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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 129, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIt's time to revisit Barbara. The thought hit me as if winging through the frost-covered window, a voice ordering me to dig out Barbara's letters, see what was there. Barbara, my childhood pen pal, died in June 1966,...
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 129, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedDONALEE MOULTON 's poetry has appeared in Prairie Fire, the Dalhousie Review, the South Shore Review, the Antigonish Review, Carousel, Fireweed, and Whetstone, among other periodicals. She is the former publisher and...
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 129, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedJAMES OWENS' most recent book is Family Portrait with Scythe (Bottom Dog Press, 2020). His poems and translations appear widely in literary journals, including recent or upcoming issues of Grain, the Dalhousie Review,...
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 129, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAs real as old Kodaks on thick glossy paper with scalloped white borders, certain images from my childhood are etched in my memory. A defining one is of my father hitchhiking alone on the highway in full view of his wife...
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 129, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedONE thing was for damn sure: he was done being Darrell. What a lame name, people should think about the names they gave their children. Darrell made you think of cold baloney sandwiches and bus drivers. "Steve," on the...
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 129, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAssignment 1. Write an essay examining the ways in which Tim Roth's character in his first scene in Quentin Tarantino's movie The Hateful Eight is similar to Thomas Bernhard's narrator in Goethe Dies. Assignment 2....
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 129, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedRICHARD LUFTIG is a professor emeritus of educational psychology and special education at Miami University in Ohio who now resides in California. His poems have appeared in numerous literary journals in Canada, the...
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 129, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedJAMES OWENS' most recent book is Family Portrait with Scythe (Bottom Dog Press, 2020). His poems and translations appear widely in literary journals, including recent or upcoming issues of Grain, the Dalhousie Review,...
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 129, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedLouise de Kiriline Lawrence's life was filled with extraordinary events from the beginning. Born into Swedish aristocracy in 1894, she turned her back on privilege and trained as a nurse during the First World War,...
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 129, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedFrom a distance, Collins Bay Penitentiary resembled a medieval castle, grey stone walls with pointed towers at the four corners of the building, and a steeple in the centre of the red metal roof that towered even higher....
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 129, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedTHIS is a girl in a book setting. I've put her in a coffee shop. She entered through a door alone and the bell rang out, alerting the whole busy, bustling scene to her presence. The heroine is here. Now the story can...
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 129, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedMAZZY SLEEP is a 10-year-old from Toronto who began writing during the pandemic. She has written over 1,000 dark fantasy/horror poems and short stories, as well as two feature screenplays. Her work has appeared or is...
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 129, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe arts have always dealt with the ills afflicting humanity--such as death, suffering, and war. Today, we are living in a period of great upheaval marked by climate change, armed conflicts, massive population...
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 129, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedCamped in a cluster of tents and vehicles at various blockades along a series of remote roads on British Columbia's Vancouver Island, land defenders have been protecting old-growth forests around Fairy Creek since August...
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 129, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAs I read his journal, I was struck by what we two Jims had in common. Was it destiny that I, of all people, should find his diary? In addition to having the same first name, he and I were both baby boomers (born in...
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 129, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedTHE night Wade met the Toddler, he had a crack rock in his pocket, a broken heart, and new shoes: faux suede loafers--navy blue--like his old man's. Gwen had left him for some transplant from the East Coast with track...
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 129, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedA day in my life keeps coming back to me, which means it must matter somehow. I don't know when exactly it happened during the two years I went to preschool at the First Baptist Church in Asheville, North Carolina. The...
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 129, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThere are two paths into programming, I realized as I watched the students in my labs at the University of Toronto handle things like the trigonometric cake cuts with ease. You can enter it either through math or...
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 129, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe little boys on the swing have no idea who Francis Drake was or the suffering he unleashed on the world. They do not know Frobisher, or Raleigh, or Hawkins, or Columbus or any of those disastrous men. They know how to...
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 129, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe city I was headed to--Puerto Montt--was only connected by rail in 1913. Once completed, this north-south railway served to bind the urban north with the agricultural regions of Chile's central valley and south....