Quill and Quire

BOOK REVIEWS

By Gregory Scofield

Never mind Canada’s French-English “founding nation” idea: Métis people are the founding nation. Created out of mixed cultures – French or Scottish fur traders married to Cree women – and combining precolonial and colonial history, ... Read More »

February 11, 2004 | Filed under: Poetry

By

The self-titled yearly anthology Drawn and Quarterly, now on its fifth volume, is an impressive, full-colour tome that introduces North America to some of the world’s best new comic book talent, as well as providing ... Read More »

February 11, 2004 | Filed under: Anthologies

By Janice Kulyk Keefer

Literary history has tended to relegate New Zealand’s Katherine Mansfield to the fringes of modernism, despite the fact that as an expatriate living in London she lived very much within its maelstrom, moving easily among ... Read More »

February 11, 2004 | Filed under: Fiction: Novels

By James King

Many novels are written around real lives, ranging from books that are near-biographies of major figures to concoctions based upon a bare historical mention, such as Jacqueline Park’s 1997 The Secret Book of Grazia dei ... Read More »

February 11, 2004 | Filed under: Fiction: Novels