Canada Reads

""Canada's Annual Title Fight""

- From the opening credits

Canada Reads is an annual event on CBC Radio. Part book club, part reality show, the series selects five books each year and has different famous Canadians defend them in a week of debates. Each day, one book is voted off the list, until only one book remains on the final day of the event. Since this only takes four days, the fifth day of the event's week is given to an interview with the winning book's writer.

At first, this was all in fun. However, people noticed that the nominated books had sales bumps in the month before the annual event (Volkswagen Blues, which usually sells around 200 copies a year, sold 7,500 copies when it was nominated in 2005), and each year's winning book got a larger sales bump just after the contest (Next Episode sold 18,500 copies in 2003) ... so this friendly little book club has become Serious Business in Canada. In some cases (such as King Leary), an out-of-print book is reprinted after being nominated for Canada Reads because the publisher suddenly has guaranteed sales for it.

A French version, Le combat des livres, ran from 2004 to 2014. It was revived in 2018 as Le combat national des livres (with Katherena Vermette's Ligne brisée winning the competition) and continued annually until 2021. As of 2021, only The Book of Negroes has won both the English and French contests.

The 2023 books for Canada Reads (with the theme "One Book to Shift Your Perspective") are:
 * Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands by Kate Beaton (creator of Hark! A Vagrant), championed by Jeopardy! contestant Mattea Roach
 * Hotline by Dimitri Nasrallah, championed by bhangra dancer Gurdeep Pandher
 * Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel, championed by actor/director Michael Greyeyes
 * Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia, championed by TikTok influencer Tasnim Geedi - Voted off the bookshelf on Monday
 * Greenwood by Michael Christie, championed by actress Keegan Connor Tracy - Voted off the bookshelf on Tuesday

Capsule descriptions of the books, authors, and champions are available here. The 2023 debates are taking place on March 27-30.


 * Award Snub:
 * Margaret Atwood has been nominated six times (three in the English competition, three in the French competition), but has never won.
 * Collections of poetry or short stories tend to get voted off the bookshelf first - none have ever won.
 * "Genre" fiction – fantasy, science fiction, and superhero novels – aren't always voted off first (or second if there's poetry or a collection of short stories), but they don't win, either.
 * Colbert Bump: If a book wins, watch it go out of stock at bookstores in Canada. Quickly.
 * Product Placement: Played With, because playing this trope straight is frowned upon by the CBC. The books that are up for discussion and elimination are definitely products, but the publishers have no say in which books are chosen.
 * Spoilers: Occasionally slip out, given the assumption that everybody who's watching or listening to the discussion has read all of the books.
 * There Can Be Only One: As much as the defenders might like some or all of the books, only one book each year can be named the book that Canada reads.
 * Voted Off the Island Bookshelf: One book is eliminated each day by a vote of all five of the books' defenders... but the books' champions remain to continue voting in future rounds.
 * X Meets Y: Your friendly neighbourhood book club meets Survivor