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Welcome to Inanna Publications
As you browse our books, we hope you will find a multiplicity of voices, particularly fresh new Canadian voices, that speak to your heart and tell truths about the lives of the broad spectrum and endless diversity of Canadian women.
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Latest updates from our authors
Notification for the Inanna Community
To the Inanna Community Inanna Publications and Education Inc. is going through a necessary restructuring of our organization. Over the last two years we have worked with consultants to determine what Inanna needs to do to remain a viable publishing house. Inanna has...
The Flood: Tuileries & Guggoló & Book Launch by Ilona Martonfi
Sometimes it is everywhere. I do not need to read or understand. I let it speak. The lament. The stillness. In medias res. I remember Paris. The Montreal Flood of 1987. Asks us, What does it mean when you dream about a place from your past? Kakekotoba. Haiga. The...
Pontoon Bridge: Refugee & Basho’s Crow & Blár by Ilona Martonfi
In this Inanna blog Ilona Martonfi, author of THE TEMPEST, introduces Refugee. Haiku. Bashō’s Crow. Tanka. The Tempest Review by The Miramichi Reader. “LOCKDOWN” Tanka p. 59. Language. Pontoon Bridge. Otthon (Home). Budapest, 1945. Korneuburg, 1945. Schillerswiesen,...
Characters Are (Not) People by Vivian Zenari
Characters Are (Not) People by Vivian Zenari I know that Philippa and Gilda Peterborough, the protagonists of my first novel, Deuce, are not real people. If I saw either of them on the street, though, I’m sure I would recognize them. # When I distinguish between...
DIATRIBE OF A MUTE EVE by Irene Marques. Translated by the author.
The other day, through a colleague from Princeton University, Luís Gonçalves, I came across an article in the Brazilian magazine Bula: Literatura e Jornalismo Cultural titled “The Ten Best Brazilian Poems of All Time.” Luís’s sour disposition toward the...
THE NIGHTINGALE; KRISTEN HANNAH by Rhoda Rabinowitz Green
The nocturnal nightingale, symbol of melody and beauty, joy and hope, suggests as well a darker side. The title, then, of Kristen Hannah’s historical novel, set in German-occupied WWII France, serves as the perfect objective correlative. As with many works of fiction,...


















