News

Iryn Tushabe’s debut novel, about two sisters bonding in the face of tragedy, compelled me to look into my own relationships ...
My husband and I had been visiting from our home in the UK, where we live as expats. We share neither the same citizenship ...
The push to sanitize school collections erases what literature is for: knowledge, discovery, the freedom to think ...
Pope Leo XIV, the new pope as of 2025, views artificial intelligence (AI) as one of the most critical challenges facing humanity today. In his first formal audience at the Vatican, he explicitly ...
Explore how tariffs are testing ties between Northern neighbours, the death of the middle class musician, Afghanistan’s lost generation, and more.
Be SURE your money goes into Canadian pockets,” recommends a gin advertisement. These words sound like a response to the ...
Bill C-5, his flagship legislation packed with the ambitious economic promises he’s staked his mandate on. Its passage shows ...
National branding campaigns are crowding out harder truths about the country we live in ...
How closely have you been reading our online stories this past week? Take The Walrus Weekly Quiz to find out—released every ...
After Confederation, some of the country’s oldest records were stashed in a loft in the reading room of the Centre Block on Parliament Hill. That’s where a fire started in 1916 that destroyed the ...
When Gaspereau acquired Clarke’s Execution Poems, Clarke thought it would be a chapbook—small, paper covers, maybe stapled. Released in the fall of 2000, Execution Poems was like no chapbook ever ...