Vol. 1 / Issue 1
Une revue littéraire et culturelle bilingue
Vol. 2 / Issue 3
Vol. 2 / Issue 2
June 05, 2024
A Look Back in Time ... Paul Auster (February 3, 1947 - April 30, 2024)
"The adroit self-consciousness of his writing made him our supreme post-modernist.​" - Ian McEwan
And so, yes, read his books; his essays, but here, we offer his Paris Review interview: Paul Auster, The Art of Fiction No. 178, where he touches upon what it is to be an artist: "If you want to become an artist, you have to learn everything you possibly can and then you have to do everything you possibly can to forget it. And the things that you cannot forget will form the foundation of your work." On writing: "Slowly blundering my way toward consciousness."
Because his stance in front of the metafictional mirror is now frozen ...
“The world is so unpredictable. Things happen suddenly, unexpectedly. We want to feel we are in control of our own existence. In some ways we are, in some ways we're not. We are ruled by the forces of chance and coincidence.”
The Story of My Typewriter, Sam Messer
more art = a greater tolerance
more art = a greater tolerance
Vol. 2 / Issue 1
January 04, 2024
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In his home in Saint-Paul-de-Vence, France in 1979. Ralph Gatti/AFP/Getty Images
more art = a greater tolerance
more art = a greater tolerance
Vol. 1 / Issue 4
September 18, 2023
© Ted Streshinsky/Corbis/Corbis via Getty images
more art = a greater tolerance
Vol. 1 / Issue 3
April 1, 2023
more art = a greater tolerance
Vol. 1 / Issue 2
December 29, 2022
A Look Back in Time ...
more art = a greater tolerance
more art = a greater tolerance
Vol. 1 / Issue 1
October 3, 2022
ON QUITTING ALCOHOL, an excerpt from author Josip Novakovich's forthcoming book, Vignettes, Montreal Publishing Company, June 2023.
AS PER USUAL, an essay by Tamas Dobozy. "Each photograph emits the opposite of testimony," writes Tamas Dobozy in his collection of 21 essays, each one based on a photograph by Karl Griffiths-Fulton, entitled, The Ministry of Loss.
THE LITTLE BOOK YOU HAVEN'T READ, BUT SHOULD, a review by Christian Fennell of Sheila Watson's The Double Hook . A book written in 1959 that still reads today as if it was written tomorrow.