Horsefly
By (Author) Mireille Gagne
Translated by Pablo Strauss
Coach House Books
Coach House Books
27th August 2025
Canada
General
Fiction
Modern and contemporary fiction: general and literary
Horror and supernatural fiction
Paperback
192
Width 127mm, Height 203mm, Spine 10mm
204g
A terrifying tale about the ways in which we try to dominate nature, and how nature will, inevitably, wreak retribution upon us.
In 1942, a young entomologist, Thomas, is sent to a remote island to work on biological weapons for the Allied military. The scientists live like prisoners while they look for the perfect carrier for anthrax among the island's many insects.
In 2024, in the same region of Quebec, a heat wave unleashes swarms of horseflies while humans fall prey to strange flights of rage. Theodore is living a simple life, working double shifts and drinking to forget, when a horsefly bite stirs him from his apathy and he impulsively kidnaps from the nursing home his grandfather Emeril, whose dementia has him living in the past during the Grosse Ile biological weapons experiments.
The horsefly, meanwhile, knows a few secrets...
Mireille Gagn was born in Isle-aux-Grues and lives in Quebec City. Since 2010, she has published books of poetry, short stories, and the remarkable novel Le livre d'Amrique (2020), which "possesses a universal wisdom, the kind that is passed down from generation to generation and from which we too often lose our way."
Pablo Strauss is the translator of twelve works of fiction, several graphic novels, and the screenplay of one feature film, White Dog (2022). He is a three-time finalist for the Governor General's Literary Award for translation for The Country Will Bring Us No Peace (Coach House Books, 2020), Synapses (Talonbooks, 2019), and The Longest Year (House of Anansi, 2017). The Dishwasher, his translation of Stphane Larue's Le plongeur, won the 2020 Amazon Canada First Novel Award. He has published essays, reviews, and translations in Granta, Geist, The Literary Review of Canada, The Globe and Mail and The Montreal Review of Books. Pablo grew up in Victoria, BC, and has made his home in Quebec City for fifteen years.