Reddit mentions: The best canadian literature books

We found 60 Reddit comments discussing the best canadian literature books. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 31 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.

1. Starfish (Rifters Trilogy (1))

Starfish (Rifters Trilogy (1))
Specs:
Height8.5 Inches
Length5.5 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateApril 2008
Weight0.64374980504 Pounds
Width0.71 Inches
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2. A Confederation of Valor (omnibus)

    Features:
  • Manufactured to the Highest Quality Available.
  • With True Enhanced Performance.
  • Latest Technical Development.
A Confederation of Valor (omnibus)
Specs:
Height6.8 Inches
Length4.24 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateDecember 2006
Weight0.65 Pounds
Width1.37 Inches
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4. Bear

    Features:
  • New
  • Mint Condition
  • Dispatch same day for order received before 12 noon
  • Guaranteed packaging
  • No quibbles returns
Bear
Specs:
Height7.72 Inches
Length5.08 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateAugust 2009
Weight0.35 Pounds
Width0.38 Inches
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6. Call Centre : Life on the Line

    Features:
  • Dutton
Call Centre : Life on the Line
Specs:
Release dateJuly 2018
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7. The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
Specs:
Height8 Inches
Length0.5 Inches
Number of items1
Weight0.49 Pounds
Width5.5 Inches
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8. Ysabel

Ysabel
Specs:
ColorMulticolor
Height9 Inches
Length6 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateFebruary 2008
Weight1.02 Pounds
Width0.9 Inches
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9. Half of a Yellow Sun

    Features:
  • Used Book in Good Condition
Half of a Yellow Sun
Specs:
Height7.98 Inches
Length5.18 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateSeptember 2007
Weight0.9375 Pounds
Width0.94 Inches
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10. The Futurist

The Futurist
Specs:
Height8 Inches
Length5.1 Inches
Release dateJune 2007
Weight0.46 Pounds
Width0.62 Inches
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11. The Little Girl Who Was Too Fond of Matches

    Features:
  • Used Book in Good Condition
The Little Girl Who Was Too Fond of Matches
Specs:
Height8 Inches
Length5 Inches
Number of items1
Weight0.39 Pounds
Width0.5 Inches
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12. Great Canadian Speeches: Words that shaped a nation

Great Canadian Speeches: Words that shaped a nation
Specs:
Release dateAugust 2008
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14. Valor's Trial (Valor Novel)

    Features:
  • Daw Books
Valor's Trial (Valor Novel)
Specs:
ColorMulticolor
Height6.75 Inches
Length4.19 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateJune 2009
Weight0.4375 Pounds
Width1.13 Inches
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15. The Heart of Valor (Valor Novel)

    Features:
  • Used Book in Good Condition
The Heart of Valor (Valor Novel)
Specs:
ColorMulticolor
Height6.78 Inches
Length4.28 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateJune 2008
Weight0.45 Pounds
Width1.19 Inches
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16. A Scientific Romance

A Scientific Romance
Specs:
Height8 Inches
Length5.15 Inches
Number of items1
Weight0.8 Pounds
Width0.7 Inches
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18. Petite Suzanne

illustrations
Petite Suzanne
Specs:
Number of items1
Weight0.15 Pounds
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19. The Abstinence Teacher

The Abstinence Teacher
Specs:
Height8.5 Inches
Length5.8 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateOctober 2007
Weight1.05 Pounds
Width1.4 Inches
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20. Bit Rot

Bit Rot
Specs:
Height9.4 Inches
Length6.4 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateOctober 2016
Weight1.45 Pounds
Width1.3 Inches
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🎓 Reddit experts on canadian literature books

The comments and opinions expressed on this page are written exclusively by redditors. To provide you with the most relevant data, we sourced opinions from the most knowledgeable Reddit users based the total number of upvotes and downvotes received across comments on subreddits where canadian literature books are discussed. For your reference and for the sake of transparency, here are the specialists whose opinions mattered the most in our ranking.
Total score: 20
Number of comments: 7
Relevant subreddits: 2
Total score: 8
Number of comments: 2
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 4
Number of comments: 2
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 4
Number of comments: 2
Relevant subreddits: 2
Total score: 4
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 2
Number of comments: 2
Relevant subreddits: 2
Total score: 2
Number of comments: 2
Relevant subreddits: 2
Total score: 2
Number of comments: 2
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 1
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 1
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1

