
by Shane Rhodes
In a time of supposed reconciliation, what role do monuments to colonialization play?
In a time of supposed reconciliation, what role do monuments to colonialization play?
Dorothy Dumbrille’s 1945 novel, “All This Difference”
Profound political and aesthetic shifts followed the departure of Montreal poetry’s heir apparent.
Sheep, penguins, and military history all play roles in the remote archipelago’s reinvention of itself.
Bourgeois Anglo attitudes undercut the radicalism of Scott Symons’ 1967 gay novel, “Combat Journal for Place d’Armes.”
A diagnosis of “Backstage Nurse” (1963) the first of W.E.D Ross’ 57 nurse-themed novels, written pseudonymously as Jane Rossiter.
Kevin Chong’s Vancouver-set, Camus-inspired novel uses dark humour to tap into present-day cultural anxieties.
How Canada’s Black sleeping-car porters became agents of social change.
A caninocidal Hudson’s Bay Company is the villain in this Jack London-inspired tale by Canada’s greatest pulp-fiction writer.
It was author Russell Smith, I think, who made an astute observation in one of his Globe and Mail columns…