News & Extras

The Lightning of Possible Storms by Jonathan Ball

Jun 22, 2021

Jonathan Ball has built an impressive writing career that includes both poetry and fiction. That wild electricity of poetry explodes in his first full-length fiction collection, The Lightning of Possible Storms. The Lightning of Possible Storms is categorized as a short story collection, and while it’s not quite a novel in stories, it’s something more […]

Read More

The Perfect Archive by Paul Lisson

Jun 7, 2021

In The Perfect Archive, Hamilton poet, archivist and librarian Paul Lisson stretches the boundaries of poetry and prose to perform an exacting/extracting critique of the archive. Reminiscent of Kafka, radical and irreverent, the archive at the centre of this dark tale of illusion, deception, and the contingent nature of truth itself, is brimful of contested […]

Read More

Best Canadian Essays 2020, Edited by Sarmishta Subramanian

May 12, 2021

Last year, the Covid-19 pandemic opened a schism that marks what many people now consider a “before and after.” The before: concerts, commutes, handshakes, birthday candles. The after: masks, six foot separations, grocery store line-ups, Zoom. March 2021 marks one year of this “after,” and in many ways, the writing that has emerged during this […]

Read More

I Am Still Your Negro: An Homage to James Baldwin

Apr 23, 2021

Answering civil rights advocate James Baldwin’s call to witness, Valerie Mason-John’s I Am Still Your Negro: An Homage to James Baldwin, is an uncompromising account of the historic and ongoing trauma of the slave trade, gender disparity, homocentric norms, and our longstanding disregard for the environment. Among the Baldwin quotes in I Am Still Your […]

Read More

Birds of a Kind by Wajdi Mouawad

Apr 12, 2021

Eitan Zimmerman, the protagonist in Wajdi Mouawad’s play Birds of a Kind, doesn’t believe that chance, fate, divine intervention, or “other such nonsense” (6) determine what happens in the universe. Yet when he meets the young woman Wahida, whom he will fall hard for at first sight, he struggles to explain such a fateful meeting. […]

Read More

Best Canadian Poetry 2019

Mar 29, 2021

How do you choose the best in language and say this is the finest? In Best Canadian Poetry 2019 editors, Anita Lahey, Amanda Jernigan and guest editor, Rob Taylor, would have searched through thousands of submissions to discover why a certain poem would be enjoyable and thought-provoking. The poem would have to be vibrant and […]

Read More