Upcoming Issues*
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Canadian Literature's Spring 2010 issue (CL#204), "50th Anniversary Interventions", looks back on Canadian Literature's 50th Anniversary Gala, and celebrates Canadian culture with papers about Duncan Campbell Scott, book policies, copyright, civil war poetry, and new Québecois literature.
Upcoming issue information is coming soon.
* Information on this page is tentative and may change before publication.
Review of "Reasoning Otherwise" by Ian McKay
Review of "No Place Strange" by Diana Fitzgerald Bryden
Review of "This Way Out" by Carmine Starmino
Review of "asking questions indoors and out" by Anne Compton
Stories of Loss by Lynn (J.R.) Wytenbroek
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Valuable Confessions by Stephen Cain
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The School of Life by Gisèle M. Baxter
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High Notes by Dorothy F. Lane
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In the Elegaic Mode by Paul Milton
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Green Violence by Mary di Michele
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on the death of paterson ewen by rob mclennan
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Afternoon and Evening by David Zieroth
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Not Born Cyd by Dave Margoshes
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Snake's Belly Turned Over by Cyril Dabydeen
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Irish & Biblical Myth in Jack Hodgins' "The Invention of the World" by Jan C. Horner
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A Poet Past and Future by Patrick Anderson
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Guilt: The Prison of This World by Jennifer Waelti-Walters
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If You Say So: Articulating Cultural Symbols of Tradition in the Japanese Canadian Community by Marilyn Iwama
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Maria Chapdelaine in Iberoamerica by Ben-Zion Shek
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An Interview with Elizabeth Bachinsky by Evgenia Todorova
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When “your ears are tingling from the inside out”: Addena Sumter-Freitag on Storytelling and Recording Life, from Stage to Page by Christine Lyons
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Lullabies for Literature: An Interview with Heather O'Neill by Kristin McHale
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Editing The Cambridge History of Canadian Literature by Manuela Costantino
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Another Interview with Thomas King by Jordan Wilson
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Literary Scenes in Canada by Ian Rae
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A possessive love by Bernadette Calonego
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A Children's Book Author in Academe by Heather Kirk
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Canadian Biography: Theory, Practice, Form by Ira B. Nadel
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On Being Canadian by Rudy Wiebe
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Rhea Tregebov (Author)
The Knife Sharpener's Bell. Coteau Books
Reviewed by Tanya Christiansen
The Knife Sharpener’s Bell, Rhea Tregebov’s first novel, is a tale of multiple migrations. As the child of Russian-Jewish immigrants living in Winnipeg in the 1930s, Annette Gershon is uprooted from her home when her idealist, Communist-supporting, and homesick parents decide to move back to Odessa in the USSR. The story traces the fallout from this decision as Annette grows up amid the perils of Stalinist society and the trauma of World War [...]
Full Review