20 Canadian books to give to kids and teens this holiday season


From quiet snails, to lost socks, to time travel, we’ve found a book for every young reader on your holiday list! 

Photo of author and illustrator smiling at the camera, alongside the book jacket with a snail holding a birthday cake whose candles spell out 'shhh.'
How to Party Like a Snail is a book by Naseem Hrab, left, illustrated by Kelly Collier. (OwlKids)

How to Party Like a Snail is a tale about a snail who loves to have a party — just not loud ones. Snail wishes for a quiet party but his animal friends have other ideas. They all soon learn just what it takes to have a get-together that all can enjoy.

How to Party Like a Snail is for ages 4 to 7.

Naseem Hrab is a Toronto-based writer and storyteller. She is also the author of Ira Crumb Makes a Pretty Good Friend and Ira Crumb Feels the Feelings. Her picture book Weekend Dad was a finalist for the 2020 Governor General’s Literary Award for young people’s literature — illustrated books.

Kelly Collier is a Toronto artist and illustrator. She is the author-illustrator of two picture books, A Horse Named Steve and Team Steve, and the illustrator of Sloth and Squirrel in a Pickle.

On the left is a photo of a woman with black hair smiling at the camera, in the middle is a book cover with two kids sitting on a garden's wall looking up at the sky with white text overlaid, on the right is a photo of a woman with long brown hair and glasses smiling at the camera.
Garden of Lost Socks is a picture book by Esi Edugyan, left, and illustrated by Amélie Dubois, right. (Tamara Poppitt, HarperCollins, Michelle Dupuis)

Garden of Lost Socks is a story about friendship, curiosity and the magic of community. Akosua, who is a budding Exquirologist, and a new friend find a remarkable world hidden right in her very own community. 

Garden of Lost Socks is for ages 4 to 7. 

Esi Edugyan is a Victoria-based author of Half-Blood Blues and Dreaming of ElsewhereHer book Washington Black was a finalist on Canada Reads 2022, shortlisted for the Rogers Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize and the Booker Prize and won the 2018 Scotiabank Giller Prize. 

Amélie Dubois grew up in Montreal and currently lives in Mauricie, Que. She has illustrated children’s books such as Rien du tout! by Marie-Hélène Jarry, Mingan les nuages by Marie-Andrée Arsenault and copine et Copine by Kim Nunès, Marie-Chantal Perron and Tammy Verge which was the French-language finalist for the 2020 Governor General’s Literary Award. She has also illustrated for magazines and television. 

LISTEN | Esi Edugyan speaks about her children’s book The Garden of Lost Socks: 

The Morning Edition – K-W6:21Two-time Giller Prize winner, Esi Edugyan, debuts her new children’s book, The Garden of Lost Socks

Featured VideoEsi Edugyan, is a two-time Giller Prize winner, she is one of only three authors to ever win that award twice. Esi is best known for her adult novels but has now delved into children’s books. This coming Saturday Esi will be at the Kitchener Public Library to launch her first picture book The Garden of Lost Socks

A man smiles at the camera. A close-up cartoon image of a boy's face.
Do You Remember? is a picture book by Sydney Smith. (Steve Farmer, Groundwood Books)

A boy and his mother talk about their memories, like having a picnic with dad who is no longer with them. Do You Remember? is a picture book that explores how memories are made, whether they’re happy or sad. 

Do You Remember? is for ages 3 to 6. 

Sydney Smith is a writer and illustrator from Halifax. Some of his other works include illustrating Town Is by the Sea which won the TD Canadian Children’s Literature Award in 2017 and the Kate Greenaway Medal, and Small in the City which he also wrote. Small in the City won the Kate Greenaway Medal and the Ezra Jack Keats Award.

On the left a man wearing glasses looks into the camera smiling. On the right a book cover shows a man kneeling on the grass with two young children, one which is holding a magnifying glass. There are flowers and butterflies.
Bompa’s Insect Expedition is a picture book by David Suzuki and Tanya Lloyd Kyi, illustrated by Qin Leng. (Dominique Lafond, Greystone Kids/The David Suzuki Institute)

Bompa’s Insect Expedition follows a pair of twins as they go on an insect expedition with their grandfather. Inspired by David Suzuki’s adventures with his grandchildren, the picture book showcases a part of nature that can sometimes be overlooked — the world of bugs. 

