Copy

Nov. 18, 2018

Donate | Subscribe | View in browser

Facebook
Twitter
The Walrus Website
Email
Instagram
What do Holocaust-inspired fantasy films like Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald owe to the real facts about Nazis? Viviane Fairbank writes about the greatest mathematician you've never heard of and Charles Foran reviews Leonard Cohen's posthumous book, finished days before he died, The Flame.

Plus: You don't want to miss Susan Glickmanmourns the world's disappearing animals in "Extinction Sonnets." 🐸
Donate to The Walrus today and your gift will be matched!
FILM
J.K. Rowling, Hollywood, and the Holocaust
In an era where Auschwitz is fading from memory, what do fictional movies about the Nazis owe to fact?
BY nara monteiro
science
The Greatest Mathematician You've Never Heard Of
In an era where sensationalism on our screens dominates, In the Making is a venture into authenticity
BY viviane fairbank
Arts & Culture
Leonard Cohen’s Afterlife
A posthumous collection, finished days before his death, reveals the artist at his most intimate
BY charles foran
Walrus Talks
Disruption: Tranna Wintour
Our culture’s narrow and oppressive constructs of masculinity and femininity limit us from being our true selves
books
Randy Boyagoda's New Novel Is Both Deeply Catholic and Deeply Funny
In his third book, the author skewers the multicultural anxieties of today’s university culture
BY andré forget
THE WALRUS TALKS
TORONTO: The Walrus Talks the Future of the Arts 
A showcase of the writers, performers, musicians, and thinkers that are defining Canada’s artistic future including Lido Pimienta, Wanda Nanibush, Shary Boyle, and Noor Naga. 
PRESENTED BY RBC 
ADVERTISEMENTS

This email was sent to <<Email>>.

You received this newsletter because you signed up at thewalrus.ca, attended The Walrus Talks, or subscribed to The Walrus.

Add Us to Your Address Book  |   Unsubscribe | My Account | Privacy Policy | Cookie Policy

© 2018 The Walrus.  B15-411 Richmond St E  Toronto, ON  M5A 3S5