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Author Tim Bowling in running for fiction prize

Edmonton-based novelist and poet Tim Bowling is among the five writers who’ve made the shortlist for the 2025 Atwood Gibson Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize. Bowling, previously a two-time Governor General’s Award finalist, is in the running for his first collection of short stories, Graveyard Shift at the Lemonade Stand. Read More
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Jamie Sarkonak: The Liberal plan for crime? More illusions of change

Following a summer of horrific crimes — a fatal domestic assault in the street by a man on release, the stabbing of a grandmother in front of a grocery store, the execution of a loving father in front of his children during a break-in, to name a few — the Liberals want you to know that they’ve got a plan for justice reform.  Read More
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Derek Burney: World order unravelling as Trump pulls at the strings

As the recent military parade and meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) in Beijing demonstrated, the global power structure is unravelling. The magnetic pull of the western alliance is cracking while that of our authoritarian adversaries is intensifying. In the words of the Wall Street Journal's Yaroslav Trofimov, the image of China’s Xi Jinping, flanked by leaders of fellow nuclear powers Russia and North Korea, as ICBMs rolled through flag-waving crowds in Tiananmen Square, “marked a new phase in the redrawing of the international order." Read More
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Colby Cosh: The separatists of Quebec and Alberta float a curious alliance

As the Herald’s incomparable Don Braid reported on Friday, there was an extraordinary moment of ecumenical outreach in Alberta last week, as Paul St-Pierre Plamondon, leader of the resurgent Parti Québécois, visited Calgary and pressed the flesh with some Alberta separatists. Plamondon was invited for a “fireside chat” by the University of Calgary School of Public Policy, and rehearsed familiar arguments for Quebec separatism. Quebec never asked for the constitutional settlement of 1982, or for that matter the one of 1867; the French language is, as ever, in precipitous decline on this continent; the federal government, unhealthily dependent on ethnic clientele-building, makes lunatic policy decisions and implements them crookedly, etc., etc. Read More
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Science says watching your favourite old shows reduces stress

Have you watched Severence yet? It’s the most nominated show going into this year’s Emmys! What about The Studio — I hear Seth Rogen is a revelation! No? Well, surely you’ve caught up on The White Lotus, finished Succession, or figured out why everyone is talking about Adolescence. If not, then what are you even doing with your life? Read More
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