The Hamilton Review of Books' Independently Published Bestsellers List: July 2024

Take a look at which independently published books Canadians are purchasing from independent bookstores.

 

August 22, 2024

 

Fiction

  1. The Downloaded by Robert J. Sawyer, Shadowpaw Press

  2. Chrysalis: Stories by Anuja Varghese, House of Anansi Press

  3. The Wendy Award by Walter Scott, Drawn & Quarterly

  4. Her First Palestinian by Saeed Teebi, Astoria (House of Anansi)

  5. The Future by Catherine Leroux (Author), Susan Ouriou (Translator), Biblioasis

  6. Rubble Children: Seven and a Half Stories by Aaron Kreuter, University of Alberta Press

  7. Hides by Rod Moody-Corbett, Breakwater Books

  8. Moon of the Crusted Snow by Waubgeshig Rice, ECW

  9. An Ordinary Violence by Adriana Chartrand, Spiderline (House of Anansi)

  10. Eleven Huskies: A Dr. Bannerman Vet Mystery by Philipp Schott, ECW Press

Nonfiction

  1. Fungal: Foraging in the Urban Forest by Ariel Gordon, Wolsak & Wynn 

  2. Crosses in the Sky: Jean de Brébeuf and the Destruction of Huronia by Mark Bourrie, Biblioasis

  3. Abolish Social Work (As We Know It) by Craig Fortier (Editor), Edward Hon-Sing Wong (Editor), MJ Rwigema (Editor), Between the Lines

  4. Wildlife, Landscapes, and Geology: An Alberta and Saskatchewan Touring Guide by Dale Leckie, Broken Poplars

  5. Special Topics in Being a Parent: A Queer and Tender Guide to Things I've Learned About Parenting, Mostly the Hard Way by S. Bear Bergman (Author), Saul Freedman-Lawson (Illustrator), Arsenal Pulp Press

  6. In Exile: Rupture, Reunion, and My Grandmother's Secret Life by Sadiya Ansari, House of Anansi Press

  7. Off the Tracks: A Meditation on Train Journeys in a Time of No Travel by Pamela Mulloy, ECW Press

  8. Hot, Wet, & Shaking: How I Learned to Talk About Sex by Kaleigh Trace, Invisible Publishing

  9. A Communist for the RCMP: The Uncovered Story of a Social Movement Informant by Dennis Gruending (Author), Gregory S. Kealey (Foreword), Between the Lines

  10. Monsters, Martyrs, and Marionettes: Essays on Motherhood by Adrienne Gruber, Book*hug Press

Kids

  1. When We Are Kind by Monique Gray Smith (Author), Nicole Neidhardt (Illustrator), Orca Books

  2. Who We Are in Real Life by Victoria Koops, Groundwood Books

  3. Walking Together by Elder Dr. Albert D. Marshall (Author), Louise Zimanyi (Author), Emily Kewageshig (Illustrator), Annick Press

  4. They Say Blue by Jillian Tamaki (Author, Illustrator), Groundwood Books

  5. Salma the Syrian Chef by Danny Ramadan (Author), Anna Bron (Illustrator), Annick Press

 
 
 

How I Built This List:

I am very grateful for all the bookstores who generously shared their sales data with me. The information used to create this list was drawn from the sales of Another Story Bookshop in Toronto,  The City and the City Books in Hamilton, Epic Books in Hamilton, McNally Robinson Booksellers (both the Grant Park and the Forks Locations in Winnipeg), McNally Robinson Saskatoon, Shelf Life Books in Calgary and Wordsworth Books in Waterloo. We’re covering a fair amount of Canada, but I hope to add more stores over time and create a more wide-ranging list. If you are a bookstore who would like to contribute to the list please get in touch with us, we’d love to have more information.

Many of the authors on this list will be new to readers, but what I’ve done here is create a bestseller list drawn only from those books published by Canadian-owned independent presses. Most of the books in the top half of both the fiction and the nonfiction bestseller lists sold well in several of the stores on the list and many of the other titles are books that sold well in only one or two stores who shared information. Sometimes these were strongly regional titles. July is a quieter month in sales and so we see more old favourites, particularly in the children’s list and in fiction.

I acknowledge that this list is not at all perfect. It is only a small sampling of the data out there, but it is a fascinating look at what independently published books Canadians are purchasing from independent bookstores across a reasonable amount of Canada.

My deep thanks to the Hamilton Review of Books for publishing this Independent Bestseller List. Please, if you’re looking for something wonderful to read, visit your nearest independent bookstore and ask them what they suggest. The people who work in these stores know an amazing amount about books and will find you your next best possible read.

Noelle Allen