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COVER ART
Unidentified by Love
by Josangelica Piñon, 2008
Fine art photography, 9 x 13"

Sample of Poetry from 32.4
Deciding to Wear an Enormous Hat
by Charlene Langfur

Sample of Fiction from 32.4
How to Keep Your Day Job
by Rebecca Rosenblum

Sample of Creative Non-fiction from 32.4
Seagull
by Lori Sarkadi

Also featuring an interview with
Miriam Toews.


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Volume 32.4

Turn and Face the Strange / (Changes)
Rachel Burns

From the odd, the small, the life-altering to the inevitable, this issue explores facing the strange—facing change. Each piece touches on a facet of change, whether it expresses hope, paralysis, fear, or excited anticipation. For some, change is a wishful improvement of circumstance—to be better, to be more. For others, change is almost impossibility—a protagonist immobilized, stuck, afraid. Some drag their feet at change, go unwillingly forward to face changes not of their own making. And then still others make peace with change—accept their circumstances, agree and make do with the forces around them—those which they cannot control.

In this issue, the work is almost divided up into 'chapters', wherein the writing and art complement each other in small segments. We start with hope; Charlene Langfur's poetry speaks to hopeful change, that we can be more than we are. Alex Pryce suggests that we are more than we seem, and Rebecca Rosenblum's story similarly deals with confinement of identity—of voice. The dynamics of power and perception are also explored by Sharon Knauer.

Haisla Collins' bold, but somewhat playful images are woven throughout, and to me, complement the different perspectives held in this issue. Josangelica Piñon's striking imagery open up surreal perspectives and possibilities. Shayla Duval's poem re-evaluates relationships right on the shelf, and dee Hobsbawn-Smith's asks how past influences present. Love is almost a game in Becky Adnot Haynes' story, but the winner is no longer clear. And the barebones of intimacy are all but stripped away in Hollay Ghadery's piece of creative non-fiction, where personal limits are tested in the most intimate ways. Susi Wyss' story takes a second look at true companionship, and Peggy Duffy's sounds all too familiar, but turns a stereotypical power struggle on its head.
...
In this issue we've also had the fortune of reaching out to the North—coming to us from the outskirts of Yellowknife is Laurie Sarkadi, who weaves a story of both personal connection and acceptance of her ailing mother, within the context of being connected to nature.

We're also honoured to have had the opportunity to interview Miriam Toews. In her candid, honest words, she gives voice to how many of us who write face the struggle to get pen on paper, to find balance, and to face perhaps the toughest critic and most dynamic barrier to change of all—ourselves.

On behalf of the collective, I hope that as you digest these words and images, you pull from them inspiration or new perspective—to take them with you as you face your next challenge.

Bios

Charlene Langfur is a college teacher, an organic gardener, and a rescued dog lover. She attended the Syracruse University Graduate Writing Program. Her poems have most recently appeared in Blueline, Green Mountains Review, Riverwind # 30 (Fall 2009), White Pelican, and the anthology Beloved of the Earth: 150 Poems of Grief and Gratitude.

Rebecca Rosenblum's fiction has been short-listed for the Journey Prize, the National Magazine Award, and the Danuta Gleed Award, and longlisted for the Relit Award. Her stories are forthcoming in Best Canadian Stories, Earlit Shorts, The Milan Review, and The Antigonish Review. Her collection, Once, won the Metcalf-Rooke Award. Rebecca lives, works, and writes in Toronto.

Laurie Sarkadi is a writer/broadcaster, singer-songwriter living off-grid with her husband and three sons near Yellowknife, NWT. Her work has been cited for national magazine, newspaper, and television awards. She produces an Inuktitut daily news program, Igalaaq (Window), for CBC North Television and is a frequent contributor to Canadian Geographic magazine.



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