Issue 3

Article 14 – Zephyr’s Gun

I am a self-taught artist,done a lot of things,been to a lot of places,seen a lot of things.My art is fringe and usually pretty weirdand my writing is dark–a reflectionof the world I live in.Now I live north of 55,for a long time, I love the peopledon’t really dig the weatherI try to live in…

Article 13 – 2 Poems: A Crocus & Another Storm

by Keyanna B. Ouellette Throughout my junior high and high school years I attended the Canada Scouts program, which offered me opportunities to go on adventures. One of our camping trips was in the bush somewhere between Thompson and Grand Rapids. My scout leader had told my friend and me about the Crocus. Being the…

Article 12 – From Misled to Leader: Edmund’s Transition in “The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe”

By Elizabeth Tritthart In “The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe,” C.S. Lewis transforms Edmund from a selfish and stuck-up boy to a strong and brave King. Several incidents influence his personality changes to make him worthy of being one of the eventual four rulers of Narnia. Through his journey, Edmund allows his displacement to…

Article 11 – Woodworker

By Christopher Charbonneau Deciding to go back to school is not a decision that can be made lightly. When I decided that it was time to further my own education it was only after years of making excuses. I never thought I would succeed in my studies, neither did I think that I could handle…

Article 10 – The Sundance

By Shelby Tobacco “Wee… Wee…Wee.” The sound of the eagle whistles were blowing in sync and harmonizing with the powerful drum beats. The beats were so strong and commanding, that I could physically feel them in my chest. Twelve of us, myself included, were in a trance, our eyes fixed on the “Okan” which translates…

Article 9 – Woman’s Involvement in the Fur Trade

by Mason McDowell When the European traders first came to North America “colonization was not envisaged”1 by them, so the traders brought no white women from Europe over to North America. This made it much harder for the European traders to practice their own culture and start families in North America so “instead, the traders…

Article 8 – Ohana

by Taryn McKinney One of the most inspiring quotes from the movie Lilo & Stitch is, “Ohana means family, and family means nobody gets left behind.” I used to believe this statement when I was little. I lived by that quote, and I truly believed family was everything. But is it? How long before one…

Article 7 – Defeated Hope

by Alicia Stensgard Character List Thomas (Tommy) Brown: 11-year-old Cree boy from the Pisim First Nation (located 400 km North of Thompson, MB). Known by his people as Osâwisip, meaning Brown Duck in the Cree language. Speaks both Cree and English fluently because of his father who attended Residential school in the 1930s. Has learned…

Article 6 – Bound Forever

By Hope Richards Two children, bound together by an unbreakable bond formed in the womb – Twins. They’re twins! Yet they look so different. One is a boy and the other, a girl. Their interests differ amazingly throughout their lives, but they always speak to one another about them. He tells her about the heavy…

Article 5 – Lurking Just Beneath the Darkness

by Peter Harris Introduction: My three year Bachelor of Arts degree from UCN provided me with exposure to new learning and fresh understanding. During that time I had the pleasure of enrolling in a fourth year condensed American Gothic Literature class instructed by Professor Ying Kong. This course bestowed in me a love of the…