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Night shift with the bicycle cops

An interview with Don Gillmor, author of Cherry Beach

Cherry Beach by Don Gillmor. Cover designed by Kate Sinclair.

Don Gillmor’s latest book—a layered literary crime thriller called Cherry Beach—comes out next Tuesday and has already been leading our Canadian sales for the past couple of weeks. It recently made the CIBA Booksellers’ List—a list of favourite spring releases voted on by indie Canadian booksellers. It’s always extra special when indie bookstores vote for books by indie presses, and honestly kind of annoying when they don’t. (6/20 of the books on this spring list are indie, but who’s counting?)

Cherry Beach is one of those novels that succeeds at being for all kinds of readers. Gillmor, who’s written on a wide range of topics over the course of his career—as a journalist, as well as a novelist—knows how to fill a story with the tidbits of information that make up the substance of real life. I learned some Toronto geography; I also learned how to make a nice jalapeño marinade for my pork tenderloin. On the one hand, this is a propulsive, gripping detective story. On the other, Cherry Beach has the qualities I love of a plotless literary novel, including the interiority of a lonely, slightly-delusional protagonist I can relate to.

Readers have been comparing Cherry Beach to The Wire for the ways it characterizes a city (Toronto in this case, instead of Baltimore), and the ways it balances racial and economic tensions while gradually revealing a complex, shadowy network of crime. But it’s also interesting to me that a 263-page book could even be comparable to a show that takes approximately 60 hours to watch. Yet it is. Gillmor doesn’t waste space, and I’m still thinking through some of the book’s connections, as the intensifying summer heat of the novel seeps into the hours spent away from it.

I had the pleasure of sending Don Gillmor a handful of questions about Cherry Beach, which he graciously answers below.

Dominique,
Publicity & Marketing Coordinator


A Biblioasis Interview with Don Gillmor

Author of Cherry Beach (April 14, 2026)

Don Gillmor. Credit Ryan Szulc.

You’ve written many kinds of books (literary novels, a memoir, books for children, a field note about oil, a fictionalized history of Canada). What made you want to write a crime novel?

I’ve always wanted to write a detective novel. In university, I began reading some of the classic detective novels from the 1930s, 40s and 50s—Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler, Ross Macdonald, Chester Hines. It was partly a relief from Eighteenth Century British Literature courses. At the time I thought it would be interesting to write one. It took me a while to get around to it.

How much of Cherry Beach is based on true events and real people?

There are parts of the novel that are informed by, if not based on, real events or people. Years ago, when I was doing a lot of journalism, I wrote an article for Toronto Life on 51 Division, which was then sometimes called the Punishment Station because bad cops from other divisions were sent there. At the time, they were also experimenting with community policing—mostly young cops on bicycles engaging with the community. So there was a clash of cultures—two very different views on policing. To a degree, I revived that idea in Cherry Beach. I went out on the night shift with the bicycle cops and there are a few scenes that are taken from that experience, including the opening conversation with the sex worker. I also went out in police cars with the hardcore cops in the division. An interesting perspective.

I wrote a magazine article that took me to Kingston, Jamaica, looking for a suspected murderer (I didn’t find him), but the trip into the red hills and the conversation with the Justice Minister are based on my own experience there.

And Torontonians may recognize aspects of a former mayor.

Toronto readers! Don’t miss Don’s launch at The Supermarket with fellow Biblioasis author David Macfarlane (On Sports).

In Cherry Beach, Toronto is essentially the main character, and we witness its character development throughout the book. How was writing the character of Toronto different from writing a human character (or was it the same)?

I wanted the city to be a large part of the book. In part because it’s a complex place, claiming to be the most multicultural city in the world. So we’re sort of a global experiment. In many ways, we’re a grand success. But there remains a lot of work to be done. There are issues of affordability and racism, and our traffic is amongst the worst in North America.

As a reader, I always enjoy seeing cities from a literary perspective, whether it’s Dennis Lehane’s Southie neighbourhood in Boston, or Elmore Leonard’s Detroit, or the Venice of Donna Leon. So I wanted to look at Toronto from the perspective of its extremes—the privileged and the underclass. There was a time when the richest and poorest neighbourhoods (Rosedale and Regent Park respectively) were essentially adjacent to one another, though the area has since gone through major changes.

