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Mindblown: a blog about philosophy.
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In Review: The Week of November 4th
This week we cheered for the Rogers Writers’ Trust Fiction winner (Andrรฉ Alexis, Days by Moonlight from Coach House Books), chatted with cover designer Kilby Smith-McGregor, relearned some devastating truths about our food consumption, shared some stellar weekend reads, and much more.
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Weekend Reads: 3 Picks to Add Some Danger to Your Downtime
For readers who want to add a bit of danger into their downtime, or for those already planning to get into a bit of trouble this weekend, here are three new titles that’ll take things up a notch.
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Under the Cover: Lost Feast
In Lost Feast (ECW Press), food expert Lenore Newman delves into the history of the foods we have literally loved to death, impacts of industrialized agriculture on the food we produce, and what that means for our food future. Below, Lenore tells us about her research into culinary extinctions, the present state of the global…
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Two poems from Marlene Cookshaw’s Mowing
Marlene Cookshaw’s first collection of poetry in over ten years is a bounty: Mowing (Brick Books) meditates on death and grief, community, and connection to land that invites readers into a harvest filled with images of high grasses and farm animals. Below we share two poems from her collection, “Sideways” and “Convalescence.”
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In Review: The Week of October 28th
This week we launched Off/Kilter, our new column devoted to books of the magical, surreal variety, shared some monster-approved books, got a behind-the-scenes of audiobook making, and much more!
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On Leaving Home, and Writing: Interview with Phillip Ernest
Author Phillip Ernest fled his home of New Liskeard, Ontario at the age of fifteen to live in an impoverished life in Toronto until he was twenty-eight. Later in life, he learned Sanskrit from a book, earned his BA in South Asian Studies and moved to India where he now lives. Below his publisher Linda…
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Four Monster-Approved Booook Picks for Halloween
In today’s Hallowe’en-perfect musing, we wondered: if literature’s classic monsters had a literary appetite, what would they read?
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Off/Kilter: Dark literature through a Canadian lens
Welcome to Off/Kilter, a brand new blog column on All Lit Up devoted toย books of a magical and surreal nature, featuring alternate realities, dystopian worlds, strange beasties and more. From the dark and fantastical to the joyfully absurd, weโll explore how books within related genres create a space for us to dream bigger and encourage…
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In House: ECW’s Bespeak Audio imprint
As the demand for audio content continues to gain popularity in Canada, the fine folks at ECW Press continue to deliver: dipping their headphones into audiobook production in 2009 with their first, they’ve since launched a new imprint, Bespeak Audio, which shares essential Canadian literature that needs to be heard as an audiobook. Below ECW’s…
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In Review: The Week of October 21st
This week we talked grief and writing, land and poetry, King of the Hill, punk music, and more.
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First Fiction Friday: Butterflies, Zebras, Moonbeams
Ceilidh Michelle’s debut novelย Butterflies, Zebras, Moonbeams (Palimpsest Press) is a punk music, coming-of-age mashup about a young non-binary woman making music while contending with nepotism, friends with drug addiction, and her own personal growth. Below Palimpsest Press’ Abigail Roelens’ puts it well: “The novel has all the punk and circumstance to satisfy concert lovers, all…
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On Land and Writing: Interview with Douglas Walbourne-Gough
Mixed/adopted Miโkmaw and Newfoundland poet Douglas Walbourne-Gough took time to chat with us about his debut Crow Gulch (Goose Lane Editions), a poetry collection that attempts to honour and dispel the stigma surrounding the community of Crow Gulch in Corner Brook, Newfoundland. Read on for our interview with Douglas on writing his collection, his major…
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Writer’s Block: Fawn Parker
We talk with Montreal-based author of the new novel Set-Point (ARP Books) about writing rituals and her perfect writing day (both involve early starts and coffee), why Luanne Platter from King of the Hill is her favourite fictional character, and the novel she’s working on next.
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Under the Cover: Writing grief in Dance Me to the End
When author Alison Acheson’s husband Marty was diagnosed with terminal ALS, Alison took to writing and reading as a way to cope. In her evocative memoir Dance Me to the End (Brindle & Glass Publishing) she describes the emotional toll of watching a loved one suffer from a terminal disease and eventually die, mixed with…
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