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excerpt

A woman in a swimming cap splashes in a lake
Memoir

The Joy, and Science, of Cold-Water Swimming

June 30, 2022October 13, 2023 - by Kathleen McDonnell

Depressive moods and menopausal turmoil drove me to a chilly “treatment” before I even knew there was such a thing

Read More
An illustration of three phone screens showing Instagram feeds
Business

Makeup and Money: The Persuasive Pull of Beauty Influencers

January 24, 2022January 24, 2022 - by Daphné B

In the world of big cosmetics companies, authenticity has become a currency

Read More
Society

Kill the Travel Bug: The Case for Staying Put

October 4, 2021October 4, 2021 - by Lucy Ellmann

Why we prioritize globe-trotting over all else, even a plague

Read More
A photograph of Barbara Amiel and her husband, Conrad Black, in formal attire. The background shows a couple of palm trees.
Society

Love and Antisemitism in Palm Beach, Florida

October 6, 2020March 9, 2021 - by Barbara Amiel

As a newlywed, Barbara Amiel desperately wanted to fit in with Conrad Black’s Palm Beach crowd. The only problem? His country club didn’t admit Jews

Read More
Uncategorized

Why We’re So Bad at Disaster Planning

September 29, 2020September 29, 2020 - by Ethan Lou

Just because we see something coming, that doesn’t mean we can stop it

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Black and white photo of people, some on ox-drawn cart, others on donkeys or walking, as they migrate, following the Partition of India, October 1947
World

Writing in My Father’s Voice

July 31, 2020August 15, 2022 - by Madhur Anand

My parents lived through the Partition of India. To tell their stories, I had to put myself in their shoes

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Vintage and damaged photo of a girl and her father playing outdoors. The father is wearing a yellow shirt and shorts and carrying his daughter, a child with pigtails. They are standing in front of a bungalow with an open door.
Arts & Culture

Why Nostalgia Is Our New Normal

May 7, 2020December 21, 2020 - by David Berry

For hundreds of years, doctors thought nostalgia was a disease. Now, it’s a name for our modern condition

Read More
Books

Can Fiction Truly Capture the Mind of a Tyrant?

May 17, 2018November 12, 2019 - by André Forget

Dimitri Nasrallah’s new novel tells a timely story about the fall of a strongman dynasty

Read More
Society

The Consequences of Growing up without a Father

May 17, 2018November 12, 2019 - by Jamil Jivani

A growing lack of male role models in families has left young men vulnerable

Read More
Illustration by Chelsea O'Byrne
Education

How Schools Can Stop Killing Creativity

August 31, 2017April 5, 2020 - by Kelly Gallagher-Mackay

With the world in crisis, it’s more urgent than ever for students to develop original thinking

Read More

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The cover for the December 2023 issue of The Walrus, featuring an illustration of an elderly woman walking on a floating, crumbling path towards a doorway to a beach. Cover lines: The End of Retirement: Why no one can afford to stop working; How Canada–India relations crumbled. 2023 Dec Issue
The end of retirement, how Canada-India relations crumbled, why the opioid and housing crises are linked, and more!

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Or make a one-time donation

Before you go, did you know that The Walrus is a registered charity? We rely on donations and support from readers like you to keep our journalism independent and freely available online.

When you donate to The Walrus, you’re helping writers, editors, and artists produce stories like the ones you’ve just read. Every story is meticulously researched, written, and edited, before undergoing a rigorous fact-checking process. These stories take time, but they’re worth the effort, because you leave our site better informed about Canada and its people.

If you’d like to ensure we continue creating stories that matter to you, with a level of accuracy you can trust, please consider becoming a supporter of The Walrus. I know it’s tough out there with inflation and rising costs, but good journalism affects us as well, so I don’t ask this lightly.

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Hey, thank you for reading!
We hope you enjoyed this story.

Before you go, did you know that The Walrus is a registered charity? We rely on donations and support from readers like you to keep our journalism independent and freely available online. Will you join us in keeping independent journalism free and available to all?

Or make a one-time donation

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Hey, thank you for reading!
I hope you enjoyed this story.
Or make a one-time donation

Before you go, did you know that The Walrus is a registered charity? We rely on donations and support from readers like you to keep our journalism independent and freely available online.

When you donate to The Walrus, you’re helping writers, editors, and artists produce stories like the ones you’ve just read. Every story is meticulously researched, written, and edited, before undergoing a rigorous fact-checking process. These stories take time, but they’re worth the effort, because you leave our site better informed about Canada and its people.

If you’d like to ensure we continue creating stories that matter to you, with a level of accuracy you can trust, please consider becoming a supporter of The Walrus. I know it’s tough out there with inflation and rising costs, but good journalism affects us as well, so I don’t ask this lightly.

Will you join us in keeping independent journalism free and available to all?

Claire Cooper
Managing Editor, The Walrus


Hey, thank you for reading!
We hope you enjoyed this story.

Before you go, did you know that The Walrus is a registered charity? We rely on donations and support from readers like you to keep our journalism independent and freely available online. Will you join us in keeping independent journalism free and available to all?

Or make a one-time donation

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