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From the archives

The Trust Spiral

Restoring faith in the media

Dear Prudence

A life of exuberance and eccentricity

Who’s Afraid of Alice Munro?

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

Taylor Swift and Other Pawns

Seeking substance in a digital echo chamber

Tara Henley

Girls, Interrupted: How Pop Culture Is Failing Women

Lisa Whittington-Hill

Véhicule Press

200 pages, softcover and ebook

At the emotional centre of Lisa Whittington-Hill’s new essay collection sits a single question: What is an unmarried, childless, middle-aged woman for? It’s Gen X’s version of the second-wave feminist Betty Friedan’s “problem that has no name”— and a timely issue to contemplate.

North American women now enjoy more freedom and more autonomy than women in any other period of history. Mainstream culture encourages us to cast off societal expectations and to embrace our independence. A great many of us are not getting married, and, as Canada’s plummeting birth rate attests, fewer and fewer of us are having children. But critics like Louise Perry, author of The Case against the Sexual Revolution, and Mary Harrington, author of Feminism against Progress, have persuasively argued that we are not necessarily happier for it. Lydia Perović captured this collective angst in...

Tara Henley is a current affairs journalist, podcast host, and the author of Lean Out: A Meditation on the Madness of Modern Life.

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