Don Gillmor’s other book with Biblioasis, On Oil, was recently announced as a finalist for the Writers’ Trust Shaughnessy Cohen Prize.

Detective Jamieson Abel is a great cook, and this book is full of wonderful recipes. I’m interested to know more about your decision to include this aspect of his character.

It’s mostly an extension of my own interest in cooking. I learned to cook as a matter of survival—a series of girlfriends with many wonderful qualities, but no interest whatsoever in cooking. So I started to learn. Cooking opens up a world. I think it’s one of the reasons for the success of cooking shows; they form a kind of community and bridge cultures. Abel is quite isolated—a single, middle-aged man who has alienated much of the department he works for. Cooking is a way for him to engage with the world.

What were some of your influences for Cherry Beach, literary or otherwise?

There are two different directions as far as influences go. On the one hand, Jamieson Abel is (sort of) in the tradition of what were once called hard boiled detectives—Ross Macdonald’s Lew Archer, Chandler’s Philip Marlowe et al. But there is also a tradition of literary novelists like Kate Atkinson, John Banville, and Michael Redhill, who all write detective novels as well. I understand the appeal of crime fiction for literary novelists, but it presents certain challenges as well. As a rule, literary novelists don’t have to concern themselves with plot. But with crime fiction, you need plot, and it has given me a fresh appreciation for those writers who do it well.

Bonus pic of our office dog Sammy with his copy of Cherry Beach!

In good publicity news:

  • Cherry Beach by Don Gillmor has been included in the CIBA Spring 2026 Booksellers List: “If the dayglo film-filtered cover of an aging high rise on a summer day doesn’t intrigue you, maybe a comparison to The Wire but ‘make it Toronto’ will do the trick. Cherry Beach is a propulsive genre mash-up of Canadian crime and literary fiction.” (Robyn York, Beach Reads Bookshop)
  • On Sports by David Macfarlane was featured in The Tyee: “A showcase of [Macfarlane’s] breezy control over the nuts and bolts of professional and amateur athletics, their cultural import as well as the rhythms (and seasons) of sports writing.
  • Every Time We Say Goodbye by Ivana Sajko (trans. Mima Simić) was reviewed in On the Seawall: “Mima Simić translates all of this with clarity and verve . . . alternately riveting and heartbreaking.” The book was also featured in Electric Lit’s list of 15 Must-Read Small Press Books of Spring 2026: “Every sentence sings with emotional resonance and is imbued with the protagonist’s regret . . . a master class in both economy of language and expansiveness of feeling.
  • Decadence by Richard Kelly Kemick was reviewed in Publishers Weekly: “Kemick’s wit and curmudgeonly self-regard is offset by his palpable adoration of his partner, Litia, evoking the work of David Sedaris. It’s a weird and rewarding ride.

Events

Biblioasis Spring Launch: Windsor!

Join us in celebrating the launches of three Biblioasis spring books: On Sports by David Macfarlane, Cherry Beach by Don Gillmor, and Silver Lake by Alex Pugsley! Hosted by our publisher Dan Wells, the launch will be held at Biblioasis Bookshop and will include readings from each author, a discussion and Q&A, and of course books will be available for sale and signing.

The launch will take place on Monday, May 4 at 7PM.

Grab On Sports here!

Grab Cherry Beach here!

Grab Silver Lake here, or check out the rest of the Aubrey McKee series here!

ABOUT ON SPORTS

What are sports, really? What do we love about them? And what, in our digital age, have they become?

On Sports reads like a conversation between friends at the ballpark in those golden days before the kiss cam and college co-eds with T-shirt cannons spoiled the fun; a book that feels like the sun on your forehead and the breeze in your hair, beer and laughter on your lips; a book that celebrates communion and friendship and the beauty of these games—whether it be baseball or football  or soccer or tennis or cricket—that we’ve designed to distract ourselves from the end of the world. It’s about what 7Up tastes like when drunk from the Grey Cup, how much work it takes for talent to shine, and the near impossibility of language to properly capture athletic excellence. It’s about the beauty of good sports copy, the ephemerality of even the biggest sports story, and how sport remains perpetually powered by the eleven-year-old in all of us. It’s a book about rediscovering the spirit of sport, before online gambling and the manufactured spectacle of today’s professional sports suffocates the last of it; and it’s about where that spirit today is best found.

