| We Wish to Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed with Our Families Stories from Rwanda by Philip Gourevitch, 384 pages $39.95 TC ISBN: 0374286973
| | Touched by Fire Doctors Without Borders in a Third World Crisis by Elliott Leyton, Greg Locke, 224 pages $29.95 TC ISBN: 0771053053
| | The International Dimension of Genocide in Rwanda by Arthur J. Klinghoffer, New York University Press pages $40 TC ISBN: 0814747213
| | | Military - Civilian Interactions Interventing in Human Crises 479 pages $18.95 ISBN: 0847687455
| | Moral Search Humanitarian Intervention in Internal Conflicts by Jonathan Moore, Cornelio Sommaruga, Rowman & Littlefield, Publishers, Incorporated 320 pages $24.95 TP ISBN: 0847690318
| | State, Conflict, and Democracy in Africa 525 pages $65 ISBN: 155877990
| | | Leave None to Tell the Story Genocide in Rwanda 789 pages $35 ISBN: 1564321711
| | Aiding Violence The Development Enterprise in Rwanda by Peter Uvin, Kumarian Press, Incorporated 288 pages $24.95 TP ISBN: 1565490835
| Book Review Rwanda by Howard Adelman In 1994, between 6 April and mid-July, a period of ninety-nine days of mayhem, approximately 500,000- 800,000 Tutsi and moderate Hutu were slaughtered in Rwanda Read more...
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Book Review Sensation Dark but Not Without Pleasure by Scott McFarlane Sally Ito's The Floating Shore, nominated for the 1999 Alberta Book Award, is a series of short stories that follows the transient, dislocated lives of characters traveling the estranging yet seductive paths between Japan and Canada. Read more...
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Book Review The Dream Bird Hatches from the Egg of Loneliness by Diana Kuprel How sad to think that at 30 Mazeppa Street, where I spent so many lovely hours, no one will be left, all of it will become mere legend. I don't know why I feel guilty towards myself, as if I had lost something and it was my own fault. Read more...
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Book Review Tipsy with the reeling times by Ronald Hatch When news leaked out late last year that a new book of "unpublished" Dorothy Livesay poems was in the works, people in the literary community were greatly excited, for Livesay had often commented on her sheaves of unpublished verse. But there was also Read more...
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Book Review Yes - No - Maybe So: Covering the Quebec Question by Mike Gasher The most difficult section of a course I teach on the media in Quebec concerns the role the news media play as political actors in Quebec society. It is difficult because students tend to oversimplify this role, leaning toward what we might call Read more...
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Book Review Zoning In - Zoning Out by Paul Dutton John C. Lilly, the scientist who established interspecies communication with dolphins and who explored chemically induced altered states of consciousness, had an astute term for what most people consider to be normal: consensus reality. Read more...
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Book Review Imperialism and Its Discontents by George Elliott Clarke Two recent collections of post-colonialist prose feature the struggle of two Indo-Canadian writers and thinkers to resist Canadian eurocentricity and to preserve their "cultural originality." Read more...
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Book Review A footprint, a dark forest, a mythical bird by John Weber Pnina Granirer was born Paula Solomon in Romania in 1935. The strong connection she made as a child to the visual world there is an important factor in her mature art. Read more...
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Book Review Cyclops Revolution by Darren Werschler-Henry If the idea of not just one new compact disc filled with poetry but an entirely new line of poetry CDs leaves you stone cold, you're probably not a poet (or, that rarest of creatures, a non-academic poetry reader who doesn't write poetry her/himself). Read more...
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Book Review Deutsche Frage - Legislating Race in the Third Reich by Norman Ravvin As it seems to do every few years, the Holocaust has returned to public consciousness following three troubling developments.The threat of class action suits against the largest German industrial corporations has led to the creation Read more...
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Book Review On the Edge of Empires by Cherry Clayton Migrating from South Africa to Canada, as I did in 1991, has meant a movement from a society historically constructed on racial binaries to one in which there were multiple claims on difference and social justice. "Identity politics" and even Read more...