Bompa’s Insect Expedition is for ages 4 to 8. 

David Suzuki is an environmentalist, scientist and science broadcaster. He was the host of CBC’s The Nature of Things since October 24, 1979 before retiring from the show in spring 2023. The Vancouver-based environmentalist is a father of five and grandfather of 10, including twins Nakina and Kaoru. He is also an author of over 50 books, including Letters to my Grandchildren and The Sacred Balance

Tanya Lloyd Kyi has written more than 30 books for children and teenagers, including The Best Way to Get Your WayThis Is Your Brain on StereotypesUnder Pressure and Mya’s Strategy to Save the World. Kyi lives in Vancouver.

Qin Leng is a Toronto illustrator, writer and visual development artist. Her recent books include I Am Small, which Leng wrote and illustrated, and she has illustrated numerous books including A Kid is a Kid is a Kid and A Family Is a Family Is a Family by Sara O’Leary. 

On the left the author smiles at the camera. On the right a book jacket with a monster sitting amongst lots of socks on the floor.
A picture book by Elise Gravel. (North Winds Press)

When dad asks who left socks all over the place, a brother and sister insist that it was “not me” in the picture book Not Me. Dad is quite sure the kids are not telling the truth, until he is introduced to the actual Not Me, a creature who in turn accuses Not True, who exposes the real sock bandit, the ever-complaining Not Fair!

Not Me is for ages 3 to 8. 

Elise Gravel is a Quebec author and illustrator who has written and illustrated over 50 books for children. Her books include The BatThe Worst Book EverThe Mushroom Fan ClubI Want a Monster! and What Is a Refugee. Gravel won the Vicky Metcalf Award for Literature for Young People in 2022 for her body of work. She lives in Montreal. 

On the left is a woman wearing glasses and a beanie smiling at the camera. In the middle is book cover that shows a drawing of a black fox and a white rabbit. There are different types of flowers in each of the corners of the book. There is white and yellow text that is the book's title and author's name. On the right is a black and white headshot of a woman with long hair.
The Origin of Day and Night is a picture book written by Paula Ikuutaq Rumbolt, left, and illustrated by Lenny Lishchenko. ( Paula Ikuutaq Rumbolt, Inhabit Media, Lenny Lishchenko)

The Origin of Day and Night is an Inuit myth that shares the origin story of light and darkness. Passed orally from storyteller to storyteller for hundreds of years, this beautifully illustrated story weaves together elements of an origin story and a traditional animal tale. 

The Origin of Day and Night is for ages 6 to 8. 

Paula Ikuutaq Rumbolt is from Baker Lake, Nunavut. She is currently attending Concordia University in Montreal.

Lenny Lishchenko is a Ukrainian Canadian illustrator, graphic designer and comic maker who now lives in Mississauga, Ont. 

A woman with brown hair looks to the top left. A boy gazes at a colourful sky with the title written on it.
More Than Words is a picture book by Roz MacLean. (Submitted by Roz MacLean, Henry Holt & Co)

In More than Words, Nathan, who is a quiet boy, observes in school how people can communicate in different ways. From peers that use sign language, to peers that sing, there are many different ways of communicating. More than Words is a story about understanding each other to create belonging and friendship. 

More than Words is for ages 4 to 8.

Roz MacLean is a B.C.-based visual artist and writer and illustrator of children’s books. Some of her other works include Violet’s Cloudy Day and The Body Book. 

Auntie's Rez Surprise by Heather O'Watch, illustrated by Ellie Arscott. A composite image featuring an illustrated book cover featuring a little girl and her aunt with a wrapped gift. Two portraits of women with dark hair looking into the camera.
Auntie’s Rez Surprise is a picture book by Heather O’Watch, illustrated by Ellie Arscott. (Second Story Press, FredauPhotography, Anna Dalton Church)

Cree receives a new puppy as a special surprise from her Auntie Rez in Auntie’s Rez Surprise. She not only has a new friend who she names “Atim,” the Nehiyaw word for dog, Cree gets to learn about the importance of dogs in her culture from her Auntie. 