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Top Reddit comments about Canadian Literature:

u/cyanicenine · 2 pointsr/childfree

Glad you liked it. Echopraxia is the sequal to his book Blindsight, which is a story about aliens, vampires and post singularity humans. Because Peter Watts is a biologist and only a somewhat recent author his sci fi writings reflect that. His perspective as a biologist yields impressive insights, and surprisingly beautiful prose, often philosophical in nature yet somehow not preachy.

Starfish is also highly enjoyable if you like deep ocean stuff. Peter Watts does what great sci fi authors are capable of, they take known concepts turn them on their head and allow you to look at them from a completely new perspective.

u/twistytwisty · 3 pointsr/booksuggestions

Tinker by Wen Spencer. Genius, runs a junkyard, races hoverbikes, works magic, Elves, Pittsburgh, etc. She's awesome.

Torin Kerr from the Valor series and Vicki Nelson from the Blood series by Tanya Huff are great female leads. Torin is a scifi series and Vicki is early urban fantasy.

Either the Kate Daniels series or Edge series by Ilona Andrews ... great female and male characters. Lots of depth and variety, very well-written.

Lily Yu and Cynna Weaver in the Lupi series by Eileen Wilks.

Any of Patricia Briggs's books - Mercy Thompson, Alpha & Omega, her fantasy novels ... all great female leads.

So many great female leads, I can give a ton more if you want them.

u/AarontheTinker · 1 pointr/Drizzt

This book is the first three in the Elminster series. Definitely a good intro to the character as you read him growing into the Wizard he's now known to be. If you don't know anything about Elminster, like myself when I read them, it's another great intro trilogy for that character.

Happy reading. =)

u/JRWellman · 4 pointsr/newbrunswickcanada

I think I'd better apologize to the moderator for the tone of my post - as a lifelong Albertan transplanted here, I'ver found people here to be good-hearted and resilient, and genuine as friends. Of which I've been happy to make many; I can respect now what they have to deal with living here every day, and that's essentially the opposite of every stereotype you hear back home.

​

My venom is directed mainly at government here - if you can call it that, even on a good day - and the very few big corporate employers, particularly here where I live in Saint John.

​

They're backwards, stupid AND corrupt. The government is on par with some creepy central Asian Islamic republic for honesty. I just got turned down for a job as a supply teacher by ASD-S (Anglophone School Distrct - South) because they said they 'were worried I couldn't handle rowdy students'. Nevermind that I'm better educated than 90% of the people they have, and the fact they're crying for ppl with math and sciences training (I have a STEM degree, from an actual top-tier university).

​

Oh, and there's the small matter of an ASD-S Transport Manager having used government expense money to bring along someone I know here in town to Kitchener-Waterloo for a week long sex holiday. Then promptly returning and securing that persona job and immediate promotion with ASD-S, no open competition. The HR person okayed it, and her boss signed off on it. The girl in question came to me in tears after Mr T strung her along and (surprise) didn't leave his wife for her, that's how I found out. He and Ms Ryan know I know all about their crime - Likely what lost me the teaching job.

​

How's THAT for 'backwards'..?

​

After being laid off from my last career-level job - as an oil company Exploration Manager in Calgary -my wife, who's from here, convinced me that we should move here so she could be closer to her aging mother. The only work I could get was at a series of call centres (the growth field in this sh!thole Saint John). I NEVER thought things I've seen here would exist in Canada.

So, I wrote a book and put it on Kobo. The CRTC asked me to give testimony at their recent inquiry into the crooked practices of call centres like Nordia. Not sure if any of it'll help....

​

Anyhow, here's the link to the ebook - Call Centre: Life on the Line, if anyone wants to give it a look. I'm thinking that maybe someday when they're in college far from here, they'll read it and have a window into that part of their dad's life, and the part of life here we worked hard to ensure they never saw. There's a lot more than just 'Sex scandal at public school board' that I have to tell, anyone who wants to hear it can feel free to pvt message me.

