Year: 2013

  • The no-spin zone: A review of Jonathan Dee’s A Thousand Pardons

    The no-spin zone: A review of Jonathan Dee’s A Thousand Pardons

    Reviewed in this essay: A Thousand Pardons, by Jonathan Dee. Random House, 2013. Lance Armstrong could have used a hand from Helen Armstead, the inexperienced public relations guru at the heart of Jonathan Dee’s novel A Thousand Pardons. Whereas Armstrong’s stone-faced mea culpa was undermined by years of deceit, Helen would have had him prostrate…

  • TRB Issue Six: Small and Sundry

    TRB Issue Six: Small and Sundry

    Welcome to Issue Six of The Toronto Review of Books, our charismatic first offering in a new punchier issue format. In this single-sitting issue size, we’re cutting through the noise to bring you six pieces that matter. You’ll attend succinct gatherings in our new short issues—the kind of conversations that are worth joining because they’re big…

  • Agreeing on Fables at 1812.gc.ca

    Agreeing on Fables at 1812.gc.ca

    A slick commercial appeared on Canadian television last year, featuring redcoats and period warships, with narrator intoning: “Two hundred years ago, the United States invaded our territory.” It’s 2013 and the invaders are long gone, but our leaders have set to work driving any ambiguity out of our collective memory. As we enter year two…

  • Translating Challawa: Pakistani Writing Between Urdu, English, and Lesbian Erotica

    Translating Challawa: Pakistani Writing Between Urdu, English, and Lesbian Erotica

    A small but vibrant literary scene has emerged in Pakistan over the last decade. After the events of 9/11 pushed their country into the media’s spotlight, many authors wanted to write their own narratives rather than have them transposed from elsewhere. Big names soon garnered global fame. Among multiple other awards and nominations, Mohsin Hamid’s…

  • XVII, from The Minutes

    XVII, from The Minutes

    Let’s begin: Come man know your span sing wilde curcles with no circumference where even the birds cannot pass an emptiness that contracts to a point no count is sure, there is no point to the act if you already know what will come to pass passes, bird- brained song man you know too well…

  • Hokkien Lesson 1: The Granddaughter’s Phrasebook

    Hokkien Lesson 1: The Granddaughter’s Phrasebook

    ang mo red hair jin sui very beautiful wah pah de leao see I will beat you to death wah zaiiyah I know wah gaiigee I can do it myself

  • The History Wars in Canada

    The History Wars in Canada

    Jack Granatstein’s 1998 jeremiad Who Killed Canadian History? was the opening shot of the History Wars, a fierce conflict about the meaning and purpose of our nation’s past. Academic historians, he satirically concluded, had abandoned traditional military and political history in order to specialize in topics like “the history of housemaid’s knee in Belleville in…

  • A Long Strange Trip: Travels Through The North Coast with Denis Johnson

    A Long Strange Trip: Travels Through The North Coast with Denis Johnson

    “This is not a dream, illusion, or metaphor. This is California.” -Denis Johnson, Already Dead: A California Gothic On a bright, sultry afternoon at the tail end of last August, my wife Jill and I sat at a picnic table in the spacious courtyard of the Anderson Valley Brewing Company in Boonville, California. The town…

  • Special Ed at Hot Docs: Winnipeg, spelling, and stop motion

    Special Ed at Hot Docs: Winnipeg, spelling, and stop motion

    Reviewed in this essay: Special Ed, directed by John Paskievich, Canada, 2013 at Hot Docs 2013. Director John Paskievich’s documentary Special Ed follows Ed Ackerman, a filmmaker who creates short stop-motion films that help kids spell. He loves words, enjoys puns, and his old boat-like car is decorated with colourful-painted letters. Then his life is…

  • Da Vinci and The Circle at Hot Docs: Science, art, and the imagination

    Da Vinci and The Circle at Hot Docs: Science, art, and the imagination

    Reviewed in this essay: Da Vinci and The Circle at Hot Docs. “I am enough of an artist to draw freely upon my imagination. Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world.” So states the Albert Einstein epigraph that prefaces Bram Conjaerts’s documentary The Circle, which is currently playing at the…

  • Pussy Riot at Hot Docs: Punk Feminist Performance Art on Trial

    Pussy Riot at Hot Docs: Punk Feminist Performance Art on Trial

    Reviewed in this essay: Pussy Riot – A Punk Prayer, directed by Maxim Pozdorovkin and Mike Lerner, United Kingdom, 2012. Always difficult for a film reviewer is what to do with a film that’s got a really great story, but is not itself a particularly great film. Which isn’t to say you shouldn’t run out and…

  • Pucks and pages: A reading list for the NHL playoffs

    Pucks and pages: A reading list for the NHL playoffs

    The NHL playoffs start this week, and will continue throughout the spring and into early summer. With hockey on TV every night between now and June, why not pair the nights’ games with some good hockey reads? We’ve matched each round of the postseason with one of the best books on the sport, creating an…