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Book Review Ecology's Trojan Horse by Lorraine Johnson In the early 1980s, the supermarket chain of Loblaws started to produce an advertising vehicle called the Insider's Report. Part goofy consumer comic book and part serious shrine to commercial culture, the thick advertising flyer is not only dense and Read more...
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Book Review Educating Readers, or New Voices Echoing in a Deaf Crowd by Richard Sanger Reading Alberto Manguel's new collection of essays, Into the Looking-Glass Wood, I began to formulate arguments against reading and books in general; still, I couldn't stop reading. As our leading apologist for reading, Manguel has certainly found Read more...
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Book Review Fire that Wears Away by Tymothi J A professor of mine told me she avoided terms like "good" and "bad" when judging a poem; instead, she insisted on assessing its "competency". Assuming that competency is preferable to incompetency, nearly half the submissions included in this latest off Read more...
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Book Review From the Rubble of West Gull by Jack Illingworth Matt Cohen's latest novel, Elizabeth and After, takes place in West Gull, a small town near Kingston. West Gull is not the sort of quaint, genteel community that we have come to expect from the rural Canadian novel. While our writers tend to cram their l Read more...
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Letters to Editor To the Editor Back Through the Looking-Glass The flaws in Mary di Michele's review of White Stone: The Alice Poems by Stephanie Bolster (Feb. 1999) are self-evident to any intelligent reader. Mary di Michele writes "Bolster is `age nine' when she encounters a man Read more...
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Profiles Reaching Up to the mind of Aquinas by Daniel Monsour One of the greatest Catholic intellectuals of the twentieth century was the Canadian Jesuit priest and Professor of Theology, Bernard Lonergan. Lonergan was born in Buckingham, Quebec, in 1904, and died eighty years later in Pickering, Ontario. In the Read more...
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First Novels First Novels - Novel Ideas for 1999 by Diana Brebner We are very happy to introduce Diana Brebner as our new First Novels' Editor. Diana is an Ottawa resident and graduate of the University of Ottawa, where she studied philosophy. Her poetry has appeared in such magazines as The Malahat Review, Event, Grain Read more...
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First Novels First Novels - Novel Ideas for 1999 by Diana Brebner We are very happy to introduce Diana Brebner as our new First Novels' Editor. Diana is an Ottawa resident and graduate of the University of Ottawa, where she studied philosophy. Her poetry has appeared in such magazines as The Malahat Review, Event, Grain Read more...
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First Novels First Novels - Novel Ideas for 1999 by Diana Brebner We are very happy to introduce Diana Brebner as our new First Novels' Editor. Diana is an Ottawa resident and graduate of the University of Ottawa, where she studied philosophy. Her poetry has appeared in such magazines as The Malahat Review, Event, Grain Read more...
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First Novels First Novels - Novel Ideas for 1999 by Diana Brebner We are very happy to introduce Diana Brebner as our new First Novels' Editor. Diana is an Ottawa resident and graduate of the University of Ottawa, where she studied philosophy. Her poetry has appeared in such magazines as The Malahat Review, Event, Grain Read more...
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Brief Reviews Brief Reviews - Medicine by Jeanette Bayduza To explain the complex subject of the cause of cancer in comprehensible terms to those not involved in this type of science is the purpose of Robert A. Weinberg's One Renegade Cell: How Cancer Begins (Basic Books, 170 pages, $30 cloth). Read more...
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Brief Reviews Brief Reviews - Architecture by Francois Lachance "Theorists are forced out of the sanctuary of theory. Practitioners are roused from sleepwalking practice. Both meet in the realm of building and engage with objects." (Mark Wigley) Architecture Theory since 1968 (MIT Press, 808 pages, $80 US Read more...
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Brief Reviews Brief Reviews - Fiction by Alana Wilcox The body is a common metaphor for discussing fiction. Yet, while we tend to focus on a narrative's "flesh" and "skeleton", we rarely consider what goes on inside the bones. This is the fresh perspective taken by Nora Gold in her excellent first Read more...
