Spirit of the Night
A photo essay.
A photo essay.
Writing from Quebec. Translated by Melissa Bull.
New poetry from Domenica Martinello.
Cole Nowicki reads between the lines on a Saskatoon street.
Sympathetic rhetoric, tightening borders—Jane Gatensby reveals Canada's hypocrisy on Venezuela.
These days people love the idea of interracial marriages, Natalie Harmsen writes, but that’s different from trying to make one work.
A tangled mess of cannabis laws is hanging Canadians out to dry and even endangering lives.
New fiction from Krzysztof Pelc.
Being basic can come with secret perks. Just ask people in London, Ontario.
Politicians praise climate-conscious teenagers like Rebecca Hamilton. But what she really wants is better public transit.
With the rise of "dark tourism," it’s never been so popular to go off the beaten track.
A photo essay.
Letter from Montreal.
What was a climate-change denier doing on the board of Canada’s most famous science museum?
A survivalist tests recipes for the apocalypse.
Letter from Montreal.
Reckoning with a homegrown hell showed that turning around emissions can also mean turning a profit.
It’s hard to live low-carbon, especially when you feel like you’re the only one. Kate Black meets a Calgary misfit who keeps trying to fit in.
Canadians are scared of losing the life they know, Inuit leader Sheila Watt-Cloutier writes. Maybe looking north will help.
In wildfire-ravaged BC, Rachel Jansen learns to keep up with the relentless rules of mushroom-hunting.
A longtime science reporter reviews the ways we’ve tried, and failed, to convey the looming climate crisis.
Toronto condos won’t seem so hot in a few decades—except in the literal sense. Here’s a guide for househunting for the end times.
New fiction by Christopher Evans.
New poetry from Mikko Harvey.
Writing from Quebec. Translated by Melissa Bull.
New fiction from Jowita Bydlowska.
Everyone needs fresh air, but Canadian psychiatric patients can go years without stepping outside.
One Montrealer is trying to revive a local addiction: snooker.
For women in tree-planting, gruelling labour is the easy part.
One man convinced Canadians that Russia was dangerous, and they’ve believed it ever since.
Immigrants have been charged exorbitant fees to send money home, but new technology offers an escape.
Letting an algorithm pick your music is now second nature, but what gets lost in the flow?
Is PrEP, the drug that prevents HIV, bringing revolution or regression?
Kaila Jefferd-Moore ignored the headlines about Jody Wilson-Raybould, she explains—they missed the point.
A photo essay.
New poetry from Rachel Crummey.
Writing from Quebec. Translated by Melissa Bull.