As a child, it wasn’t unusual for Ann Y.K. Choi to be at work behind the counter of her family’s convenience store
Canadian authors of faith-based fiction say seeking answers in religion to the injustices of their pasts enhances their creativity and inspires their
Lynne Kutsukake’s The Translation of Love is as haunting as it is beautiful. Set in post-WWII Japan, the novel touches upon migration
Café Babanussa is a story about mental illness that has never been told before. Through the journey of a young, mixed-race woman
Canadian book publishers and literature supporters say diverse stories written by emerging writers can increase readership and are vital for enhancing Canada’s
Imagine being a child bride in pre-revolutionary Iran – suffering abuse on a daily basis, being forced into a joyless marriage and
Canada’s foreign policy is caught in a precarious balancing act between the “sunny ways” of election promises and the realpolitik of weapons
When Sheema Khan told audience members at the Aga Khan Museum that the men sitting at one of her last lectures refused
Canadian writers and educators are expressing a need for more children’s books about refugee and diaspora stories that reflect Canada’s diversity. “It
Canada is not the land of fairy tales. It is a land of opportunities, welcoming those who are daring and rebound from