Dr. Shock
How an apartheid-era psychiatrist went from torturing gay soldiers in South Africa to sexually abusing patients in Canada.
How an apartheid-era psychiatrist went from torturing gay soldiers in South Africa to sexually abusing patients in Canada.
Richard Poplak The Walrus Aug 2015 25min Permalink
Beatrice White, the Toronto girl who won the city’s turn-of-the-century fly-swatting contest.
Katie Daubs The Toronto Star Aug 2015 10min Permalink
In Ontario, Canada, ribfests were largely non-profit affairs. Then one man decided to make a profit off their popularity.
Michael Fraiman The Globe and Mail Aug 2015 20min Permalink
An immigrant from Lebanon, a hair-cutting fortune, and the dream of building a castle on an island in British Columbia.
Omar Mouallem Eighteen Bridges Nov 2013 30min Permalink
Searching for the line between courage and humility on an expedition to Cirque of the Unclimbables, a remote ring of perfect rock-climbing mountains in Canada.
Eva Holland SB Nation May 2015 30min Permalink
The Nazis stole his family’s paintings, but Max Stern escaped and became one of Canada’s leading art dealers. Now, 20 after his death, he is changing the rules of restitution.
Sara Angel The Walrus Sep 2014 20min Permalink
How a Canadian used a Mohawk reservation’s lakes to smuggle tons of marijuana to stash houses in Brooklyn and Staten Island, resulting in nearly a billion in profits, which he laundered through the Sinaloa Cartel.
Alan Feuer New York Times Sep 2014 10min Permalink
Finding peace and quiet in the high Canadian Arctic.
Previously: The Longform Guide to Silence.
Tom Bissell VQR Jun 2005 40min Permalink
How a group of vigilante cat-lovers seeking the hooded figure who suffocated a kitten in an internet video found a sadistic killer.
Bill Jensen Rolling Stone Mar 2014 30min Permalink
On the rise of Indian Posse, the largest of Canada’s native gangs, and the fall of its leader.
Joe Friesen The Globe and Mail Jun 2011 45min Permalink
Why hundreds of Buddhist monks moved from Taiwan to Prince Edward Island, buying up thousands of acres of land in the process.
Mark Mann Maisonneuve Jun 2013 20min Permalink
On the theft of 6 million pounds of maple syrup from Canada’s strategic reserve and the group of free market renegades who are fighting “The Maple Wars.”
Brendan Borrell Businessweek Jan 2013 10min Permalink
In 1968, the author revisits remote British Columbia, which he traveled two years earlier.
Edward Hoagland The American Scholar May 2006 30min Permalink
On the economics, impact, and communities of the international pipeline.
John H. Richardson Esquire Aug 2012 45min Permalink
Dead of an accidental overdose at 28, Derek Boogaard rose from Western Canada’s rugged youth leagues to become on of Hockey’s most feared pugilists. Along the way, what happened to his brain?
John Branch New York Times Dec 2011 40min Permalink
How is Canada’s “post-AIDS” generation coping? Not that well.
[I]n some ways we are still hopelessly lost. A generation of men who could have been our mentors was decimated. The only thing we learned from observing them was to ruthlessly identify “AIDS face,” that skeletal appearance the early HIV drugs wrought on patients by wasting away their bodily tissues. But those faces grow more rare each day.
Michael Harris The Walrus Sep 2011 20min Permalink
On the life of an American soldier AWOL in Canada.
Wil S. Hylton GQ Jun 2011 25min Permalink
On “the Incidents”, three shootings in a single month in a 1,300 person hamlet tucked inside the 12-year-old Nunavut territory. (The complete 4-part series.)
Patrick White The Globe and Mail Apr 2011 Permalink
Supply and demand paid-sex economics, ‘hobbyist’ internet message boards, and the power of reviews.
Bianca McSweeney's Feb 2011 Permalink