February 5, 2004 | Filed under: Science, Technology & Environment
The rash of health information bombarding the public can stymie anyone trying to stay or get healthy. Should we swallow supplements, exercise until we drop, or stick with Canada’s Food Guide? Some of us are ... Read More »
The rash of health information bombarding the public can stymie anyone trying to stay or get healthy. Should we swallow supplements, exercise until we drop, or stick with Canada’s Food Guide? Some of us are ... Read More »
February 5, 2004 | Filed under: Science, Technology & Environment
The rash of health information bombarding the public can stymie anyone trying to stay or get healthy. Should we swallow supplements, exercise until we drop, or stick with Canada’s Food Guide? Some of us are ... Read More »
February 5, 2004 | Filed under: Science, Technology & Environment
The British writer Cyril Connolly warned that “All excursions into journalism, broadcasting, propaganda and writing for the films, however grandiose, are doomed to disappointment. To put our best into these forms is another folly, since ... Read More »
February 5, 2004 | Filed under: Sports, Health & Self-help
The oft-repeated Canadian “farm crisis” soundbite finally gets an in-depth exploration with veteran journalist and author Ingeborg Boyens’ comprehensive overview of the problems facing the family farm. Another Season’s Promise explores the farm crisis not ... Read More »
February 5, 2004 | Filed under: Politics & Current Affairs
Maureen Jennings takes her readers on a voyage through what will probably be uncharted territory for most – a quest to find the artist within. The Map of Your Mind is a kind of travel ... Read More »
February 5, 2004 | Filed under: Health & Self-help
The list of chapter titles in Ontario writer Christina Kilbourne’s debut novel reads like a poem: “Salted Fish, Smoked Fish, Pickled Fish”; “A Successful Excursion”; “Bad Eyes, A Son for Hamar.” That poetic sensibility carries ... Read More »
February 5, 2004 | Filed under: Fiction: Novels
When 10-year-old Paige Baker wanders off a camping trail to look for her dog, she has no idea of the danger she’s put herself in. Her parents, Doug and Emily, are so wrapped up in ... Read More »
February 5, 2004 | Filed under: Fiction: Novels
The relatively recent fad for irony – its use and misuse – can make it hard to know how to read some fiction. Like equally tricky efforts to be satirical, sometimes irony is evident, delicious, ... Read More »
February 5, 2004 | Filed under: Fiction: Novels
Voice is visceral, it’s of the guts, whereas the daily tinkering of today’s society is primarily cerebral: we think more than we feel, we count more than we sing. To find voice, when voice is ... Read More »
February 5, 2004 | Filed under: Fiction: Novels