​

https://www.kobo.com/ca/en/ebook/call-centre-2

​

https://www.amazon.com/Call-Centre-Life-J-R-Wellman-ebook/dp/B07FSQLNRD/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1542808271&sr=8-2&keywords=call+centre+life

u/matthewrozon · 2 pointsr/suggestmeabook

Little Hands Clapping was pretty good and kind of messed up. It's pretty short too.

Horns by Joe Hill was also good.

But the two I'd really recommend are The little girl who was too fond of matches

And End of Alice by A.M Homes which is one of my favourite books of all time.

u/CmdrKleen · 5 pointsr/whatisthisthing

Canada...

"A daring and compelling novel, Marian Engel’s Bear won the Governor General’s Award for 1976."

u/[deleted] · 5 pointsr/casualiama

Do you like books? Any favourites?

I recently finished The Curious Incident of The Dog in the Night-time. I literally could not put this book down. I know it's a work of fiction, but it gave me a whole new appreciation and respect for people with Autism.

u/aenea · 1 pointr/books

The Sarantium series is well worth a read as well. Ysabel is also fun, and a few of the characters from the Fionavar series are in it, which was a bonus.

u/Rose1982 · 1 pointr/AskReddit

I could recommend you a good 20-30 books based on your examples, but seriously, do yourself a favour and read Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie.

It's excellent.

u/artman · 1 pointr/scifi

I am reading Tanya Huff's Confederation series and it is superb. A good mix of science fiction, military action and alien characters. I am not a big fan of military science fiction (Scalzi excluded), but this series has been great so far.

Link to the omnibus, first two books.

u/r3solv · 1 pointr/funny

I found some strange books in my school library, including Starfish.

http://www.amazon.com/Starfish-Rifters-Trilogy-Peter-Watts/dp/0765315963

It's basically horror/sci-fi with its mix of 50,000 leagues under the sea and Resident Evil...and sex...so much sex. Strange find, but I loved it as a 13 year old. Haha.

u/jhra · 1 pointr/books

Christopher Moore,
Douglas Coupland,
Max Barry,
Some books that I have, but only the singular novel...
Apathy And Other Small Victories,
The Futurist

hope that helps

u/EyebrowDandruff · 3 pointsr/rpg

Not too hard to find hard copies of the books on Amazon. I grabbed a used 2nd ed core a little while back. I really wanted to play this game when I was a kid in the 90's. I still want to try it, but none of my players are very interested. Mostly I just skim through and look at the rad 80's anime mechs like I did when I was a wee child.

u/CargoCulture · 1 pointr/rpg

That's fair enough. Work with what you've got!

However, For ideas I'd also dig into games like Heavy Gear (which has some anime influences) and Mechwarrior (which is the classic mech-based RPG) if you can manage it. Heavy Gear especially has a very simple, scalable system that you might like. The 2nd Edition is the best, though some enjoy the changes in 3rd Edition (these edition changes aren't like D&D changes, but rather little revisions to the rules). You can pick up a copy of Heavy Gear on Amazon for as little as $4. (http://www.amazon.com/Heavy-Gear-Rulebook-Edition-Dream/dp/1896776329)

u/nyc_food · 2 pointsr/printSF

Oh let's definitely give him science fiction about the ocean, good idea.

Starfish trilogy by Peter Watts... love this guy, and like these novels. I like echopraxia series more, but these are solid

u/MaunoBrau · 1 pointr/AskReddit

Starfish - some very interesting sci-fi. In this series, there are companies that are siphoning energy from the geothermal rifts at the bottom of the ocean. Normal humans cannot survive the pressure, so they have modified humans by replacing one of their lungs with a gill-like rebreather, so when they go into the water, they can empty their lungs of air. While down there, they discover a new form of life. The series has some very interesting allusions to internet memes and many forms of reality being replaced with information technology. It reminds me of Snow Crash.

u/FinestStateMachine · 3 pointsr/CanadaPolitics

I personally enjoyed Chretien's My Years As Prime Minister and Diefenbaker's One Canada. I also liked Great Canadian Speeches, which was a cheap little pick up from Chapters that's also apparently cheap on amazon so I linked it.