Auntie’s Rez Surprise is for ages 6 to 8. 

Heather O’Watch is a Nakota and Nehiyaw writer from Okanese First Nation, located in Treaty 4 Territory. She is currently a graduate student at the University of Saskatchewan, pursuing a Masters in Public Policy. 

Ellie Arscott is a Toronto-based illustrator. Her first picture book that she illustrated was Night Walk by Sara O’Leary, which received an SCBWI Canada East Crystal Kite award. 

On the left a woman looks into the camera smiling. In the middle a book cover shows an illustration of a young girl holding her finger up to her lips. On the right a woman wearing a hijab smiles at the camera.
Top Secret Anniversary is an early chapter book by Mitali Banerjee Ruths, (left, and illustrated by Aaliya Jaleel. (Submitted by Mitali Banerjee Ruths, Scholastic Inc., Hibah Ansari)

Top Secret Anniversary is the third book in the early chapter books series, The Party Diaries, about a third grader named Priya who starts her own party planning business and raises money for endangered species. In Top Secret Anniversary, Priya is planning a party for her mom and dad’s anniversary, but Priya and her mom want the party to be a surprise for Priya’s dad. Priya is trying her best to keep it a secret from her dad and works hard to create the best anniversary party ever.

Top Secret Anniversary is for ages 5 to 7.

Mitali Banerjee is a Montreal-based children’s book writer and a pediatrician. Her previous books include picture book Archie Celebrates Diwali, the early readers series The Inside Scouts and two other books in the The Party Diaries series: Awesome Orange Birthday and Starry Henna Night

Aaliya Jaleel is an illustrator, a designer and a visual development artist. Previous books that she has illustrated include Awesome Orange BirthdayStarry Henna Night, Maryam’s Magic, Under My Hijab and Muslim Girls Rise. 

LISTEN | Mitali Banerjee Ruths talks about The Party Diaries:

All in a Weekend12:57Mitali Banerjee Ruths releases two new books in her children’s series “The Party Diaries”

Featured VideoWe speak with pediatrician and children’s book author Mitali Banerjee Ruths about her new series, “The Party Diaries”. The central character is a third-grader named Priya who starts her own party planning business and raises money for endangered species. Mitali also talks about her path from medicine to children’s literature and how she tackles diversity in her books.

On the left a woman wearing glasses smiles at the camera. In the middle a book cover shows illustrations of different wildlife and a tree with eyes looking at the reader. On the right a woman smiles at the camera.
Nutshimit: In the Woods is a nonfiction book by Innu author Melissa Mollen Dupuis, left, and illustrated by Elise Gravel. (Submitted by Melissa Mollen Dupuis, North Winds Press, Allen McInnis)

In the non-fiction book Nutshimit: In the Woods, Innu writer Melissa Mollen Dupuis takes children on a guided walk through the forest to learn about Innu culture. Illustrator Elise Gravel brings the words to life with her comic style illustrations. 

Nutshimit: In the Woods is for ages 6 to 8. 

Melissa Mollen Dupuis is a writer, director and radio show host and a member of the Innu community of Ekuanitshit on Quebec’s Côte-Nord. Dupuis is the co-founder of the Quebec branch of the Idle No More movement. She lives in Granby, Que. Nutshimit: In the Woods is her first children’s book. 

Elise Gravel is a Quebec author and illustrator who has written and illustrated over 50 books for children. Her books include The BatThe Worst Book EverThe Mushroom Fan ClubI Want a Monster! and What Is a Refugee. Gravel won the Vicky Metcalf Award for Literature for Young People in 2022 for her body of work. She lives in Montreal. 

