Capital City Press
Capital City Press is a gathering place, both digitally and physically, for the exchange of ideas and education on the craft of writing. It gives EPL the opportunity to showcase and promote notable work from within our community, while also giving Edmontonians a chance to discover fantastic local writers and discuss their creations. Capital City Press aims to help support and grow writing in the community.
Host a Book Talk at EPL
Join the Capital City Press Collection
Meet Your New Capital City Featured Creators
Host a Book Talk at EPL
Join the Capital City Press Collection
Meet Your New Capital City Featured Creators
Jasmina Odor is a Croatian-born Canadian writer, who emigrated to Canada in 1993. She is the author of the short story collection You Can’t Stay Here (Thistledown Press, 2017), winner of the Canadian Authors Association Exporting Alberta Award, and a novel, The Harvesters (Freehand Books, 2024). Her fiction and reviews have been widely published in magazines and anthologies, including The New Quarterly, The Malahat Review, The Fiddlehead, Eighteen Bridges, Prism International, and the Journey Prize Stories. Her short fiction has won the Howard O’Hagan Award and been nominated for the Journey Prize and the CBC Short Story Prize, among others. She lives with her family in Edmonton, on Treaty 6 territory, where she also teaches English literature and writing.
Don't forget to check out Jasmina's recommended reading list of her Favourite Books About Motherhood.
Past Featured Writers
The Capital City Press Anthology is a new project from the Edmonton Public Library that publishes short stories, non-fiction, and poetry by local authors in a digital format. Our goal is to celebrate the creativity of our city and the Treaty 6 First Nations by providing opportunities for diverse, new, and thought-provoking voices to be heard. Volume 5 of the Anthology was released in June 2025.
Capital City Press Anthology Podcast
You can listen to stories from past volumes on the Capital City Press Anthology podcast! Episodes are available on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
Blogs & Book Lists
Blogs
Taking the Long Road to a Creative Life
It Was Never About Pink
The Songwriter Within: My Journey Through Music and Lyrics
Taking the Long Road to a Creative Life
It Was Never About Pink
The Songwriter Within: My Journey Through Music and Lyrics
Featured writers will host a variety of programs that are free for the community throughout the year. Annual events include the Capital City Press Book Festival and the Young Writers Conference. If you are a local author and interested in presenting a talk at EPL, apply for a local author talk.
CCP - BiblioEvents Feed
Catalogue Carousel
EPL also provides access to databases and online libraries that include works by local authors. Check them out here.













Jaima Fixsen is a USA Today Bestselling author, an Edmontonian, and a self-confessed history addict.







Davis G. See is a gay Edmontonian and graduate of MacEwan University’s Bachelor of Communication Studies program. While a student, he co-founded the Bolo Tie Collective, a creative writing club at MacEwan that continues to publish an annual anthology. His prose has appeared in 





For a while she entertained the idea of becoming an actress, then she worked in the music industry for five years. Finally, she realized it was the words behind the music, the story behind the movie star, that ultimately filled her with passion.
Tololwa M Mollel is a seeker, facilitator and animator, maker, and sharer of stories. He has published stories in English and Swahili in books, anthologies, and magazines, for children and for adults. Some of his stories have been translated into Korean, Serbian, and other languages. He is currently writing his life story, Why We Have Two Ears and Only One Mouth: A Tanzanian Memoir. Tololwa is also known for performing stories he writes, solo and/or with other performers, for his story workshops, and for his plays in which he sometimes acts. He has been an actor in his native Tanzania and in Canada.
Leif Gregersen was born in the early 70’s in St. Albert and developed a love of libraries and reading from an early age. Even in his elementary school years, Leif would walk to the St. Albert library after school almost each and every day to get a fresh book. Leif also began writing in elementary, trying to entertain his classmates with comic book stories he wrote and illustrated. Leif lived in St. Albert in the same house with his parents until he was 18 when he left for Vancouver to seek out new options and to try and escape his situation of being in poor mental health. After going to flying school for a while and hitch-hiking to California, Leif returned home to complete school and was accepted to a journalism program that was later cancelled. Leif spent a great deal of his time over the next years reading all the quality literature he could get his hands on and working on and off on his first book,
SG Wong holds a B.A. (Honours) in English Literature from the University of Alberta. She speaks four languages—at varying degrees of proficiency—and usually only curses in one of them. She is a member of the Writers’ Guild of Alberta, Crime Writers of Canada, and Sisters in Crime (National). She is currently the President of the Sisters in Crime—Canada West chapter.