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Loving poetry is like giving yourself a lobotomy because your thoughts are just too damn sublime. It’s like suddenly becoming ...
On his birth centenary on August 7, we explore the brilliance of Keshto Mukherjee — the master of the slurred soliloquy, slow ...
These words might trip you up, but take comfort in knowing you’re not alone. Even the most seasoned linguists stumble over ...
T hat peon to Ted Hughes’ CROW, Max Porter’s compact tone poem, Grief is the Thing With Feathers, has been adapted and ...
Six decades of civil-rights efforts haven’t budged it, and the usual prescriptions—including reparations—offer no lasting ...
The inventive fictions of Michael Farrell, Lucy Nelson and Alex Cothren display flashes of brilliance and humour.
Recommendations and the latest reviews from the Telegraph critics on the ground at Edinburgh International Festival and ...
To recap, generative AI tools work by identifying trends in vast "datasets" and using them to make predictions in response to ...
Her lyrics are precise, narratively disciplined, and emotionally legible. But to fans raised on the mazes of Dylan and Joni, ...
With so much attention being given to the misuse of AI by attorneys, and all the ethical pitfalls occasioned by such misuse, ...
Between July 31 and Aug. 9, StarPhoenix reporter Julia Peterson reviews all 23 of this year's Saskatoon Fringe shows.
Tuesday's column about the winner of a weed limerick contest published barely seven of 66 poems submitted by readers. Here are some more good non-winners.