Politics Briefing: Tam hopeful that Canada has passed the peak of COVID-19′s third wave theglobeandmail.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theglobeandmail.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Redbridge creates a buzz in Squamish with striking design, waterfront location The master-planned community is is striking a chord with buyers who are genuinely excited at the prospect of owning a home in the 435-unit development, says Kingswood Properties president, Lorne Segal.
Author of the article: Kathleen Freimond
Publishing date: May 14, 2021 • May 14, 2021 • 5 minute read • Artist s rendering of Redbridge, Kingswood Properties master-planned community in Squamish. Photo by Supplied /PNG
Reviews and recommendations are unbiased and products are independently selected. Postmedia may earn an affiliate commission from purchases made through links on this page.
Article content
Redbridge, Kingswood Properties’ master-planned community in Squamish, is more than just an address – it is designed to compel people to think about the next chapter of their lives and consider not just what it takes to live, but to live well, says the company’s pres
(Warp Records)
âA lot going onâ: Squid. Photograph: Holly Whitaker
âA lot going onâ: Squid. Photograph: Holly Whitaker
Sun 9 May 2021 08.00 EDT
The multifarious music of Brighton five-piece Squid strives hard to escape definition, their tentacles tangled in krautrock, post-rock, math rock, re-revived post-punk and full-on sax-vamping jazz. Their debut album, produced by Dan Carey, has a lot going on: the influence of Douglas Coupland, field recordings of bells and bees, oblique lyrical reflections on everything from big pharma to Easter eggs. Paddling is typical, a nervy gallop from low-key motorik through spidery goth guitars to a ghostly spoken breakdown, opening at last into an exhilarating punk-funk-kraut expanse.
But Tree Snag is more than just another piece of public art
Author of the article: Joanne Sasvari
Publishing date: May 07, 2021  â¢Â 1 hour ago  â¢Â 6 minute read  â¢Â The sculpture Tree Snag by Douglas Coupland, installed at the galleria between the two buildings of the Grosvenor Ambleside development in West Vancouver. Photo by Courtesy of Grosvenor /PNG
Reviews and recommendations are unbiased and products are independently selected. Postmedia may earn an affiliate commission from purchases made through links on this page.
Article content
Bleached and gnarled like the driftwood that washes up on the beach a few metres away, Douglas Couplandâs newly installed sculpture Tree Snag towers over the galleria entrance at the Grosvenor Ambleside development in West Vancouver.
Helen Andrews’s insightful and hilarious
Boomers has gotten me thinking about the whole idea of generations. For as long as I can remember, I have been averse to the very notion. Nearly every way of generalizing about people strikes me as more attractive and perspicuous than lumping legions together by their birth year.
But in truth, my own experience convinces me that the labels of generations are not unwarranted. When Gertrude Stein told Ernest Hemingway, “You are all a lost generation,” I do not think she meant to consolidate those who came of age during the Great War into a grand character, but merely to observe that the war had done much to damage and disillusion the young in this way or that.