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From the archives

Who’s Afraid of Alice Munro?

A long-awaited biography gives the facts, but not the mystery, behind this writer’s genius

The New Campus Puritanism

Free speech, safe spaces, and the limits of tolerance

Carol's Canon

A new collection explores Carol Shields's literary legacy

The Veteran and the Rookie

One astute political commentator observes another

Peter C. Newman

Right Side Up: The Fall of Paul Martin and the Rise of Stephen Harper’s New Conservatism

Paul Wells

Douglas Gibson Books, McClelland and Stewart

336 pages, hardcover

I eagerly opened the package that contained advance proofs of Paul Wells’s Right Side Up: The Fall of Paul Martin and the Rise of Stephen Harper’s New Conservatism, since I had always admired his astute reporting and enjoyed his witty writing, and this was his first book. Whatever quarrels I had to pick with him pertained to his questionable taste in jazz, but he could justifiably say the same about me.

Little did I realize, until I read the review copy’s accompanying note from Ruta Liormonas of McClelland and Stewart’s promotion department, that this volume was meant to be my professional obituary. Her letter described Wells as “the new Peter C. Newman” and claimed that “this book … will stake his claim to that title.”

We writers may not be good at home repairs or filling out tax forms, and shy away from any toys or gadgets that carry the warning “batteries not included.” But being Canadian scribblers, we know about survival. My first...

Peter C. Newman wrote many books, including Mavericks: Canadian Rebels, Renegades and Anti-Heroes and Heroes: Canadian Champions, Dark Horses and Icons.

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