I Didn't Come Here to Make Friends: An Exchange with Michael Lista
Lista's latest book, The Scarborough, is set on the weekend in 1992 when Paul Bernardo and Karla Homolka abducted, tortured and killed Kristin French.
Lista's latest book, The Scarborough, is set on the weekend in 1992 when Paul Bernardo and Karla Homolka abducted, tortured and killed Kristin French.
Where do I end and you begin brings together twenty artists, many born in the 1980s, all from countries that print money with the queen.
Grants, she says, are vital to the work of freelance investigative journalists.
Does a song to a speed bump, if deftly done, carry as much artistic heft as moving sustained elegy?
The Issue 51 contributor discusses her feature on the Aleut internment.
I’ve become a sports fan, which, as it turns out, is not the opposite of a political intellectual.
The justification of torture as a means to ensure truth and safety is not a new one.
Come by Ryerson on Sunday, June 22.
A new exhibit at the Canadian Centre for Architecture.
The cover story of our Spring 2014 issue chronicles the development of Quebec’s hydroelectric industry and its impact on rural New England.
Our best bet for learning the truth about Noah may not lie with archaeologists.
Horse racing is, by its nature, more about action than any other sport.
The Game of Thrones rape scene was disrespectfully handled but the ensuing criticism sets an encouraging precedent.
When aggregators have an explicit political purpose, even innocuous videos can become tacit pro-life arguments.
Reporting from a conflict zone becomes even more difficult when the violence is wholly unpredictable.
Our unpaid intern doesn't believe in unpaid internships. Let her explain.
The author discusses the influences on her Man Booker-nominated novel A Tale for the Time Being.
There’s a strangely pervasive idea, borne either of scenes taken out of context or just of willful misunderstanding, that Girls endorses its characters’ behaviour.
The unjustified attack on voters from out-of-province comes from a page in the PQ’s playbook that dates back to the 1995 referendum.
Singles is out March 25.