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Thirtieth Issue
Volume 13, No. 1
 

features

Because I Have Loved And Hidden It
By Fiona O'Connor

Heading South
By Kimberly Bourgeois


fiction

A Very Bold Leap
Reviewed by Lorraine Ouimet

Animals
Reviewed by Dimitri Nasrallah

Cecil And Jordan In New York
Reviewed by Correy Baldwin

Fall
Reviewed by Ian McGillis

Iced Under
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

Short Accounts Of Tragic Occurrences
Reviewed by Christopher Olson

The Brutal Telling
Reviewed by Elspeth Redmond

The Hipless Boy
Reviewed by Correy Baldwin

The Mountain Clinic
Reviewed by Mélanie Grondin

Valley Of Fire
Reviewed by Louise Fabiani


fiction at a glance

Fences In Breathing
Reviewed by Aparna Sanyal

The Fixer-upper
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik


non-fiction

America's Gift: What The World Owes To The Americas And Their First Inhabitants
Reviewed by Raquel Rivera

Babies For The Nation: The Medicalization Of Motherhood In Quebec 1910-1970
Reviewed by Kate Forrest

Canada's Game: Hockey And Identity
Reviewed by Ted Smith

Done With Slavery: The Black Fact In Montreal 1760 - 1840
Reviewed by Dr. Dorothy Williams

The Black Book Of Canadian Foreign Policy
Reviewed by Brian Campbell

What's To Eat? Entrees In Canadian Food History
Reviewed by Anne Chudobiak


non-fiction at a glance

Ghost Tracks: Surprising Stories Of The Supernatural On Rails
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

Swallowtail Calling: A Naturalist Dreams Of Grand Manan Island
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik


poetry

Passenger Flight
Reviewed by Dr. Bert Almon

Penned
Reviewed by Dr. Bert Almon

Pure Product
Reviewed by Dr. Bert Almon

Rutting Season
Reviewed by Dr. Bert Almon

This Way Out
Reviewed by Dr. Bert Almon


young readers

A Wizard In Love
Reviewed by Andrea Belcham

Bird Child
Reviewed by Andrea Belcham

Far From Home
Reviewed by Andrea Belcham

Junkyard Dog
Reviewed by Andrea Belcham

Lord Of The Sky
Reviewed by Andrea Belcham

Proud As A Peacock, Brave As A Lion
Reviewed by Andrea Belcham

The Banana Story Of Agony
Reviewed by Andrea Belcham

The Middle Of Everywhere
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

Walking Backward
Reviewed by Andrea Belcham

When Wishes Come True
Reviewed by Andrea Belcham




The Black Book Of Canadian Foreign Policy
By Yves Engler
$24.95
paper 284 pp.
Fernwood Publishing 978-1-55266-314-1
non-fiction

The Black Book of Canadian Foreign Policy

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New Document Want to buy a thick black book replete with salaciousness and skullduggery?

In The Black Book of Canadian Foreign Policy, Montreal writer and activist Yves Engler compiles a long and disgustingly dirty laundry list of Canada's international transgressions. For those who would stand by Canada's status as a "peacekeeper" and "honest broker," Engler presents an impressive cascade of evidence that Canada is not exactly a force for good in the world.

According to Engler, Canada has carefully maintained its "good guy" image as a convenient guise for its real foreign policy priorities: the aiding and abetting of empire (first British, now American), and protection and promotion of investments of our major corporations. Our country is home to some of the world's largest mining, resource, and manufacturing firms; it comes as no surprise that these, along with our five banks, have made multimillion dollar investments in places like the Congo, Guatemala, Iraq, Chile, apartheid South Africa, China, Vietnam, and others. Our diplomatic efforts and foreign aid policies have not only directly supported these corporations, Engler demonstrates, but have also been used to rewrite labour and environmental codes for their benefit, leading to some of the worst industrial practices in the world.

Engler further argues that our international aid as well as weapons sales have helped prop up a rogue's gallery of brutal dictators: our forces have been involved in the deposition of democratically elected leaders such as Aristide in Haiti and Lumumba in the Congo. For all the positive spin on our refusal to join the US in invading Vietnam or Iraq, closer examination shows that we have provided extensive military and logistical support for both ventures. Even our peacekeeping and Pearson's role in the Middle East - which lead to his Nobel Peace Prize - are revealed by Engler to have had questionable aims and results. With recent talk of "pulling our weight" in the world, it becomes clear that we are a willing, if underhanded, junior partner of the United States. As Engler informs us, Jean Chrétien in his memoir recounts telling Bill Clinton, "Keeping some distance will be good for both of us. If we look as though we're the fifty-first state of the United States, there's nothing we can do for you internationally, just as the governor of a state can't do anything for you internationally. But if we look independent enough, we can do things for you that even the CIA cannot do."

While Engler's writing delivers plenty of punch, he mostly lets facts - meticulously researched and substantiated - speak for themselves. The Black Book is so full of detail it can make one's head swim: at times, it is a rather academic read. It will doubtless prove a significant resource for international solidarity activists and specialists in foreign policy. For the rest of us, it provides a valuable glimpse into shadowy machinations that all too often fall entirely under our radar.

Engler's is a high ideal: that Canadians, armed with the knowledge in his book, "debate and shape what is being done around the world in their name," and ultimately "demand altruistic aid, real international cooperation, benevolent peacekeeping instead of militarism, and the rule of law instead of an empire's might." Foreign policy, however, has almost never been high on our election agenda: our leaders, at first daunted by the world stage, soon find it an easy place to perform. Perhaps with further activism Engler and others will succeed in altering the tinctures of our national discussion.

Brian Campbell is the author of "Passenger Flight," a collection of prose poems recently released by Signature Editions



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