Articles
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FictionComplicated desire for family foregrounds tale set in early 1900s Mennonite town
The creative fodder for Winnipeg author Sarah Klassen’s second novel, The Russian Daughter, came from a story told by her mother about a childless couple who made two attempts at adoption, both ending sadly. -
FictionCli-fi mystery questions our digital dependence, and survival amid decay
As humanity faces climate change, we’ll certainly need the resources of the information age to survive it. But what if those resources weren’t available? What if electronic records were as fragmented and incomprehensible to future generations as hieroglyphics? -
PoetryWith six takes on the apocalypse and meditations on anger, Knife on Snow is oddly hopeful
Alice Major’s new poetry collection, Knife on Snow, began with the mysterious appearance of a knife in the snow of her backyard. “Somehow this ordinary, inexplicable object on the untrodden white really spooked me. It also made me realize how much I feel this piece of property is ‘mine.’ -
PoetryRemedies include returning to grief, and the love it grows from, for Winnipeg poet
Remedies for Chiron is a warm and powerful debut collection of poetry by m. patchwork monoceros, a Black, agender, and queer poet who is “Jamaican by blood, Canadian by birthplace,” and who lives in Treaty 1 Territory, in Winnipeg. -
PoetryAmid upheaval, Lucas Crawford took to the page, reflecting on queer sex, love, and place
Maritime poet Lucas Crawford’s latest poetry collection, Muster Points, has its origins in the COVID-19 pandemic. In March 2020, Crawford arrived at the Banff Centre for the Arts, ready to mentor writers at a retreat. -
DramaReal-life pilgrimage to Burning Man amid grief, transformation comes to life in one-woman play
Mieko Ouchi’s one-woman play Burning Mom follows Dorothy, a character based on the playwright’s mother, as she uncovers the pain and grief of the past so that she can fully embrace the future. The title is a reference to Burning Man, the Nevada art festival to which Ouchi’s mother made a pilgrimage a year after her husband’s passing. -
FeaturesGraphic novel shows that kids with difficult lives can shift patterns, find breakthroughs
For Cree writer Wanda John-Kehewin, author of Visions of the Crow, the inspiration to write a graphic novel for young people was personal. -
FeaturesTravelling through genres, Garry Thomas Morse questions notion of stable identity
Tulpa Mea Culpa, the latest avant-garde novel by Garry Thomas Morse, tells the story of an unknowable poet, and two people—an academic chair and a police clerk—who seek to understand him. -
FeaturesNonlinear tale of homecoming and history weaves Franco-Métis language, culture
In his groundbreaking debut novel, Hold Your Tongue, Winnipeg author Matthew Tétreault explores loss, searching, and homecoming in Métis and Franco-Manitoban history and culture througha contemporary lens. -
FeaturesPoetry collection reflects on perseverance, kinship, offering teachings through storytelling
Rita Bouvier believes what saves her is that in many ways she had a privileged upbringing. Growing up in the community of Île-à-la-Crosse, Sask., surrounded by family, she was raised by her grandparents who nurtured her culturally. They gave her a language (Cree-Michif, or what is now referred to as Northern Michif), which is woven throughout the collection.









