-
Recent Posts
- My Favourite Reads of 2021
- My Favourite Reads from 2020
- Art, Lesbian Love, Palestine, Cairo, and Family in the Novel THE PHILISTINE by Leila Marshy
- Fluid Queer Identities and Food Justice in the Hi-Lo YA YOU’RE YOU by Mette Bach
- A Witty Dissertation on Love, Relationships, and Academia Itself: THEORY by Dionne Brand
Archives
Categories
Twitter Updates
- RT @MissWestWrites: Oh Yvonne, sweet child… https://t.co/ia15m8eXyq 3 hours ago
- RT @NabenRuthnum: The extreme cynicism of a massive company firing their entire diversity initiative after a bad financial quarter is incre… 3 hours ago
- RT @DailyJulianne: I’ve been thinking a lot about MeToo and the men who had their lives “ruined” by assault or harassment allegations, so…I… 3 hours ago
- 4 of 5 stars to Boy-Crazy Stacey by Ann M. Martin goodreads.com/review/show/47… 3 hours ago
- Marked as dnf: Delilah Green Doesn't Care by Ashley Herring Blake goodreads.com/review/show/43… 10 hours ago
Tag Archives: Dani Couture
“a rust-belt affection for the way things flew apart”: A Review of Dani Couture’s Poetry Collection YAW
It only seems fitting that my review of this sparse, short book follows in the same tradition, so I don’t think I’ll be writing much about Toronto-based Dani Couture’s 57-page collection of poetry YAW. But don’t take that to mean I … Continue reading
The Word on the Street is Queer: Also, Watch for a Rae Spoon Book Launch Near You
The Word on the Street is a national festival centred on, you guessed it, words, in all their diverse glimmering glory. Taking place in Vancouver, Lethbridge, Saskatoon, Kitchner, Toronto, and Halifax and starting in a few days (depending on where … Continue reading
Posted in Bisexual, Canadian, Farzana Doctor, Fiction, Halifax, Hiromi Goto, Indigenous, Lesbian, Mariko Tamaki, Montreal, News, Poetry, Queer, Toronto, Trans, Trans Masculine, Transgender, Vancouver
Tagged books, Dani Couture, Elizabeth Bachinsky, Janet Marie Rogers, Jen Currin, Karleen Pendleton Jiménez, Leah Horlick, literary festival, literature, Liz Bugg, Rae Spoon, Vivek Shraya
4 Comments