Arts & Entertainment

The View from Here: William Pura. View from the Bridge, 1991

2 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

Staycation: The Art of Being Here features more than 100 Manitoba-related artworks from the Winnipeg Art Gallery-Qaumajuq collection, spanning the past 50 years. These pieces reveal how the places around us are layered with memory, story and lived experience. Over the coming weeks, the Free Press will spotlight works from this eclectic exhibition, each one offering a new way of seeing home. Experience it in person and enjoy some staycation time at the gallery, on view until December.

William Pura. View from the Bridge, 1991

Oil on canvas. Collection of the Winnipeg Art Gallery; Acquired with funds from The Winnipeg Art Gallery Foundation Inc., G-92-91. Photo: Ernest Mayer. Artwork sponsored by Ken & Lynn Cooper.

If William Pura’s View from the Bridge feels familiar, it should. The painting depicts a stretch along Kingston Row in Winnipeg, but the scene could be any suburban setting, making it easy to place yourself right in the painting. Its large scale draws you in, while the cool colour palette and absence of activity create an eerie calm. Curator Riva Symko describes it as “a big, concentrated work of seemingly nothing”— a fleeting but recognizable moment of Winnipeg life. The artist Bill Pura, who was born in Winnipeg and taught at the University of Manitoba School of Art for many years, currently resides in Santa Fe, N.M.

Advertisement

Advertise With Us

Weather

Apr. 4, 12 PM: 1°c Cloudy with wind Apr. 4, 6 PM: 1°c Cloudy with wind

Winnipeg MB

1°C, Cloudy

Full Forecast

Stunning stories explore families’ untreated mental illnesses

Reviewed by Sara Harms 2 minute read Preview

Stunning stories explore families’ untreated mental illnesses

Reviewed by Sara Harms 2 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

There’s Always More to Say is a beautiful debut collection of stories from English-born Montreal author Natalie Southworth.

The nine stories within are filled with ache and grace, often naming (without shaming) the toll that untreated and/or undiagnosed mental illness takes on families, and the fractured realities that youth in these upbringings are left to navigate on their own.

Already this summary is no match for the elegance of the collection, which blends a delicacy and clarity with dignity in its portrayals of nuanced shifts in sanity.

The DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) is mentioned once, but otherwise Southworth’s characters — children, siblings, mothers, fathers, friends, puppeteers, realtors, politicians, live-in nannies — use the language at their disposal to name the dissonance of mental instability, including “strange,” “spiral,” “fluorescent-lit,” “that kind of brain” and “ambiguously alive.”

Read
2:00 AM CDT

Supplied photo

Natalie Southworth

Supplied photo
                                Natalie Southworth

NATO (including Canada) anything but peacekeepers in world conflict: author

Reviewed by Joseph Hnatiuk 5 minute read Preview

NATO (including Canada) anything but peacekeepers in world conflict: author

Reviewed by Joseph Hnatiuk 5 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

In the decades following the founding of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) in 1949 by 12 Western nations, many of its members, including Canada, have participated in military campaigns which, according to the author of the relatively brief but fact-packed Canada & NATO, suggest the alliance fosters more death and destruction than peace and goodwill.

Examples of subterfuge, political manipulation and even timely assassinations reveal the birth pains that accompanied NATO’s arrival onto the world stage and its subsequent participation in regional wars, far removed from its originally intended Western Hemisphere protectorate, giving credence to the book’s subtitle, Myth of a Global Peacekeeper.

Comfortably readable in one sitting, this book summarizes NATO’s decades-long involvement in world affairs, as compiled by Manitoba writer Owen Schalk, who traces NATO’s controversial actions while offering alternative assessments of its contributions to world harmony.

Schalk’s published work includes Canada in Afghanistan (2023) and Targeting Libya (2025). He now boldly offers reasons for Canada’s withdrawal from NATO, positioning himself as a progressive-minded critic of Canada’s support for an organization he opines has consistently failed to live up to its stated “defensive” purpose.

Read
2:00 AM CDT

Canada & NATO

Canada & NATO

Grandmother’s memoir lands Colby a Kobzar

Ben Sigurdson 4 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

B.C. author Sasha Colby has won the 2026 Kobzar Book Award for her work of non-fiction The Matryoshka Memoirs: A Story of Urkainian Forced Labour, the Leica Camera Factory and Nazi Resistance.