ABOUT DAVID MACFARLANE

David Macfarlane‘s family memoir, The Danger Tree, was described by Christopher Hitchens as “one of the finest and most intriguing miniature elegies that I have read in many a year.” Macfarlane’s novel, Summer Gone, was shortlisted for the Giller Prize. Based on The Danger Tree, “The Door You Came In,” a two-man show (co-written and performed with Douglas Cameron) has been produced, to acclaim, from St. John’s, Newfoundland, to Stratford, Ontario. Macfarlane lives in Toronto with his wife, the designer, Janice Lindsay.

ABOUT CHERRY BEACH

A brutal murder exposes secret real estate deals, a corrupt police force, and the dark heart of a city simmering with unrest.

When two girls are found murdered in a rundown Toronto highrise, Jamieson Abel and his partner are first on the scene. Abel is a law school dropout turned police detective chronically at odds with his colleagues and perpetually on the brink of being terminated, and Davis is the department’s only female officer of colour. Both understand their being partnered as a form of banishment, but when the details of the murder go public at the start of an excruciatingly hot summer, they find themselves thrust into the centre of a front page investigation that will bring to a head the city’s long history of shady real estate deals and racist disenfranchisement.

Intricately plotted and brilliantly layered, Cherry Beach is a gripping literary crime novel that examines class, race, and corruption in the most multicultural city in the world.

ABOUT DON GILLMOR

Don Gillmor is the author of To the River, which won the Governor General’s Award for nonfiction. He is the author of five novels, Cherry BeachBreaking and EnteringLong ChangeMount Pleasant, and Kanata; a two-volume history of Canada, Canada: A People’s History; and nine books for children, two of which were nominated for the Governor General’s Award. He was a senior editor at The Walrus, and his journalism has appeared in Rolling Stone, GQ, Saturday NightToronto Life, the Globe and Mail, and the Toronto Star. He has won twelve National Magazine Awards and numerous other honours. He lives in Toronto.

ABOUT SILVER LAKE

It was on a fully dark February night when I went to the Communist’s Daughter to meet a friend who never showed that my life in movies began.

So begins the third installment in a series of standalone novels about the life and travels of Aubrey McKee. Set in Toronto and Silver Lake, a creative neighbourhood in Los Angeles, the novel chronicles with infectious élan Aubrey’s journey from broken-hearted derelict to B-movie production assistant, comedy writer, and science-fiction screenwriter, all the way up to feature film director. Along the way, he encounters long-ago childhood friends, manic producers, NHL players turned talk show hosts, Victoria’s Secret models, impulsive movie stars . . . and his own rising destiny.

ABOUT ALEX PUGSLEY

Alex Pugsley has worked on over 185 produced episodes of television, writing for performers such as Lauren Ash, Scott Thompson, Dan Aykroyd, and Michael Cera. He wrote and directed the feature film Dirty Singles which won for him the Irving Avrich Emerging Filmmaker Award at TIFF. Following the publication of his first novel, Aubrey McKee, he was named one of CBC’s Writers to Watch. His first story collection, Shimmer, was nominated for the ReLit Award for Short Fiction, and his most recent novel, The Education of Aubrey McKee, was long listed for the Toronto Book Awards. His next book, The Hungarian Ballroom, an Aubrey McKee novella, is forthcoming from Biblioasis. More information can be found at www.alexpugsley.com.

CHERRY BEACH and ON SPORTS: Toronto Launch!

Toronto readers! Join us for the double book launch of Don Gillmor’s Cherry Beach and David Macfarlane’s On Sports. The launch, hosted by our intrepid sales coordinator Hilary, will be held at The Supermarket, and include a reading, conversation and Q&A, and books will be for sale and signing from Ben McNally.

The launch takes place on Thursday, May 7 at 7PM EST.

Grab Cherry Beach here!

Grab On Sports here!

ABOUT CHERRY BEACH

A brutal murder exposes secret real estate deals, a corrupt police force, and the dark heart of a city simmering with unrest.

When two girls are found murdered in a rundown Toronto highrise, Jamieson Abel and his partner are first on the scene. Abel is a law school dropout turned police detective chronically at odds with his colleagues and perpetually on the brink of being terminated, and Davis is the department’s only female officer of colour. Both understand their being partnered as a form of banishment, but when the details of the murder go public at the start of an excruciatingly hot summer, they find themselves thrust into the centre of a front page investigation that will bring to a head the city’s long history of shady real estate deals and racist disenfranchisement.