u/rhex1 · -1 pointsr/GlobalOffensive

Also canada has better taste in erotic fiction: http://www.amazon.ca/Bear-Marian-Engel/dp/0771093799

And canadian bacon is ofc supreme.

u/the_florist · 1 pointr/booksuggestions

Will you be the person I finally convince to try A Scientific Romance by Ronald Wright? http://www.amazon.ca/Scientific-Romance-Ronald-Wright/dp/0676971075

u/GMcrates · 1 pointr/rpg

I loved that show when I was younger.

There's a book called Starfish where they do the whole "cyberpunk" at the bottom of the ocean thing. I've always wanted to read it. And here's the link: http://www.amazon.com/Starfish-Peter-Watts/dp/0765315963/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1393876210&sr=1-2&keywords=Starfish

u/tandem7 · 2 pointsr/TwoXChromosomes

I'll throw in another vote for the Hunger Games trilogy, and the Sookie Stackhouse series isn't bad. If she enjoys supernatural fluff lit, then perhaps Patricia Briggs might be another good choice.

Some of my favourites:

u/Herbststurm · 4 pointsr/scifi

The Confederation of Valor series by Tanya Huff is extremely fun and action-packed military SF, and definitely focuses more on combat than politics.

u/OakTeach · 1 pointr/whatsthatbook

I'm guessing it was something by Marguerite de Angeli, though I couldn't find one about a Felicity. She wrote lots of books popular at the time that were about similar topics- kids moving to parts of the US (many of them set in Pennsylvania) and having to adapt. Maybe Henner's Lydia?

u/omgwolverine · 2 pointsr/books

The Abstinence Teacher by Tom Perrotta. It's just a novel! I am not a crackpot!

u/cjbest · 2 pointsr/canada

Douglas Coupland's new book Bitrot is an interesting collection of stories and essays about our changing social and economic foundations and the effects of technology on our lives.

https://www.amazon.ca/Bit-Rot-Douglas-Coupland/dp/034581214X

u/TekTrixter · 3 pointsr/technology

Sounds like they should just send people who are already insane

u/srterpe · 1 pointr/masseffect

Private Vasquez.

Edit: You might like the Torin Kerr/Confederacy novels by Tanya Huff: https://www.amazon.com/Confederation-Valor-omnibus-Tanya-Huff/dp/0756403995

u/squidbait · 1 pointr/printSF

Peter Watts Rifters Trilogy features humans who've highly adapted themselves to be able to live and work in the abyssal depths. Starfish is the first novel.

u/neuromonkey · 2 pointsr/Maine

Quite the opposite. An admission that you are ignorant on a subject (or ignorant of answers,) does not preclude thoughtful examination. "Agnostic" just means, "without knowledge." People often self-identify as "agnostic" rather than "atheistic" when they don't have conclusive answers. Not having firm convictions leaves a lot of room for exploration and theorizing.

The SF novel Calculating God has a slightly different take on god in SF, for instance.

u/deathglitter · 2 pointsr/printSF

Robert J. Sawyer's Calculating God.

u/rhlowe · 5 pointsr/Forgotten_Realms

~$13 is expensive? http://www.amazon.com/Annotated-Elminster-Collectors-Edition-Series/dp/0786947993

If you are looking for a brand new copy, its expensive because its a 7-year old book that probably didn't see many print runs and is therefore fairly rare. That's what happens to collector's items.

u/1107d7 · 1 pointr/books

Starfish by Peter Watts.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0765315963/ref=mw_dp_mdsc?dsc=1

" Civilization rests on the backs of its outcasts.

So when civilization needs someone to run generating stations three kilometers below the surface of the Pacific, it seeks out a special sort of person for its Rifters program. It recruits those whose histories have preadapted them to dangerous environments, people so used to broken bodies and chronic stress that life on the edge of an undersea volcano would actually be a step up. Nobody worries too much about job satisfaction; if you haven't spent a lifetime learning the futility of fighting back, you wouldn't be a rifter in the first place. It's a small price to keep the lights going, back on shore."