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| The Dead of Winter by Paul Gosling, Paula Gosling, Gosling, 320 pages $29.95 TC ISBN: 0316912387
| Brief Reviews Brief Reviews - Fiction by Jennifer Duncan Writers often toil on their books for years and for very little financial compensation. Imagination is a capricious creature, and the writing process a snarling leash. Out of respect for these considerations, judging a book as bad seems churlish. Call Read more...
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Brief Reviews Brief Reviews - Poetry by Madeline Bassnett With her first book of poetry, Monkeypuzzle (Press Gang Publishers, 107 pages, $14.95 paper), Rita Wong positions herself alongside poets such as Dionne Brand and Muriel Rukeyser, for whom the personal and political are intertwined. Read more...
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Brief Reviews Brief Reviews - History by Sophia Schweitzer Originally written in Gaelic and published in 1841, Robert MacDougall's thoroughly entertaining The Emigrant's Guide to North America (edited by Elizabeth Thompson, Natural Heritage Books, 160 pages, $18.95 paper) is many things: a practical manual Read more...
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Brief Reviews Brief Reviews - History by Ian Allaby Long ago, when this was a real country with a buck worth better than par, a landscape portrait of grain fields under a majestic cumulus sky graced the back of our dollar bill. And, though it was barely more than a speck on the vast horizon, a grain Read more...
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Children's Books Children`s Books by Erinn Banting Some children have absolutely no difficulty jumping into any and all situations feet first. Others prefer to stand back, to observe, to test the water, to feel out the situation, and to exhaust all of the what's and why's before even thinking about Read more...
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Children's Books Children`s Books by Lian Goodall Safari's magnificent illustrations by one of Canada's foremost wildlife artists, Robert Bateman, are a great way to acquaint children aged six to eleven with the animals of Africa, the continent where Bateman taught for two years and which he has often Read more...
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Children's Books Children`s Books by Sherie Posesorski Harry Potter is a Cinderella afraid to dream at the start of J.K. Rowling's fantasy adventure novel, Harry and the Philosopher's Stone. The orphaned Harry lives with his loathsomely normal Uncle Vernon and Aunt Petunia Dursley. Skinny, small, Read more...
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Children's Books Children`s Books by Alicia Sloboda "The truest kind of happiness, the only kind that is really worth having, the happiness of making others happy too!"
So writes Lewis Carroll in a letter to all child-readers of his first Alice book on Christmas of 1871. Having captivated over Read more...
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Douglas Fetherling Douglas Fetherling - Duelling Poet by Douglas Fetherling This year is the 200th Anniversary of the birth of the famous poet, Alexander Pushkin, whose works most ordinary Russians, including children and factory workers, can quote from memory in a way that isn't true of any English writer, Shakespeare included Read more...
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First Novel Award First Novel Award by Joan Givner This year, the evaluations of the three judges did draw us into a slightly torturous process of deciding which of the fine books shortlisted for the Chapters/Books in Canada First Novel Award was the indisputable winner. Read more...
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Great Authors Poetic Intensity of Human Interplay - Aleksander Rybczynski speaks with Joseph Brodsky This interview was conducted during the 1994 Toronto Authors' Festival. AR: In your 1987 Nobel Prize lecture, you write: "There are, as we know, three modes of cognition: analytical, intuitive, and the mode that was known to the biblical prophets Read more...
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Great Authors Dry Land of Days Where We Remain - on Brodsky "A prominent forehead, hair swept back yet framing the head with a reddish halo, a sharp though not quite aquiline nose, and pale blue eyes-this is how I remember Joseph Brodsky when I met him at the Vancouver Airport in the fall of 1972, when he arrive Read more...
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Great Authors Linguistic Disobedience and the Code of Conscience - a summation "Unlike society, a good poet always has the future, and his poems, in a manner of speaking, are an invitation for us to sample it." (from "An Immodest Proposal") Meeting Joseph Brodsky during the 1994 Toronto Festival of Authors left Read more...
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Great Authors Great Authors of Our Time - Joseph Brodsky Joseph Brodsky was born in May of 1940 in Leningrad. Disenchanted with formal education, he left school at the age of fifteen to pursue his own studies. He worked at a series of menial jobs. At the age of eighteen, he began writing poetry, and taught Read more...
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