U of T MagazineFinding Comfort in FoodEdna Staebler was 55 when her marriage ended. She thought she would grow old alone, impoverished and unhappy. Then she wrote a cookbookFeb 27, 2018Feb 27, 2018
U of T MagazineThere Is No Magic Formula When Quitting an AddictionBy 28, I’d been arrested, convicted and kicked out of grad school. But it took me another two years to end my love affair with drugsFeb 27, 2018Feb 27, 2018
U of T MagazineAfter the Shooting, a Search for SalvationGunshot victims often struggle for years with injuries, chronic pain and health problems. Many turn to religious institutions to help them…Feb 27, 2018Feb 27, 2018
U of T MagazineMinor KeyI WAS 43 YEARS OLD when I had my first piano lesson. Forty-three years old, newly divorced and the mother of a three-month-old baby. I…Sep 26, 2017Sep 26, 2017
U of T MagazineDoctors Make Mistakes. Can We Talk About That?I’LL NEVER FORGET the first time I heard the three words that emergency physicians dread: Do you remember? “Do you remember that patient…Sep 26, 2017Sep 26, 2017
U of T MagazineThe Case for Academic Writing That Everyone Can ReadIn 1980, my father asked each of us kids to write what we thought we would be doing in the year 2000, and then put it in a time capsule…Sep 11, 20161Sep 11, 20161