Books

Sappho’s Gaps: a review of If Not, Winter: Fragments of Sappho by Anne Carson

By Barry McKinnon | November 11, 2004

Barry McKinnon reviews Anne Carson’s translations of Sappho

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Mel Hurtig and the New Maginot Line

By Max Fawcett | October 4, 2004

Max Fawcett reviews Mel Hurtig’s latest and most articulate polemic yet, Rushing to Armageddon, and sees in it a frightening glimpse of the past…

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On Czeslaw Milosz

By Stan Persky | August 17, 2004

The poet Czeslaw Milosz died last week in Krakow, Poland, at age 93. Stan Persky has a couple of thoughts.

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Thriller-Dillers

By Stan Persky | July 28, 2004

The Da Vinci Code has sold 10 million copies, spawned a minor industry of counter-books and websites, and Harrison Ford is suiting up for the Hollywood blockbuster version. Stan Persky reads it.

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Education and Democracy

By David Banerjee | July 22, 2004

David Banerjee explores the reasons for educating our children through Neil Postman’s The End of Education

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Corpses, Brats and Cricket Music

By Bruce Serafin | July 13, 2004

Bruce Serafin reads a poet that reminds him of black sausage

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Reading Bloor Street, sort of

By Gordon Lockheed | July 12, 2004

Gordon Lockheed reads a locally-produced chapbook of Bloor Street vignettes

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Reconvening Jorge Luis Borges

By Brian Fawcett | July 4, 2004

Brian Fawcett reviews Alberto Manguel’s memoir of reading to Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges

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Life Was A Cabaret, My Dear

By Stan Persky | June 26, 2004

Stan Persky reviews a biography about a Berlin neighbour.

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O Muse, I Sing the Wrath of Spielberg

By Stan Persky | June 6, 2004

Stan Persky goes to the movies and sees the face that launched a thousand digitalized ships. Er, Brad Pitt’s face and most of the rest of him.

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