Roxy Meloni
A
Omg I knew it was really bad in Quebec but not this bad. The government won't talk about it so no one is masking
At one point everyone I know had COVID last month and most were a second bout of it. My mom and I are the only ones who haven't had it. We are rarely going out now.
CovidUpdates @CovidUpdates
Source information reposted with permission from Moriarty Labs.

Canadian COVID Forecast: Feb 3-16, 2024

SEVERE: CAN, AB, BC, MB, NB, NL, North, NS, ON, PEI, QC, SK
VERY HIGH: none
HIGH: none
ELEVATED: none
MODERATE: none
LOW: none

About 1 in 19 people in Canada are CURRENTLY infected.
09:03 PM - Feb 04, 2024
01:47 AM - Feb 05, 2024
Avatar Avatar Avatar
0
6
5
kat4obama
A
Protect yourselves out there.

- Wearing a surgical mask near a sick person: 90% chance of infection after an hour.🤒
- Wearing N95 respirator: 20% chance. 😷
- Both people in N95: 0.4% chance. 😷😷
11:32 PM - Jan 18, 2024
Avatar Avatar Avatar
0
5
37
Andrea Junker
A
BREAKING: Hunter Biden gained 41 trademarks in China, made $640 million while “working” in daddy’s administration, and received $2 billion from the people behind 9/11.

Now that I got Republicans’ attention. That was actually Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump.
02:06 PM - Sep 14, 2023
Avatar Avatar Avatar
0
4
153
K. R. Wilson
A
G by Klara du Plessis and Khashayar ‘Kess’ Mohammadi consists of linked poems marbled with—or wholly consisting of—elegant multilingual word-play, sound-play, meaning-play; language intricately, joyfully languaging itself. Plus some transcribed orally composed pieces that are practically tactile.
06:26 AM - Aug 22, 2023
0
0
0
K. R. Wilson
A
thread 2 Threaded Spouts
A playwright’s muses literally inhabit her body. Or is it dissociative identity disorder? Melia McClure’s new novel All The World’s a Wonder is part script fragments, part first-person narratives, part diary entries, & all delightful. The writing is deft & clever & wonderfully …
06:48 AM - Aug 11, 2023 (Edited)
Avatar Avatar
0
1
2
K. R. Wilson
A
John Lorinc’s illuminating book Dream States is an overview of the history of cities & their systems, followed by a wide-ranging exploration of ideas of, developments toward, & dangers inherent in ‘smart cities.’ Privacy interests & Big Data are, unsurprisingly, recurring themes.
09:35 AM - Aug 09, 2023 (Edited)
0
0
0
K. R. Wilson
A
The stories in Jason Heroux’s Survivors of the Hive are both amusingly surreal and solidly grounded, now drawing you curiously forward and now stopping you with a jewel-like phrase placed deftly just so, as if with tweezers.
03:14 PM - Jul 31, 2023
0
0
0
K. R. Wilson
A
Jennifer Ackerman’s recent book What An Owl Knows is an excellent, in-depth look at the behaviour, biology, and breathtaking variety of the world’s coolest birds. 🦉
06:15 PM - Jul 28, 2023
Avatar
0
0
1
K. R. Wilson
A
My novel Call Me Stan is available in all the places. Hollay Ghadery calls it “a masterfully written piece of magic realism.” Lucy E. M. Black calls it “a clever and incredible book by a provocative and gifted writer.” Melanie on Goodreads says “I tried … but this is not for me.” 🤷🏼‍♂️ krwilson.ca
07:24 AM - Jul 26, 2023 (Edited)
0
0
0
K. R. Wilson
A
Daniele Cybulskie’s book How to Live Like a Monk: Medieval Wisdom for Modern Life is a lovely primer on the Medieval period in general and monastic life in particular, with—as the title promises—some practical takeaways for regulating our own sometimes-out-of-control lives.
04:33 PM - Jul 19, 2023
Avatar
0
0
1
K. R. Wilson
A
Mary Robinette Kowal’s Hugo-nominated novel The Spare Man is a charming, breezy SF murder mystery set on a Luna-to-Mars cruise ship. It’s essentially Nick & Nora Charles in space, complete with a perky Westie named Gimlet & a cocktail recipe at the beginning of each chapter.
06:53 PM - Jul 18, 2023
0
0
0
K. R. Wilson
A
Cherie Dimaline’s new novel VenCo (Random House) blends a range of witch legends into a tight odyssey tale of family histories, ancient hunters, holy wisdom, dreamed realities, and timely Indigenous knowledge. Plus spoons. Its narrative momentum will keep you up past your bedtime.
07:39 AM - Jul 16, 2023
0
0
0
K. R. Wilson
A
As WW II grinds toward its close a shadowy Pynchonian bureaucracy stalks the Third Reich. What is its connection with a cabal of classicists and an indebted French priest? Michael Mirolla’s new novella The Collection Agency Files is darkly unsettling and progressively surreal.
07:38 AM - Jul 16, 2023
0
0
0
K. R. Wilson
A
With a 100-year-old news item as its jumping-off point, the book-length poem Duck Eats Yeast, Quacks, Explodes; Man Loses Eye by Gary Barwin & Lillian Necakov (Guernica Editions) is a delightful pass-the-potato wordplay game between two accomplished poets which we get to watch unfold.
07:37 AM - Jul 16, 2023
0
0
0
K. R. Wilson
A
Andrew F. Sullivan’s wryly chilling novel The Marigold is set in a near-future Toronto where environmental decay, corporate bloat, crumbling public services & the dark mould along the edge of your shower are all ratcheted up to nightmare levels. Pairs well with a Toronto mayoral election.
07:36 AM - Jul 16, 2023
0
0
0
K. R. Wilson
A
The Spirits Have Nothing to Do with Us—edited by Dan K. Woo and published by Wolsak and Wynn—is a tiny jewel-box of a book. It contains nine well-chosen, well-crafted works of short fiction by nine Chinese Canadian authors, each a gem in its own distinct way.
07:35 AM - Jul 16, 2023
0
0
0
K. R. Wilson
A
Stephen Marche’s slim book On Writing and Failure (biblioasis) is a bracing soul-restorative. If you write, do yourself the favour of reading it.
07:33 AM - Jul 16, 2023
0
0
0
K. R. Wilson
A
Lee Maracle’s novel Celia’s Song is mythic and immediate, intimate and vast, heartshredding and hopeful, an evocation and an invocation. Reading it I get a glimpse of why her passing brought out such reverent remembrances.
07:33 AM - Jul 16, 2023
0
0
0
K. R. Wilson
A
Just going to catch you folks up on a few of my most recent mini-book-review posts from That Other Site.
07:32 AM - Jul 16, 2023
Avatar
0
0
1
loading...
{{ notificationModalContent }} {{ promptModalMessage }}