian art 鈥 that informed them both. Available from Goose Lane Editions. 

  • Blood on the Coal, the true story of the great Springhill Mine disaster

    Blood on the Coal

    Ken Cuthbertson, Arts鈥74, Law鈥83

    Former Alumni Review editor Ken Cuthbertson, Arts鈥74, Law鈥83, chronicles the 1958 Springhill mine disaster, a workplace incident that still stands as one of Canada 91制片厂 鈥檚 worst, in Blood on the Coal. At the time, Springhill, N.S., was the quintessential one-industry town whose economic survival depended upon coal. The mine, one of the world 91制片厂 鈥檚 deepest and most dangerous, continued to operate until disaster struck. The author draws upon archival records as well as interviews with the last surviving miner and his co-workers鈥 relatives. Available from HarperCollins. 

Summer 2023

  • Conversations with Chordates

    Conversations with Chordates

    Anastasia Shavrova, Artsci鈥13, MSc鈥17.

    What do extroverts, dinosaurs, snake-infested marshes, and Mongolia all have in common? They鈥檙e all featured subjects on Conversations with Chordates, a podcast launched last fall by Anastasia Shavrova, Artsci鈥13, MSc鈥17. While Ms. Shavrova works toward her doctorate in reproductive evolution at the University of New South Wales, she uses the podcast to engage fellow scientists in non-scientific conversations on an eclectic range of topics. You can find it on Spotify, Apple, and SoundCloud.

  • Evaluating Urban and Regional Plans: From Theory to Practice

    Evaluating Urban and Regional Plans: From Theory to Practice

    Mark Seasons, Artsci鈥75

    The planners who design our cities and communities often don鈥檛 know if their plans will succeed. Mark Seasons, Artsci鈥75, a professor of planning at the University of Waterloo, says understanding which practices have worked in the past 鈥 and which ones haven鈥檛 鈥 can help take the risk out of urban planning. His 2021 book, Evaluating Urban and Regional Plans: From Theory to Practice, shows planners and planning students how to learn from past successes and mistakes to make better decisions in the future.

  • Olga Onuch & Henry E. Hale The Zelensky Effect

    The Zelensky Effect

    Dr. Olga Onuch, Artsci鈥05

    What enabled Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to stand his ground and lead his country so impressively against an invasion at the hands of an aggressive neighbour? Dr. Olga Onuch, Artsci鈥05, and co-author Henry E. Hale tackle that question in The Zelensky Effect, published earlier this year by Oxford University Press. They learned that the answer is less about a charismatic leader and more about a shared culture and a strong national identity, hard-won after a tumultuous history.