LISTEN | Melissa Mollen Dupuis discusses writing about the natural world in her children’s book: 

All in a Weekend12:46“Nutshimit: In the Woods” by Melissa Mollen Dupuis

Featured VideoWe hear about a new illustrated book by Innu author Melissa Mollen Dupuis. “Nutshimit: In the Woods” explores the natural world in English and Innu-Aimun, with playful illustrations by Elise Gravel that work for both adults and kids.

Illustrated book cover of four young girls on the curb in front of a house on a snowy day. Two of the girls stand huddled together, one is in a wheelchair and one is taking a picture of themselves with a dog. Black and white portrait of the author and illustrated portrait of the illustrator.
Priya Puts Herself First is a middle-grade graphic novel by Nathan Fairbairn, left, and illustrated by Michele Assarasakorn. (Nathan Fairbairn, Razorbill, Michelle Assarasakorn)

Priya Puts Herself First is the third book in the PAWS graphic novel series. The third volume takes place during the holidays when their business is impacted due to a big storm and the PAWS members go through some personal challenges — Gabby wants to be internet famous and Priya’s family is being evicted. Can PAWS overcome these challenges and stay afloat? 

Priya Puts Herself First is for ages 8 to 12.

Nathan Fairbairn is a Vancouver-based and Eisner-nominated comic creator. Other projects he has worked on include the characters Spider-Man, Batman, Wonder Woman and the graphic novel Lake of Fire.

Michele Assarasakorn is a colorist who has worked on comic book series such as Isola, Gotham Academy and The Magnificent Ms. Marvel. Assarasakorn is originally from Thailand and now lives in Vancouver. Her previous books include the first two graphic novels in the PAWS series, Mindy Makes Some Space and Gabby Gets It Together

On the left a book cover shows illustrations of a boy kneeling on a cloud while looking up, with the ocean and scattered houses in Newfoundland in the background. On the right a woman wearing glasses smiles at the camera.
The Boy, the Cloud and the Very Tall Tale is a historical middle-grade novel by Heather Smith. (Orca Book Publishers, Robin Smith)

The Boy, the Cloud and the Very Tall Tale is a historical middle-grade novel with a dash of magic. When Ewan was nine years old, he was still grieving the loss of his mother when his father disappeared by getting swept away by a magical cloud. It is now the year 1924 and 11-year-old Ewan is living with his younger sister Flora, his Grumple and his cat. He is determined to find out what happened to his father so he decides to take his grandfather’s most reliable horse and sets off on a journey up the Newfoundland coast to get some answers. 

The Boy, the Cloud and the Very Tall Tale is for ages 9 to 12.

Heather Smith writes books for children and young adults. She is originally from Newfoundland, but now lives in Waterloo, Ont. Smith’s picture books include The Phone Booth in Mr. Hirota’s GardenA Plan for Pops and Granny Left Me a Rocket Ship, and her YA books include Chicken GirlThe Agony of Bun O’Keefe and Baygirl. She won the TD Canadian Children’s Literature Award in 2019 for her YA novel in verse Ebb & Flow

A composite image featuring an illustrated book cover with a young Black girl pulling her swim goggles over her head next to a portrait of a Black man in a blue blazer looking off to the right of the frame.
Swim Team is a middle-grade graphic novel written and illustrated by Johnnie Christmas. (HarperCollins, Amanda Palmer)

Swim Team follows middle schooler Bree as she navigates swim class. Bree is excited for her first day at her new middle school until she’s stuck with the only elective class that fits her schedule, Swim 101. Swimming makes Bree sick to her stomach, but she’s forced to dive headfirst into her fear. With the help of Etta, her elderly neighbour and former swim team captain, Bree becomes good at swimming. Her swimming obsessed community is counting on her to guide her school’s failing swim team to a state championship, but first, they have to defy all odds and beat their rival, Holyoke Prep. 

Swim Team is for ages 8 to 12.

Johnnie Christmas lives in Vancouver and is a #1 New York TImes bestselling graphic novelist. He’s the author of the sci-fi series Tartarus and Crema, the book Firebug and is working on three middle-grade graphic novels. He’s best known for creating the Angel Catbird series with Margaret Atwood and adapting the lost Alien 3 screenplay into a graphic novel of the same name. 