Intricately plotted and brilliantly layered, Cherry Beach is a gripping literary crime novel that examines class, race, and corruption in the most multicultural city in the world.

ABOUT DON GILLMOR

Don Gillmor is the author of To the River, which won the Governor General’s Award for nonfiction. He is the author of five novels, Cherry BeachBreaking and EnteringLong ChangeMount Pleasant, and Kanata; a two-volume history of Canada, Canada: A People’s History; and nine books for children, two of which were nominated for the Governor General’s Award. He was a senior editor at The Walrus, and his journalism has appeared in Rolling Stone, GQ, Saturday NightToronto Life, the Globe and Mail, and the Toronto Star. He has won twelve National Magazine Awards and numerous other honours. He lives in Toronto.

ABOUT ON SPORTS

What are sports, really? What do we love about them? And what, in our digital age, have they become?

On Sports reads like a conversation between friends at the ballpark in those golden days before the kiss cam and college co-eds with T-shirt cannons spoiled the fun; a book that feels like the sun on your forehead and the breeze in your hair, beer and laughter on your lips; a book that celebrates communion and friendship and the beauty of these games—whether it be baseball or football  or soccer or tennis or cricket—that we’ve designed to distract ourselves from the end of the world. It’s about what 7Up tastes like when drunk from the Grey Cup, how much work it takes for talent to shine, and the near impossibility of language to properly capture athletic excellence. It’s about the beauty of good sports copy, the ephemerality of even the biggest sports story, and how sport remains perpetually powered by the eleven-year-old in all of us. It’s a book about rediscovering the spirit of sport, before online gambling and the manufactured spectacle of today’s professional sports suffocates the last of it; and it’s about where that spirit today is best found.

ABOUT DAVID MACFARLANE

David Macfarlane‘s family memoir, The Danger Tree, was described by Christopher Hitchens as “one of the finest and most intriguing miniature elegies that I have read in many a year.” Macfarlane’s novel, Summer Gone, was shortlisted for the Giller Prize. Based on The Danger Tree, “The Door You Came In,” a two-man show (co-written and performed with Douglas Cameron) has been produced, to acclaim, from St. John’s, Newfoundland, to Stratford, Ontario. Macfarlane lives in Toronto with his wife, the designer, Janice Lindsay.

Don Gillmor at TIFA: Uncovering Hidden Fractures

Don Gillmor, author of Cherry Beach, will be appearing at TIFA for the panel ‘Uncovering Hidden Fractures’. Don will be joined by Lilja Sigurðardóttir for a conversation on building atmosphere in modern crime fiction. The event will be moderated by Steven Beattie, and a book signing will follow.

The event will take place on Saturday, June 6 at 2PM. A festival pass is required.

More details here.

Get Cherry Beach here!

ABOUT CHERRY BEACH

A brutal murder exposes secret real estate deals, a corrupt police force, and the dark heart of a city simmering with unrest.

When two girls are found murdered in a rundown Toronto highrise, Jamieson Abel and his partner are first on the scene. Abel is a law school dropout turned police detective chronically at odds with his colleagues and perpetually on the brink of being terminated, and Davis is the department’s only female officer of colour. Both understand their being partnered as a form of banishment, but when the details of the murder go public at the start of an excruciatingly hot summer, they find themselves thrust into the centre of a front page investigation that will bring to a head the city’s long history of shady real estate deals and racist disenfranchisement.

Intricately plotted and brilliantly layered, Cherry Beach is a gripping literary crime novel that examines class, race, and corruption in the most multicultural city in the world.

ABOUT DON GILLMOR

Don Gillmor is the author of To the River, which won the Governor General’s Award for nonfiction. He is the author of five novels, Cherry BeachBreaking and EnteringLong ChangeMount Pleasant, and Kanata; a two-volume history of Canada, Canada: A People’s History; and nine books for children, two of which were nominated for the Governor General’s Award. He was a senior editor at The Walrus, and his journalism has appeared in Rolling Stone, GQ, Saturday NightToronto Life, the Globe and Mail, and the Toronto Star. He has won twelve National Magazine Awards and numerous other honours. He lives in Toronto.