Plenitude magazine, Canada’s queer literary magazine, is seeking a Film Review Intern to cover the Toronto Inside Out Film Festival, which runs from May 21 – May 31, 2015. The reviewer will write ten short reviews (400-500 words each), which will be posted during the festival (1-2 per...
Latest Stories
Brian Francis, Toronto
“I came out when I was twenty-one. At the time I was going to school at Western University in London, Ontario. There was a place downtown called Mandala Book Store that sold meditation CDs and crystals and other new age type stuff. It’s still there, on Central Avenue. I associate that place...
Fishing for Family: A Review of Arleen Paré’s Lake of Two Mountains
By Sugar le Fae Lake of Two Mountains, Arleen Paré’s new poetry collection, is a rich meditation on place, memory, nostalgia, and loss. Paré interweaves vignettes of family history with kaleidoscopic bursts of lake imagery, biographies of local monks, maps, plants and animals, place names, and...
From the Paint Stains
Rachel Charlene Lewis [mks_dropcap style=”square” size=”35″ bg_color=”#505556″ txt_color=”#ffffff”]I[/mks_dropcap] keep losing my colouring; I am a blob of human. I should probably see a therapist, but for now I’ll stick to drinking a lot of...
Kay Ulanday Barrett on Community, Art and Activism
Interview by Rachna Contractor Kay Ulanday Barrett is a poet, performer, and educator who draws from his experience as a “disabled, pin@y-amerikan transgender queer in the US” to create art about community, culture, food, struggle, and resistance. He performs on campuses throughout the...
Jane Eaton Hamilton
Jane Eaton Hamilton (Vancouver) “I am a dyke, a visual artist, a writer who longs for the sentences I read to be painted instead of typed. Can I tell you how excited I was when a friend recommended the beautifully composed The Last Nude, by Ellis Avery? This is a novel about the nature of art...
Forgetting Sarah Marshall
Dina Del Bucchia and Daniel Zomparelli 1. I don’t really remember much these days, when the bones arrived I talked about paper or the way glass isn’t something I want to be around. Did you remember the way love works, I told you once in a small elevator that the world closes in...
Believe Her: A Review of Leah Horlick’s For Your Own Good
BY METTE BACH When are we going to start believing women who are brave enough to come forward to share their stories? When are we going to trust that survivors know their own bodies and experiences? These questions haunted me while I read Leah Horlick’s latest collection of poems, For Your Own Good...
Alan Woo
Alan Woo (Vancouver) “One of the most influential books for me as a gay Asian-Canadian writer has to be Wayson Choy’s The Jade Peony. It tells a tale of what growing up in Chinatown Vancouver back in the 1930s and 1940s was like. “Told in three sections, the book splits up the narration...
