What’s Mine Is Yours
The three nominated authors for this year’s Amazon First Novel Award Youth Short Story category reveal the stories they most want to tell
Read MoreFact-based journalism that sparks the Canadian conversation
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The three nominated authors for this year’s Amazon First Novel Award Youth Short Story category reveal the stories they most want to tell
Read MoreFresh off winning this year’s Amazon First Novel Award, Stéphane Larue discusses how the backdoor POV of a restaurant’s busiest employee became an unforgettable tale of survival
Read MoreCanada is in a strong position to keep pace with the insatiable demand for bandwidth
Read MoreCate Freeborn wins the Youth Short Story category for “74 Percent of the Victims of Nonfamily Abductions are Girls”
Read MoreThe six shortlisted authors for this year’s Amazon First Novel Award share the literary firebrands that inspire them to push their own fictional boundaries
Read MoreAn interview with the winner of the 2019 Amazon Canada First Novel Award on the state of trans stories in fiction and on making diverse, once-quieted voices come to life
Read MoreWinner of the Amazon First Novel Award in the Youth Short Story Category for 2019
Read MoreNominees for the 2019 Amazon Canada First Novel Award Youth Short Story category share how they find their voice amid the cacophony of the information age.
Read MoreIn light of the current trend towards blurring fiction and memoir, we asked the nominees of the 2019 Amazon Canada First Novel Award to reveal exactly how much of themselves is infused in their works
Read MoreIl y a 100 ans, le 24 mai 1918, les femmes canadiennes obtenaient le droit de vote aux élections fédérales pour la première fois. Aujourd’hui, nous célébrons cette étape importante tout en réfléchissant au sort de ceux et celles qui en ont été exclues et à la lutte – loin d’être terminée – pour l’égalité des droits.
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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.
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?
Did you know that The Walrus is a registered charity? We rely on donations from our readers to keep our journalism independent and thriving. That means the story you’re reading was made possible by readers like you.
With the support of our community, every story is meticulously researched, written, and edited, before undergoing a rigorous fact-checking process, so that you always have access to stories you trust. If you believe in this work, consider joining your fellow readers in supporting Canada’s conversation and donate to The Walrus.
Did you know that The Walrus is a registered charity? We rely on donations from our readers to keep our journalism independent and thriving. That means the story you’re reading was made possible by readers like you.
With the support of our community, every story is meticulously researched, written, and edited, before undergoing a rigorous fact-checking process, so that you always have access to stories you trust. If you believe in this work, consider joining your fellow readers in supporting Canada’s conversation and donate to The Walrus.