Books

Temporary Palaces by Jeff Miller

Out April 21, 2026 – Available to Preorder Now!
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“A plainspoken, punk-rock hymn … This is a book that will pick you up off the floor of a mosh pit and wrap you in its arms.” —Sean Michaels

In the fevered summer of 2001, charismatic activist Rob and his collective set up a squat in an abandoned house. His bandmate and lover, Ben, watches anxiously as his own plans are threatened by Rob’s choice of radical politics over music. Meanwhile, photographer Alex finds herself torn between documenting the chaos of the scene and saving the friendship that binds them together. When the police break up the squat, Rob vanishes, and the dream dies.

Ten years later, Alex and Ben find each other again—she’s conquering Montreal’s contemporary art world, he’s running a thriving restaurant in Ottawa. But their success feels hollow. As they excavate their shared past, they must confront the ghost of Rob’s disappearance and the trauma that pushed them apart.

Pulsing with the raw energy of basement punk shows and DIY creativity, late-night manifestos and first heartbreaks, Temporary Palaces is a stunning debut that captures a generation caught between idealism and survival, art and activism, the dreams that define us and the compromises that save us.

“A memorable debut … Miller’s bittersweet novel burns with the warmth of lasting friendship.” —Publishers Weekly

“Jeff Miller’s debut novel is like a plainspoken, punk-rock hymn, singing praise and gratitude to the lovers, fighters, artists, and burnouts whose bands, art projects, friendships, and political movements were torn to pieces—but endured somehow, all the same. This is a book that will pick you up off the floor of a mosh-pit and wrap you in its arms.” —Sean Michaels, Giller Prize–winning author of Us Conductors and Do You Remember Being Born?

“A love letter to the ones who got away, and the ones who never let go, Temporary Palaces is punk enough to be tender about the way scenes form people and place. Jeff Miller has written a wise, elegiac novel about the interstices of subculture, and how memory and time comes for us all.” —Michelle Min Sterling, New York Times bestselling author of Camp Zero

“Jeff Miller writes with intensity and grace about those pitched moments in our lives when everything is changing before we quite know it. Temporary Palaces is a gritty, moving debut about young people finding and losing themselves—in music, in politics, in love—and realizing that since, as the saying goes, the struggle never ends, the moments of connection, joy, and integrity along the way really matter.” —Sam Lipsyte, New York Times bestselling author of The Ask and No One Left to Come Looking for You

“Jeff Miller is a beautiful storyteller who masterfully weaves threads of the past into the delicate fabric of the present. The walls of punk houses long torn down come alive again in Temporary Palaces, an impassioned elegy to the reckless passion of youth and its lingering impact on wounds still healing in the present. The world that Miller has created here feels broken in and well worn, its backdrops a vividly realized collection of derelict living spaces, back roads, and side streets, and the unforeseeable futures waiting for hardened and delicate hearts. A beautifully told story about the formative power of people and places, even and especially those that are flawed and crumbling into the dirt below.” —Niko Stratis, author of The Dad Rock That Made Me a Woman

Temporary Palaces is a haunting ode to youthful idealism and art-making that tracks its protagonists’ grinding pivot to the career-building and long-term relationships of adulthood. Jeff Miller welcomes readers into anarchist flop houses, music venues, and restaurant kitchens with revealing detail, gentle humour, and an open heart.” —Kevin Chong, author of The Double Life of Benson Yu

“In this self-assured debut, Jeff Miller paints a vivid picture of life in the dive bars, dish pits, art spaces, and punk houses at the dawn of the new millennium. Steeped in the subcultures of punk rock and indie sleaze, Temporary Palaces is full of details so authentic you’d think these fictional characters are real people. These are young anarchists, starving artists, and flawed idealists burnt out on trying to change—or even just survive—a system designed to keep them down. At its heart, though, is a story of romance and heartbreak, and all of the cuts and scrapes from youth that leave scars that last forever.” —Adam Feibel, co-author of In Too Deep: When Canadian Punks Took Over the World

“A deeply intimate, vivid, and thoroughly engrossing account of youth culture, punk pathos, love, ambition, and the moral entanglements that come with it. Jeff Miller’s characters are confronted with the unfathomable realization faced by every young person—that the belief system that once defined you will inevitably shift and change, just as the storefronts, tenements, and city skyline of your hometown will inevitably change. Everything is temporary.” —Alex Edkins, METZ and Weird Nightmare

Temporary Palaces is a fierce and tender portrait of young people chasing their dreams. Years pass, lives change, the dreams get tattered and remade along the way—but Jeff Miller’s fine writing testifies to the ties that remain. This is a lovely and memorable debut by a writer to watch.” —Alix Ohlin, author of Inside and We Want What We Want

Ghost Pine: All Stories True by Jeff Miller

Buy Invisible Publishing | All Lit Up

Ghost Pine: All Stories True offers thirteen years of sparkling true stories from the life of author Jeff Miller, compiling the best of his long-running zine. From his youth in suburban Ottawa in the late 1990s, to travels across Canada and North America and his current home in Montreal, Miller’s stories are equal measures funny and sad, nostalgic and unsentimental, punk rock and grandparents.

“Finally, the best stories from Canada’s longest running and best punk zine all in one long-overdue book! Jeff Miller is a collector of lost moments and a poet of the back alleys of the heart where we tenderly but ferociously guard innocence, inspiration, and our deepest fragile hopes from an indifferent world. Ghost Pine is a tree fort, a train yard, a treasure map. A refuge.”
Erica Dawn Lyle, author of On the Lower Frequencies

“Jeff Miller writes raw truths like an innocent, describes people with harsh forgiveness, and sees the dreary world we inhabit as if it were brand new. He makes all memories beautiful, even the painful ones. There’s no other voice like his.”
Emily Pohl-Weary, author of A Girl Like Sugar and Strange Times at Western High

Reviews

“Whether you still hold dear the smell of photocopier toner in the internet age, or this is your first exposure to the zine, the stories of Ghost Pine stick long after the last page is turned.”
This Magazine


“Jeff Miller spins an entertaining true life tale, especially when discussing his suburban punk rock youth.”
Boing Boing

“When Miller is really in stride, recounting his relationship with his grandfather or succumbing to the outsider romance of punk rock, his stories break out of their indie parameters and achieve a real poignancy.”
Montreal Gazette

“Anyone to whom suburbs ‘became the symbol of everything wrong in the world,’ who belonged to a high school ‘Social Justice Club,’ or who marches when ‘evil politicians come to town’ will relate to and chuckle at these slices of youthful life. . . .  Sometimes the writing in Ghost Pine is stunning.”
Montreal Review of Books

“Pithy and charming, Miller’s voice is an engaging one, and reading this you’ll feel as though you’re with a friend, and that the two of you are out together, taking note of all to see.”
Ottawa XPress

“Miller repeatedly does what zine writers are supposed to do: he brings us into his world. He takes us where he’s been and where he’s going.”
Razorcake

“Jeff Miller’s writing in Ghost Pine over the past thirteen years stands out amidst the scribbling crowd.”
Maximumrocknroll

“The beauty that exists on street corners, coffee shops, highways and subways is continuously brought to life in Ghost Pine, oft ignored pockets gracefully illuminated.”
Broken Pencil

“Miller slows the progression . . . of growing up to examine its transformative passages.”
The Coast