How closely have you been reading our online stories this week? Take The Walrus Weekly Quiz to find out—released every ...
I was born missing an ear. What followed was years of well-intentioned violence from a medical system bent on solving the ...
In Whitehorse, a two-hour flight south, preteen students at Takhini Elementary created hunting bags, cutting and stitching ...
I made that list to avoid work on a poem that uses the word “conglomerate.” As people do, I write practical, purpose-built ...
The twenty-year legal saga involved 18,000 exhibits, 100,000 pages of expert reports, and a judge who needed an emergency ...
The publishing industry is hinging its hopes on a twenty-three-year-old with a Substack and a devout following. Can she ...
I was disabused of a jejune nationalist commitment to Canada (call it pride or patriotism if you wish) and left with ...
In research first published in 2015, the World Health Organization estimated more than 1 billion teens and young people are ...
While such a statement might be dismissed as crude heckling, in the case of the memorial, it feels more like a pointed ...
To meet that demand, The Walrus is launching a new initiative dedicated entirely to local reporting.
Angus MacCaull is a Toronto-based journalist and poet currently working on a memoir about losing a music career to tinnitus.
L ast summer, The Walrus published an exclusive investigation by contributing writer Rachel Browne into allegations of physical and sexual abuse, humiliation, and degradation at a private, ...