On the left a woman smiles into the camera. On the right is a book cover showing a turtle swimming underwater in the sea, with light shinning through from the surface.
We the Sea Turtles is a collection of short stories for children ages 8 to 12 by Michelle Kadarusman. (Micah Ricardo Riedl, Pajama Press)

In the short story collection We the Sea Turtles, nine stories are told featuring different children on islands around the world. The stories all have one thing in common — a turtle swims into each of the children’s lives at a critical moment. From Georgian Bay, Ont., to Australia, the U.S., Denmark and Indonesia, all nine children form connections with the natural world in different ways. 

We the Sea Turtles is for ages 8 to 12.

Michelle Kadarusman is a Canadian Australian Indonesian writer of books for children and teens. She is the author of BeraniMusic for TigersThe Theory of Hummingbirds and Girl of the Southern Sea, which was a finalist for the 2019 Governor General’s Literary Award for young people’s literature — text. Kadarusman lives in Toronto.

On the left a man with brown hair smiles at the camera. In the middle a book cover shows an illustration of a goat. On the right a woman with brown hair smiles at the camera.
Think Like a Goat is an illustrated nonfiction book for children illustrated by Alexander Mostov, left, and written by Lisa Deresti Betik. (Submitted by Alexander Mostov, Kids Can Press, Submitted by Lisa Deresti Betik)

Think Like a Goat is an illustrated nonfiction book that highlights the ways animals can innovate, communicate and cooperate with one another. Author Lisa Deresti Betik explores facts such as how elephants grieve, how ants teach one another the routes to new sites to set up their home and how fireflies attract their mates by flashing patterns of light from their abdomens. The book also explores what humans can learn from how animals solve problems.

Think Like a Goat is for ages 8 to 12.

Lisa Deresti Betik is children’s nonfiction writer and former teacher originally from Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. Her first book was In the Dark, illustrated by Josh Holinaty. Betik currently lives in Waterloo.

Alexander Mostov is an illustrator who lives in Seattle. 

Two white twin sisters with short brown hair in front of beige wall. Illustrated book cover of two young twin girls with grown hair touching hands. Multi-coloured background with many objects falling.
Tegan and Sara: Junior High is a middle-grade graphic novel by Tegan Quin, Sara Quin and illustrated by Tillie Walden. (Trevor Brady, Macmillan)

Tegan and Sara: Junior High is a middle-grade graphic novel by Canadian sister musician duo Tegan and Sara. The story is inspired by the authors’ own experiences of finding one’s identity, musicianship and family in their adolescence. Growing up as identical twins, Tegan and Sara move to a new home and school and begin to come into their own as individuals.

Tegan and Sara: Junior High is for ages 10 to 14.

Tegan Quin and Sara Quin are twin sisters and a pop music duo from Calgary. They previously published a memoir called High School

Tillie Walden is an American cartoonist, illustrator and writer. She has published several graphic novels, including On a Sunbeam and Spinning.

LISTEN | Tegan and Sara spoke on Q with Tom Power: 

Q23:53Tegan and Sara balance looking back on their youth as twins with planning for the future as a duo

Featured VideoSinger-songwriters Tegan and Sara tell Tom about their latest album Crybaby, and a new Amazon series based on their lives called High School.

On the left the author smiles at the camera. On the right is the book jacket which has the name of the book written out in balloon letters.
Woke Up Like This is a YA rom-com novel by Amy Lea. (Mindy’s Book Studio)

In Woke Up Like This, ultra-organised Charlotte Wu is 17 and trying to plan the perfect prom. While hanging up decorations in the gym with her archnemesis J. T. Renner, Charlotte falls off a ladder and crash lands directly on Renner. The next thing Charlotte knows she is waking up in a strange room, she is 30 and her and Renner are engaged to be married. Charlotte and Renner are determined to figure out what happened and how to get themselves back to their 17-year-old selves.

Woke Up Like This is for ages 13 and up. 