The $25,000 prize, presented by the Shevchenko Foundation at a gala at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights on March 26, is awarded every two years to a work that highlights the Ukrainian-Canadian experience and the issues faced by Ukrainians in Canada.

Colby’s book, published in 2023 by ECW Press, chronicles the plight of her grandmother, Irina Nikifortchuk, who was abducted by the Nazis and made to labour at the Leica camera factory, and the factory heiress who helped rescue Nikifortchuk, who was imprisoned by the Gestapo.

The other two finalists were Bohdan S. Kordan for the non-fiction book No Place Like Home: Enemy Alien Internment in Canada during the Great War, and Michael Cherkas for Red Harvest: A Graphic Novel of the Terror Famine in 1930s Soviet Ukraine.

Gimme a break with supporting burnout culture

Jen Zoratti 4 minute read Preview

Gimme a break with supporting burnout culture

Jen Zoratti 4 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

There are many things HBO’s hit medical drama, The Pitt, does very well, and one of those things is capturing burnout.

It’s in the small details, such as the specific ways in which burned-out workers joke about needing a break. “Throw me in jail; I could use the vacation,” quips nurse Dana Evans (Katherine LaNasa).

It’s in the big ones, too, such as Dr. Robby’s (Noah Wyle) increasingly brusque treatment of his staff, the sabbatical he keeps threatening to take, how he feels the entire emergency department rests on his shoulders alone and how he takes great offence when it is suggested that running the ED is a two-doc job by Dr. Al-Hashimi (Sepideh Moafi), who will be running the show while he’s away.

Burnout in medicine is a well-known and well-documented problem. It’s gruelling and often thankless work. Ask any nurse who has been spit on, sworn at or threatened in the space of a shift. (The Pitt addresses this, too.)

Read
2:00 AM CDT

WARRICK PAGE / HBO Max

Charge nurse Dana Evans (Katherine LaNasa, right) suffers burnout in medical drama The Pitt.

WARRICK PAGE / HBO Max
                                Charge nurse Dana Evans (Katherine LaNasa, right) suffers burnout in medical drama The Pitt.

Wayward prairie scholar reconstructs ancient text as his life falls apart in Martel’s profound prose

Reviewed by Alison Gillmor 5 minute read Preview

Wayward prairie scholar reconstructs ancient text as his life falls apart in Martel’s profound prose

Reviewed by Alison Gillmor 5 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

As with other contemporary retellings of classical texts (Margaret Atwood’s The Penelopiad, Madeline Miller’s The Song of Achilles, Pat Barker’s The Silence of the Girls, Jennifer Saint’s Elektra), this challenging, rewarding new work by Canadian writer Yann Martel looks at the Trojan War from another angle, chronicling the decidedly unheroic experiences of an ordinary foot soldier.

Best known for 2012’s bestselling, Booker Prize-winning The Life of Pi, the Saskatoon-based Martel is obsessed with stories — why we need them, how we share them, why some narratives last while others are lost.

In this retelling of the Iliad, Martel relates not the noble exploits of the “god-blooded,” gold-bedecked heroes of the Trojan War, but the everyday miseries of Psoas, a humble cheesemaker from a scrubby hillside outside Midea, and his battles against rats, lice, fleas, mud, hunger and homesickness.

Martel relates this story of a common man through the eyes of another common man, Harlow Donne, who is working on his PhD in classics at a Saskatchewan university when he is offered a year of study and research at Oxford.

Read
2:00 AM CDT

Son of Nobody

Son of Nobody

Ye attempts a comeback with sold-out LA-area concert, support from Lauryn Hill

Ryan Pearson, The Associated Press 3 minute read Preview

Ye attempts a comeback with sold-out LA-area concert, support from Lauryn Hill

Ryan Pearson, The Associated Press 3 minute read 2:58 AM CDT

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The artist formerly and possibly again known as Kanye West reveled in support from one of his musical idols, Lauryn Hill, as he staged a sold-out Southern California concert meant to mark a comeback from years of controversy.

