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Ninth Issue
Volume 5, No. 1
 
features

Booze, Sun, Sex And Mythology
By Joel Yanofsky

O Sister, Where Art Thou?
By Andrew Steinmetz

Travels With My Tiger
By Padma Viswanathan


fiction

Rousseau's Garden
Reviewed by By T.F. Rigelhof

Plenty Of Harm In God
Reviewed by Byron Rempel

Gambler's Fallacy
Reviewed by Doug Rollins

A Good Life
Reviewed by Mark Heffernan

Reading Nijinsky
Reviewed by X.I.Selene


fiction at a glance

All Day Breakfast
Reviewed by Ian McGillis

If Looks Could Kill
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

You & Your Bright Ideas: New Montreal Writing
Reviewed by By Ian McGillis


non-fiction

Spreading Misandry: The Teaching Of Contempt For Men In Popular Culture
Reviewed by Melissa Scowcroft

Getting Started: A Memoir Of The 1950s
Reviewed by Denis Sampson

Facsimiles Of Time: Essays On Poetry And Translation
Reviewed by Ian Ferrier

Impure: Reinventing The Word
Reviewed by Maria Simpson

My 26 Stanley Cups: Memories Of A Hockey Life
Reviewed by William Brown

Our Life With The Rocket
Reviewed by William Brown


non-fiction at a glance

A Taste Of Quebec
Reviewed by By Margaret Goldik

Chasing Grandma
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

Imprints: Discovering The Historic Face Of English Quebec
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

Le Carre's Landscape
Reviewed by Ian McGillis

Making Waves: The Origins And Future Of Greenpeace
Reviewed by Ian McGillis

On Snooker: The Game And The Characters Who Play It
Reviewed by Ian McGillis

This Business Of Family: Preventing And Resolving Disputes In Family-owned Businesses
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

Writing The Meal: Dinner In The Fiction Of Early 20th Century Women Writers
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik


poetry

Sheep's Vigil By A Fervent Person
Reviewed by Carmine Starnino

Hamburger Valley, California
Reviewed by Noel Rieder

Hotel Montreal
Reviewed by Sonja A. Skarstedt

Of Dissonance And Shadows
Reviewed by Sonja A. Skarstedt


young readers

An Island In The Soup
Reviewed by Sarah Rosenfeld

Oma's Quilt
Reviewed by Sarah Rosenfeld

As For The Princess
Reviewed by Sarah Rosenfeld

A Tree Is Just A Tree
Reviewed by Sarah Rosenfeld

From Daybreak To Good Night
Reviewed by Sarah Rosenfeld

Animal Sneezes
Reviewed by Sarah Rosenfeld

Jacques Plante: Behind The Mask
Reviewed by Sarah Rosenfeld

John Franklin: Traveller On Undiscovered Seas
Reviewed by Sarah Rosenfeld

Frederick Banting: Hero, Healer, Artist
Reviewed by Sarah Rosenfeld

John Diefenbaker: An Appointment With Destiny
Reviewed by Sarah Rosenfeld

Titanic's Race To Disaster
Reviewed by Sarah Rosenfeld

Shoes For Amelie
Reviewed by Sarah Rosenfeld

7 Secrets Of Highly Successful Kids
Reviewed by Sarah Rosenfeld

When I Grow Up, I Want To Be A Writer
Reviewed by Sarah Rosenfeld

Lobster's Family Guide To North American Ski Resorts
Reviewed by Sarah Rosenfeld

Trading Riley
Reviewed by Sarah Rosenfeld

The William Ghost
Reviewed by Sarah Rosenfeld

The Mole Sisters And The Blue Egg
Reviewed by Sarah Rosenfeld

The Mole Sisters And The Moonlit Night
Reviewed by Sarah Rosenfeld

The Sex Book: An Alphabet Of Smarter Love
Reviewed by Sarah Rosenfeld



You & Your Bright Ideas: New Montreal Writing
Edited By Andy Brown And Rob Mclennan
$16.95
Paper 180 pp.
Véhicule Press 1-55065-152-8
fiction at a glance

You and Your Bright Ideas
New Montreal Writing

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A friend and I were having a barroom chat awhile back about Montreal's thriving zine/spoken word scene, a good chunk of which consists of people who've come here from elsewhere. "Why here?" we asked, and I propounded some high-flown cultural/linguistic theory. My friend was more blunt, offering a syllogism: "Young writers generally aren't big breadwinners. Low wage earners gravitate toward cheap places. Therefore a lot of young writers end up in Montreal."

There's got to be more to it than that (why don't they all go to Edmonton?) but let's just move on and say that there is a lot happening here, and You and Your Bright Ideas bravely attempts to get it between two covers. Brown and mclennan are tireless campaigners who've done a good job of representing the range of work appearing lately. Inevitably there's a grab-bag feel, but the upside is that there's something for almost any taste. Plenty of the more bleakly earnest pieces, and most of the more "free" poetry, just didn't float my boat, and some of the visual pieces stretch the definition of "writing" past my personal breaking point. But I loved some of the more comic narrative things, like those by Jonathan Goldstein, Tess Fragoulis, and Ian Ferrier. A preview of Catherine Kidd's long-anticipated novel Bestial Rooms shows that it works as well on the page as on the stage, and David McGimpsey's laugh-out-loud poetic odes to trash culture shouldn't be missed. All in all, a highly commendable undertaking.




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