Amy Lea is an Ottawa-based contemporary romance writer and Canadian bureaucrat. Her previous novels include Exes and O’s and Set on You

On the left a book cover shows two women, one with a red flower in the hair, as they face one another and their noses are touching. On the right a woman looks into the camera.
Songs of Irie is a historical YA novel by Asha Ashanti Bromfield. (St. Martin’s Press, Kyle Kirkwood)

Songs of Irie is a historical coming-of-age YA novel set in 1976. Irie and Jilly are from two different worlds — Jilly lives in the hills, safe in a mansion, while Irie is from the heart of Kingston, where fighting on the streets is a regular occurrence. Tension is building on the streets and there is civil unrest in the lead-up to an important election. Irie and Jilly bond at Irie’s dad’s record store over their love of Reggae music and must fight for their friendship, and budding romance, to survive. 

Songs of Irie is for ages 13 and up.

Asha Ashanti Bromfield is a writer, actress, singer and producer of Afro-Jamaican descent. She is known for starring as Melody Valentine, drummer for the band Josie and the Pussycats, in the television show Riverdale and as Zadie Wells in the Netflix show Locke and Key. Her YA novels include Hurricane Summer and Songs of Irie. She is from Toronto. CBC Books named Bromfield a Black Canadian writer to watch in 2022. 

The Next Chapter13:55Riverdale’s Asha Ashanti Bromfield talks about her new career in writing

Featured VideoThe Canadian actress and author talks with Ryan B. Patrick about her new novel Songs of Irie, which takes place in 1970s Jamaica.

On the left a book cover showing a field with flowers and a young woman wearing a white dress sitting in the field and looking into the camera. On the right a woman looks into the camera.
Into the Bright Open is a queer YA book by Cherie Dimaline which reimagines The Secret Garden. (Feiwel and Friends)

Into the Bright Open is a queer YA reimagining of The Secret Garden. When Mary Lennox becomes an orphan at 15 years old, she is sent from her home in Toronto to the wilderness of the Georgian Bay to live with her uncle. Mary is settling into her new life when one night she finds her cousin Olive, who has been medicated and hidden away in an attic room. Mary and Olive become instant friends and, along with a Métis girl named Sophie, set out to try and free Olive. Then one day they stumble upon a long-forgotten and overgrown garden.

Into the Bright Open is for ages 13 and up.

Cherie Dimaline is a Métis author best known for her YA novel The Marrow Thieves, which was named one of Time magazine’s top 100 YA novels of all time and was championed by Jully Black on Canada Reads 2018. Her other books include VenCoRed RoomsThe Girl Who Grew a GalaxyA Gentle HabitEmpire of Wild and Funeral Songs for Dying Girls

The Next Chapter20:19The Marrow Thieves author Cherie Dimaline reimagines The Secret Garden.

Featured Video

The Métis author reveals the inspiration behind her new queer YA novel, Into the Bright Open: A Secret Garden Remix.

On the left is a photo of a woman looking into the camera. On the right is the cover of a book.
The Space Between Here & Now is a book by Sarah Suk. (Farisa Thang, Quill Tree Books)

In The Space Between Here & Now, Aimee Roh has a rare condition called Sensory Time Warp Syndrome. When Aimee smells something that is linked to a memory, she will travel in time to that moment in her life. When Aimee time travels to a memory about her estranged mother, the moment she is brought back to doesn’t match up with the story she was told about why her mother left. Aimee decides to travel to Korea in search of some answers. 

The Space Between Here & Now is for ages 13 and up.

Sarah Suk is a YA writer living in Vancouver. Her debut novel, Made in Korea, was named one of the best Canadian books for kids and young adults of 2022 by CBC Books. 

North by Northwest11:59Vancouver-based author Sarah Suk taps into time travel and memory with new novel “The Space Between Here & Now”

Featured VideoVancouver-based author Sarah Suk explores memory, family and identity in her new YA novel “The Space Between Here & Now.” The book follows Korean-Canadian teen Aimee Roh, as who copes with “Sensory Time Warp Syndrome,” a rare condition causes her to time travel whenever she smells anything that’s linked to a specific memory.


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