A Minor Chorus: A Novel

Billy-Ray Belcourt
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A Minor Chorus: A Novel

Billy-Ray Belcourt
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*Valid July 3, 2026 - July 19, 2026 at Canadian stores, while quantities last. Not valid on previous purchases or in conjunction with other offers.

Overall rating: 4.0 / 5 from 2 reviews.

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Canada Reads Selection 2026

"The narrator has just left his PhD thesis to explore his roots in Northern Alberta. He’s trying to write a novel that captures the place he comes from and the people he knows as an Indigenous, queer man. He meets several different characters and finds himself in a variety of circumstances that showcase who complex people are and that there is a lot more to people than good and bad. Overall, I liked this book. I usually enjoy books that are more plot heavy than character driven. This is more character forward, but the characters feel very real. They are flawed and living in circumstances that are super complicated. I’ve read a lot of indigenous fiction in Ontario, so it was eye-opening to read about some of the similarities and differences that seem to pop up throughout Canada. I think the pieces that stuck out to me the most was a scene in which the narrator is visiting a residential school to mourn and a white woman threatens to call security on him for trespassing. It was very ironic, heartbreaking and frustrating to read. The other scene that jumped out to me was one of the last ones, in which the narrator is in discussion with an old friend in prison. That chapter was very emotional to read. This is one of the five choices for Canada Reads 2026! I can’t wait for the debates in April."

Wes u. (4/5)

Deepen Your Understanding

"This is an introspective book. A gay, indigenous PhD student walks away from his dissertation and returns to his reserve in northern Alberta. He is there to interview members of his community and, he hopes, to begin writing a novel. What follows is largely a deep look inside his experiences and how these have shaped him. We see how his various relationships have also affected him. Contrast is provided in the story of his cousin, who stayed on the reserve and ended up suffering from so many of the social problems Aboriginal people face: addiction, petty crime and incarceration. This is a deeply affecting book that brought me, I think a deeper, visceral understanding of the kind of lives I'll never experience."

LynnB (4/5)

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  • Published date: May 20, 2025
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 192
  • Publisher: Penguin Canada
  • ISBN: 9780735242029
  • Dimensions: 5.0" W x 0.49" L x 7.4" H
*WINNER OF THE 2023 BC AND YUKON ETHEL WILSON PRIZE*
*LONGLISTED FOR THE 2022 SCOTIABANK GILLER PRIZE*
*LONGLISTED FOR THE 2024 DUBLIN LITERARY AWARD*

Named a Best Book of the Year by the Globe and Mail, Indigo, and CBC


"No one breaks your heart as elegantly as Billy-Ray Belcourt. Innovative, intimate, and meticulous, A Minor Chorus is a thoughtful riot of intersections and juxtapositions, a congregation of keenly observed laments gently vivisecting the small, Northern Alberta community at its core."
—Eden Robinson, author of Son of a Trickster
 
"The literary child of Rachel Cusk’s Outline trilogy and James Baldwin’s Giovanni’s Room, this novel builds on both, and is yet still something so new. It has the guts to centre Indigenous queer life as worthy of serious intellectual and artistic inquiry—which, of course, it always has been. We will be reading and re-reading and learning from A Minor Chorus for decades to come."
—Alicia Elliott, author of A Mind Spread Out on the Ground
 
"An absolutely dazzling confluence of big ideas and raw emotions, told in Billy-Ray Belcourt’s singular poetic voice. A Minor Chorus is about loving, questioning, and fighting for your life, and it’s as compelling a debut novel as I’ve read in years."
—Jami Attenberg, author of I Came All This Way to Meet You
 
"A truly exceptional novel about how the disregarded sometimes live the most remarkable lives, and how storytelling will redeem us somehow, make us less lonely. A Minor Chorus is like a song that’s over too soon; I want to play it on repeat, to memorize the words so that I can sing them to myself."
—Katherena Vermette, author of The Strangers

“An achingly gorgeous debut novel of Indigenous survival. . . This is a breathtaking and hypnotic achievement.”
Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“Registers less as minor chorus than symphony . . . Belcourt's boldest, freest, and most linguistically assured work yet.”
Library Journal (starred review)


"Poet Billy-Ray Belcourt’s first novel is, unsurprisingly, a genre-defying masterpiece . . . . This book is unlike anything else I’ve ever read: it’s academic and anti-academic, full of poetry, longing, theory, and philosophy."
Book Riot

“Belcourt crafts sentences like only a poet can, each one precise and shimmering. He writes with ferocious intensity and beauty about Grindr hookups, queer Indigenous friendship, police violence, the open wounds of Canada’s residential schools, loneliness, and longing.”
—BookPage
 
“Belcourt is a brilliant writer and this book is further proof.”
—Them
BILLY-RAY BELCOURT (he/him) is a writer from the Driftpile Cree Nation. He won the 2018 Griffin Poetry Prize for his debut collection, This Wound Is a World, which was also a finalist for the Governor General's Literary Award. His bestselling memoir, A History of My Brief Body, won the Hubert Evans Non-Fiction Prize and was a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award and the Governor General's Literary Award. A recipient of the prestigious Rhodes Scholarship and an Indspire Award, Belcourt is Assistant Professor of Indigenous Creative Writing at UBC.

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