Letter from Guatemala, by Guy Tiphane
Salvador Dali's images of The Divine Comedy in Antigua, Guatemala
Canto 13: The Wood of the Suicides:
“Look well, for here one sees things which in words would be incredible.
SENTENCE originated the way most projects like this do—as a potentially exciting form of private diversion. I was looking, somewhat abstractly, for a different way of "doing" narrative—one that might potentially be as comfortable for me as a certain kind of an infinitely rolling, archetypal and (admittedly) largely non-existent Russian sentence used to be, back in my "first" life of an aspiring underground writer in Leningrad, USSR—a lifetime ago. And so, rather on a lark, I started writing those endlessly sinuous, instantaneously self-adjusting and self-correcting, memory-based stories, where everything happens in two or more dimensions of time and space, and where past and present constantly clash and dovetail and converge. It is, in a way, an experiment in the approximated simultaneity of the thought-word continuum, a running comment on the very process of writing as a mode of self-expression—and one, at that, unfolding in a non-native language.
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Mikhail Iossel was born in Leningrad, USSR (now St. Petersburg, Russia), where he worked as an electromagnetic engineer and belonged to an organization of samizdat writers before immigrating to the United States in 1986. He is the author, most recently, of Love Like Water, Love Like Fire (winner of the 2021 QWF Paragraphe Hugh MacLennan Prize for Fiction), Notes from Cyberground: Trumpland and My Old Soviet Feeling. Founding director of the Summer Literary Seminars international literary programs, he is a frequent contributor to The New Yorker, and his stories and essays have also appeared in The New York Times Magazine, Foreign Policy, Best American Short Stories, and elsewhere. A Guggenheim, National Endowment for the Arts, and Stegner Fellow, Iossel has taught in universities throughout the United States and is associate professor of English at Concordia University in Montreal. |
Salvador Dali's images of The Divine Comedy in Antigua, Guatemala
Canto 13: The Wood of the Suicides:
“Look well, for here one sees things which in words would be incredible.
An Insider’s View of the NDP Leadership Convention (continued)
By Louise Tremblay Matchett


"Let’s remember that Venice is a fish, after all. She sprang from the lagoon like a miraculous birth. If she is to swim freely, her waters must be respected and protected. How can we allow these titans of steel and smoke to threaten the vitality of the most original city in the world?”

Le Funambule  © Marie-Danielle Croteau, Josée Bisaillon et les éditions Les400 coups, 2010
Works by Stéphane Poulin, Marie-Louise Gay, Stéphane Jorisch, Janice Nadeau, Michael Martchenko, Barbara Reid, Philippe Béha, and others on the block at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts.