Poles Apart

If Polonium remains just a portal, it will likely continue to have a Twitter following that can be counted on one hand

It’s early April, and Tomek Kniat stares at his computer screen in the basement of his Scarborough, Ontario, home. His usual desktop image of a polar bear with gentle eyes is covered by a graph that zigs sharply higher and higher, reaching peaks that were foreign to Kniat only three or four days earlier. Is this… Continue reading Poles Apart

Swerve Ahead

“I hate mags that make you feel that if you don't have the right haircut or eat at the right restaurant or don't know the right people, your life is shit,” says Youngblut. Photography by Heather Saitz

Shelley Youngblut had a problem. How can I get people like me to feel they can do home improvement? She was working on art ideas for a cover story titled “What’s the Worst That Can Happen?” So, when the Swerve editor-in-chief saw someone dressed as Mike Holmes at a Halloween party, she thought, Wouldn’t it be funny to put him… Continue reading Swerve Ahead

Lost and Bound

Illustration by Gracia Lam

Andrew Westoll was on a mission. His motorboat, loaded with food and supplies, pushed upriver. Along the banks of the Sipaliwini River the foliage was dense, the layers of varying shades of greens and browns occasionally reverberating with bird cries. He was deep in the neotropical jungle of southern Suriname, the least-travelled country in South… Continue reading Lost and Bound

Not All Smurfs and Sunshine

Photography by Jeff Kirk

Updated February 2, 2011, 12:41 p.m. Chris Jones dials a number in Scottsburg, Indiana, and Gail Bond answers with her slow Midwestern twang. “My name is Chris,” he says. “I’m a writer with Esquire and I’d like to write a story about your son’s journey home.” Gail’s voice tightens and she begins to cry. Then Chris cries,… Continue reading Not All Smurfs and Sunshine

Standing on the Shoulders of a Giant

The uncompromising legacy of George Bain, Canada's first national affairs columnist

Updated: January 5, 2011 1:12a.m. By 1973, George Bain was restless. He’d been writing The Globe and Mail’s Ottawa column since 1964, and though he’d covered a fascinating, occasionally tumultuous, time in Canada’s political life—including the 1967 Centennial, Trudeaumania and the War Measures Act—he was up for a new challenge. Globe editor Richard “Dic” J. Doyle didn’t want… Continue reading Standing on the Shoulders of a Giant

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