

Psychomachia by Sanita Fejzic
Reviewed by Ranga Rajah Sixty seconds is all it takes for lives to change, and forever. It's the time that most of us take to stare at a...


November is with us :)
"So dull and dark are the November days. The lazy mist high up the evening curled, And now the morn quite hides in smoke and haze; The...


Do Not Say We Have Nothing by M. Thien
Reviewed by Dessa Bayrock Madeleine Thien's Do Not Say We Have Nothing is the title on everyone's mind this fall - winning a Governor...


The Wonder by Emma Donoghue
Reviewed by Menaka Raman-Wilms The Wonder, Emma Donoghue’s latest book, is a story that disarms in its simplicity. It is set in the 1850s...


Set Free by Anthony Bidulka
Reviewed by Jim Napier The opening sentence gets the reader’s immediate attention: “I would have packed less if I knew I was going to...


The Elf Conspiracy by Kass Williams
Reviewed by Alex Binkley Everyone knows Twas The Night Before Christmas, Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer and How the Grinch Stole...


Welcome to the October 2016 Issue
Canada is in the full swing of the literary season with the Giller Prize Award winners soon to be announced, and many fine literary...


Path of Most Resistance by R. Wangersky
Reviewed by Ian Shaw Russell Wangersky in his latest collection of short fiction, The Path of Most Resistance is simply brilliant. The...


Aluta by Adwoa Badoe
Reviewed by Timothy Niedermann In many ways Aluta is what a YA novel should be—an experience of the transition from the naïveté of youth...


Stone Woman by Bianca Lakoseljac
Reviewed by Menaka Raman-Wilms Stone Woman pays homage to the Toronto arts and hippie scene of the 60s. Not only does it explore the ways...