Eleven months after releasing a song titled “Heil Hitler” and just over two months after publishing an apology letter for his antisemitism, Ye let two decades of hits — and 70,000 screaming loyal fans — speak the loudest on Friday night at SoFi Stadium.

"I want to thank y’all for sticking by me all these years. Through the hard times, through the low times," he told the crowd. “I love you for that.”

Hill joined Ye on a stage for the first time ever for an energetic rendition of his 2004 hit “All Falls Down,” which originally sampled her voice. Ye left the stage as she performed “Lost Ones” and “Doo Wop (That Thing)” before rejoining for his 2021 “Doo Wop”-sampling song “Believe What I Say.” They hugged as she exited.

Read
2:58 AM CDT

FILE - Kanye West, known as Ye, watches the first half of an NBA basketball game between the Washington Wizards and the Los Angeles Lakers, on March 11, 2022, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis, File)

FILE - Kanye West, known as Ye, watches the first half of an NBA basketball game between the Washington Wizards and the Los Angeles Lakers, on March 11, 2022, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis, File)

Dark fantasy explores the demands of being human — and our perfectly imperfect creations

Reviewed by Jess Woolford 4 minute read Preview

Dark fantasy explores the demands of being human — and our perfectly imperfect creations

Reviewed by Jess Woolford 4 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

The never-ending news cycle inundates us with stories of mental illness, violence and the tech bro obsession with artificial intelligence (AI), and it is these threads Torontonian Bar Fridman-Tell intertwines to create her unique and compelling dark fantasy debut.

Abandoned by their parents to the indifferent care of a housekeeper and a tutor, siblings Rory and Wynne make the best of life in their isolated country house. Together they pass their days adventuring through meadow and forest, until Wynne turns 15 and begins to distance herself from eight-year-old Rory. “I’m too old to play with you,” she says, but Rory won’t stop following her.

With the nearest village “endless fields away,” Wynne knows her lonely brother will never find another friend, but this doesn’t eliminate her need for privacy. Desperate, she offers to get Rory a companion and he watches, wide-eyed, while she weaves flowers, branches, leaves and fruit into “a little girl… doll-perfect and Rory-sized” before “muttering a steady stream of words” that bring her to life.

What Wynne has magicked into being is a Blodeuwedd (Welsh for “flower face”), a creature who, though mute, proves to be “the perfect playmate.” Rory calls her Daye and soon comes to cherish her as “a bosom friend, a confidant” who promises she’ll never leave him.

Read
2:00 AM CDT

Julie Riemersma photography

Bar Fridman-Tell has a talent for bringing the passion of first love, and its accompanying drama, to the page.

Julie Riemersma photography
                                Bar Fridman-Tell has a talent for bringing the passion of first love, and its accompanying drama, to the page.

Paperbacks: Virginia family entangled with thugs

David Pitt 4 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

S.A. Cosby’s thriller King of Ashes (Flatiron Books, 352 pages, $26) might be his best novel, which is a big deal if you know Cosby’s books, because his other ones (Razorblade Tears, for example, a brilliant tale of revenge) are magnificent… like Elmore Leonard-level magnificent.

Cosby writes about the people of rural Virginia, where he was born and still lives. His books feature abundantly human characters in exquisitely rendered settings, the dialogue is pitch perfect and the stories are morally complex.

Here, Cosby introduces us to Roman Carruthers, who made it out of the dying town of Jefferson Run only to be forced to return after his father is critically injured in an automobile accident. He finds his family tangled up with gangsters and in shambles — and there might be no easy way to keep it all from falling completely apart. A splendidly conceived and executed novel.

● ● ●

Former Turnstile guitarist is accused of hitting an ex-bandmate’s dad with his car

The Associated Press 4 minute read Preview

Former Turnstile guitarist is accused of hitting an ex-bandmate’s dad with his car

The Associated Press 4 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 12:35 PM CDT

SILVER SPRING, Md. (AP) — A former guitarist for Grammy-winning Baltimore hardcore band Turnstile has been charged with attempted murder after authorities say he chased down and struck a former bandmate's father with his car, badly injuring him.

Montgomery County police officers responding to a Sunday report about a pedestrian being struck in the Washington, D.C., suburb of Silver Spring found William Yates, the 79-year-old father of lead singer Brendan Yates, injured in a front yard, according to charging documents.

