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Peterborough | Speculating Canada: Canadian Horror, Science Fiction, and Fantasy
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Speculating Canada: Canadian Horror, Science Fiction, and Fantasy. Challenging the barriers of the way we define reality. October 3, 2015. Speculating Canada on Trent Radio Episode 48: A Discussion of the Work of Max Turner. You can listen to this episode of Speculating Canada on Trent Radio at the link below. Http:/ www.dereknewmanstille.ca/media/trentradio/150807 episode51 max-turner.mp3. Explore Trent Radio at http:/ www.trentradio.ca. You can explore Max Turner’s work at http:/ maxturner.ca/. Night R...
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Mary Renault | Speculating Canada: Canadian Horror, Science Fiction, and Fantasy
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Speculating Canada: Canadian Horror, Science Fiction, and Fantasy. Challenging the barriers of the way we define reality. Tag Archives: Mary Renault. August 14, 2015. Bronze Age MagicA review of Caitlin Sweet’s The Door in the Mountain. ChiZine Publications, 2014). Caitlin Sweet’s The Door in the Mountain. And Bull From The Sea. Archaeology is speculative, imagining the lives of people long dead from the refuse they left behind and the places they eventually abandoned, and perhaps it is this speculative ...
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reviews | Speculating Canada: Canadian Horror, Science Fiction, and Fantasy
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Speculating Canada: Canadian Horror, Science Fiction, and Fantasy. Challenging the barriers of the way we define reality. October 25, 2016. No Longer Worn Down. No Longer Worn Down. A review of Amal El-Mohtar’s”Seasons of Glass and Iron” in The Starlit Wood. Ed Navah Wolfe and Dominik Parisien, Saga, 2016). To discover more about Amal El-Mohtar, visit her website at https:/ amalelmohtar.com/. Posted in Fiction Book Reviews. October 23, 2016. Stigma is StickyA review of Nalo Hopkinson’s The Chaos. To disr...
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family conflict | Speculating Canada: Canadian Horror, Science Fiction, and Fantasy
https://speculatingcanada.ca/tag/family-conflict
Speculating Canada: Canadian Horror, Science Fiction, and Fantasy. Challenging the barriers of the way we define reality. Tag Archives: family conflict. August 14, 2015. Bronze Age MagicA review of Caitlin Sweet’s The Door in the Mountain. ChiZine Publications, 2014). Caitlin Sweet’s The Door in the Mountain. And Bull From The Sea. Archaeology is speculative, imagining the lives of people long dead from the refuse they left behind and the places they eventually abandoned, and perhaps it is this speculati...
speculatingcanada.ca
Caitlin Sweet | Speculating Canada: Canadian Horror, Science Fiction, and Fantasy
https://speculatingcanada.ca/tag/caitlin-sweet
Speculating Canada: Canadian Horror, Science Fiction, and Fantasy. Challenging the barriers of the way we define reality. Tag Archives: Caitlin Sweet. February 12, 2016. Speculating Canada on Trent Radio Episode 60: An Interview with Caitlin Sweet. You can listen to this episode of Speculating Canada on Trent Radio at the link below. Http:/ www.dereknewmanstille.ca/media/trentradio/160112 episode64 caitlin sweet.mp3. Tagged Aegean Bronze Age. August 14, 2015. ChiZine Publications, 2014). Is a mytho-archa...
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Fiction Book Reviews | Speculating Canada: Canadian Horror, Science Fiction, and Fantasy
https://speculatingcanada.ca/category/fiction-book-reviews
Speculating Canada: Canadian Horror, Science Fiction, and Fantasy. Challenging the barriers of the way we define reality. Category Archives: Fiction Book Reviews. October 25, 2016. No Longer Worn Down. No Longer Worn Down. A review of Amal El-Mohtar’s”Seasons of Glass and Iron” in The Starlit Wood. Ed Navah Wolfe and Dominik Parisien, Saga, 2016). To discover more about Amal El-Mohtar, visit her website at https:/ amalelmohtar.com/. Posted in Fiction Book Reviews. October 23, 2016. To disrupt hegemonic i...
rurallifejournal.com
A Year of Pies: A Seasonal Tour of Home Baked Pies | Rural Life Journal
https://rurallifejournal.com/2012/12/07/a-year-of-pies
Cultivating commonsense and an independent spirit. Resources for a Sustainable Life. About Rural Life Journal. A Year of Pies: A Seasonal Tour of Home Baked Pies. December 7, 2012. February 28, 2013. A Year of Pies. A Seasonal Tour of Home Baked Pies. 2012 Lark Crafts, 176 pp, $19.95. Be warned, every page of Ashley English’s. A Year of Pies. Makes your mouth water! And Chicken Pot Pie. To Cranberry Mince Tarts. And Brandy and Spice Apple Hand Pies. The variety in this book is amazing. English provides a...
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fantasy | Speculating Canada: Canadian Horror, Science Fiction, and Fantasy
https://speculatingcanada.ca/tag/fantasy
Speculating Canada: Canadian Horror, Science Fiction, and Fantasy. Challenging the barriers of the way we define reality. June 7, 2016. Speculating Canada on Trent Radio Episode 66:. In this episode of Speculating Canada on Trent Radio, I have a chance to do an audio interview with Julie Czerneda. I have previously interviewed Julie in text format, but wanted a chance to share her spoken words with you. You can listen to this episode of Speculating Canada on Trent Radio at the link below. August 14, 2015.
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psychiatric disability | Speculating Canada: Canadian Horror, Science Fiction, and Fantasy
https://speculatingcanada.ca/tag/psychiatric-disability
Speculating Canada: Canadian Horror, Science Fiction, and Fantasy. Challenging the barriers of the way we define reality. Tag Archives: psychiatric disability. August 5, 2015. A review of Max Turner’s Night Runner. Harper Trophy Canada, 2008). Night Runner, like vampirism itself, is about radical change, coping with different social and emotional pressures and the process of discovery. To discover more about the work of Max Turner, visit his website at http:/ maxturner.ca. Posted in Fiction Book Reviews.
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myth | Speculating Canada: Canadian Horror, Science Fiction, and Fantasy
https://speculatingcanada.ca/tag/myth
Speculating Canada: Canadian Horror, Science Fiction, and Fantasy. Challenging the barriers of the way we define reality. October 23, 2016. Stigma is StickyA review of Nalo Hopkinson’s The Chaos. Margaret McElderry Books, 2012). As she frequently does, Nalo Hopkinson uses her novel The Chaos. To disrupt hegemonic ideas of normalcy, questioning what is ‘normal’ and using the supernatural and magical to point out the way that the norms we create are equally strange. The Chaos. The boundaries of categories ...
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