
by Rod Moody-Corbett
Saul Bellow’s oft-downplayed Canadianness is key to his best fiction
Saul Bellow’s oft-downplayed Canadianness is key to his best fiction
Arielle Twist’s elegant debut ends with a powerful postscript: “Ah-hay, my Indigiqueer and Two- Spirit kin, this is for…
Our first warnings about the internet’s impact grew out of our personal experience of it. You didn’t need any technical…
“Ill at ease”: that’s the phrase, antique but applicable. With Sophie Bienvenu’s one-of-a-kind Worst Case, We Get Married I found…
Samantha Heather Mackey isn’t like the other MFA students at Warren University, an Ivy-League school in a seemingly quaint New…
Warren’s new girlfriend had a son named Benjamin, always called Benny. The boy’s father had infuriated her by taking a…
Diagnosis is of secondary importance in field practice. Can you give me something? Intended to maximally protect patients from receiving…
Tie a string around my tooth and pull. Offshore dental rigs won’t drill this skull for secrets. In my mother’s…
Christie Redfern’s troubles are so many that they spill over into her backstory in Margaret Murray Robertson’s 1866 novel.