Yates' family said guitarist Brady Ebert, a neighbor who parted ways with the band several years ago, had struck him with a car, police wrote. Yates’ daughter, Erin Gerber, told authorities that she and her husband were getting their kids out of their car when Ebert drove up honking at them and yelling obscenities, then drove into her father.

In video footage obtained from a neighbor, Ebert could be seen driving a gold Buick LeSabre and swerving toward William Yates but missing him, according to the charging documents. Yates then threw a rock at Ebert’s vehicle and Gerber dragged her 3-year-old son onto the lawn to avoid being hit. Ebert then turned sharply into Yates' driveway and struck him as he was trying to run away, investigators wrote. Ebert finally drove across the lawn and left.

Read
Updated: Yesterday at 12:35 PM CDT

FILE - Turnstile's guitarist Brady Ebert performs at the Coachella Music & Arts Festival at the Empire Polo Club, Friday, April 19, 2019, in Indio, Calif. (Photo by Amy Harris/Invision/AP)

FILE - Turnstile's guitarist Brady Ebert performs at the Coachella Music & Arts Festival at the Empire Polo Club, Friday, April 19, 2019, in Indio, Calif. (Photo by Amy Harris/Invision/AP)

Golden state governor’s uneven past, tussles with Trump chronicled in frank, fresh prose

Reviewed by Douglas J. Johnston 4 minute read Preview

Golden state governor’s uneven past, tussles with Trump chronicled in frank, fresh prose

Reviewed by Douglas J. Johnston 4 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

California governor Gavin Newsom recently called Donald Trump a “jackass.”

He resorts to no such name-calling in his captivatingly offbeat memoir.

The U.S. president surfaces only at the tail end of the book. And Trump manages to indict himself as an idiot without need of pejoratives from Newsom.

Newsom is widely considered a top contender for the Democratic Party’s 2028 nomination for president. He has said he’s considering a run for the office, but deferring a decision until after the 2026 U.S. mid-term elections.

Read
2:00 AM CDT

Tribune New Service

Gavin Newsom (left), seen speaking in 2024 as California attorney general Rob Bonta looks on, is considered a leading contender for the Democratic Party’s 2028 nomination for president.

Tribune New Service
                                Gavin Newsom (left), seen speaking in 2024 as California attorney general Rob Bonta looks on, is considered a leading contender for the Democratic Party’s 2028 nomination for president.

Canadian Paul Alexander Nolan sinks teeth into Broadway’s ‘The Lost Boys’ musical

Craig Macrae, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Preview

Canadian Paul Alexander Nolan sinks teeth into Broadway’s ‘The Lost Boys’ musical

Craig Macrae, The Canadian Press 5 minute read 6:00 AM CDT

 

Paul Alexander Nolan is sinking his teeth into his newest role as “The Lost Boys: A New Musical” hits Broadway. 

The production is generating buzz from audiences and praise from the original 1987 bloodsucker himself, Kiefer Sutherland.

"Doesn't Kiefer still look fantastic? You know, maybe he is a vampire," Nolan quipped.

Read
6:00 AM CDT

Paul Alexander Nolan attends the Broadway opening night for "Water For Elephants" at The Imperial Theatre on Thursday, March 21, 2024, in New York. (Photo by CJ Rivera/Invision/AP)

Paul Alexander Nolan attends the Broadway opening night for

Romany family’s plight uplifting, haunting chronicled in gritty, magical prose

Reviewed by Keith Cadieux 4 minute read Preview

Romany family’s plight uplifting, haunting chronicled in gritty, magical prose

Reviewed by Keith Cadieux 4 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

Lynn Hutchinson Lee, a multimedia artist and prolific writer of speculative short stories, focuses on the intersection of poverty-stricken workers in 1980s Ontario and the lasting traditions of the Romany people after they’ve emigrated to Canada.

Hutchinson Lee is of mixed ancestry, and is of Anglo-Romany descent on her father’s side. She writes frequently about Romany culture and traditions, as can be seen in the stories she’s published in numerous Canadian journals and anthologies, her previous novella, Origins of Desire in Orchid Fens, and in her debut novel Nightshade.

Set in the ’80s in Ontario’s tobacco belt, the novel follows Zelda, her mother and aunties, who travel as itinerant workers on various farms. At the novel’s outset, the family has just been hired on at a tobacco plantation owned by Jack Tormentine. The workers, and thus Zelda and her family, are provided only an abandoned and filthy hotel as lodgings. The work in the tobacco fields is gruelling and dangerous.

While travelling in search of work, the Romany women hold fast and bring their traditions along with them, including a troupe of elaborate puppets. They perform puppet shows for extra money, but the puppets are also extended members of the family with their own personalities and, in the case of Puri Dai — the grandmother puppet — voices of their own.

Read
2:00 AM CDT

Ingrid Mayrhofer photo

Lynn Hutchinson Lee

Ingrid Mayrhofer photo
                                Lynn Hutchinson Lee

Flavor Flav, a longtime supporter of women’s sports, is courtside at Final Four

The Associated Press 1 minute read Yesterday at 6:36 PM CDT

PHOENIX (AP) — Flavor Flav was among the celebrities in attendance at the women's Final Four on Friday night, sitting courtside for the UConn-South Carolina game with former Gamecocks player Aliyah Boston.

Flav, a founding member of the hip-hop group Public Enemy, is also friends with Gamecocks coach Dawn Staley.

The 67-year-old Flav is a longtime supporter of women’s sports and attended various Olympic competitions this winter. He invited the U.S. women's ice hockey team to Las Vegas after their gold medal win in February, shortly after the women turned down a trip to Washington.

___

Nearly a century of wondering: The American UFO saga, in reality and in fiction

Corey Williams, The Associated Press 6 minute read Preview

Nearly a century of wondering: The American UFO saga, in reality and in fiction

Corey Williams, The Associated Press 6 minute read Yesterday at 11:15 PM CDT

UFOs, or the notion of them, have been around a long time. Here’s a look at how the various iterations of the subject — from government investigations to sightings to movies and TV — have unfolded since World War II:

___

1947: First widely reported UFO sighting in US

On June 24, private pilot Kenneth A. Arnold reports seeing nine objects flying near Mount Rainier in Washington state. His was the first widely reported UFO sighting in this country and set off a wave of other reported sightings. On July 2, A ranch foreman checking on sheep finds strange debris spread over a prairie near Roswell, New Mexico. Authorities initially say the material is from a flying disc, but later say it is from a weather balloon.

Read
Yesterday at 11:15 PM CDT

FILE - A sign directs travelers to the "1947 UFO Crash Site Tours" in Roswell, N.M., on June 10, 1997. (AP Photo/Eric Draper, File)

FILE - A sign directs travelers to the

Hollywood’s narrative on UFOs and ETs reaches back many decades

Corey Williams, The Associated Press 4 minute read Preview

Hollywood’s narrative on UFOs and ETs reaches back many decades

Corey Williams, The Associated Press 4 minute read Yesterday at 11:10 PM CDT

Before zombies shambled about, ghoulishly feasting on the flesh of those too slow to flee, aliens from outer space ruled movie theaters, drive-ins and late Saturday night creature features on television.

Even as Hollywood still drives how Americans envision little green men with big eyes and bigger heads, fiction soon could be separated from — or revealed as — fact if government agencies release secret files related to extraterrestrials and UFOs as called for in February by President Donald Trump.

The science fiction genre has shaped how people think about intelligent life elsewhere in the universe — “whether it’s invasion narratives or aliens coming to warn us that we’re on the wrong track or aliens just trying to come and make contact and help us with things or just say ‘hi,’” says Duke University professor Priscilla Wald, who teaches a class on science fiction and film.

Trump's announcement on social media followed former President Barack Obama suggesting in a podcast interview that aliens were real. Obama later clarified that he had not seen evidence that aliens had made contact, but said since the universe is so vast odds are good that life exists elsewhere.

Read
Yesterday at 11:10 PM CDT

FILE - Model ships hang at the entrance to the Star Trek Experience at the Las Vegas Hilton in Las Vegas on Aug. 25, 2008. (AP Photo/Isaac Brekken, File)

FILE - Model ships hang at the entrance to the Star Trek Experience at the Las Vegas Hilton in Las Vegas on Aug. 25, 2008. (AP Photo/Isaac Brekken, File)

LOAD MORE