Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - September 18, 2025, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C2
● WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM
Catherine Hunter
book launch
McNally Robinson Booksellers, Grant Park loca-
tion (1120 Grant Ave.)
Tonight, 7 p.m.
Free
WINNIPEG author Catherine Hunter
launches her latest book, the short-sto-
ry collection Seeing You Home,
tonight.
Hunter has worked in a variety
of genres, to widespread critical
acclaim. The
former Univer-
sity of Winnipeg
professor’s poetry
collection St.
Boniface Elegies
was a finalist for
the 2019 Governor
General’s Literary
Awards, while her
collection Latent
Heat won the 1998
McNally Robinson Book of the Year
prize at the Manitoba Book Awards.
On the fiction side of things, Hunt-
er’s novella In the First Early Days
of My Death was a finalist for the
McNally Robinson Book of the Year
Award and the Margaret Laurence
Award for fiction at the 2003 Manito-
ba Book Awards; the previous year,
her thriller The Dead of Midnight was
shortlisted for the Margaret Laurence
Award, as well as the Carol Shields
City of Winnipeg Book Award and the
Mary Scorer Award for the best book
by a Manitoba publisher.
Published by Winnipeg’s Signature
Editions, Seeing You Home is a col-
lection of linked stories that follow a
couple, Richard and Clare, from their
first encounter through their time
together and into Richard’s struggle
with cancer in the St. Boniface Hospi-
tal and beyond.
The launch of Seeing you Home was
originally slated for Sept. 10, but was
postponed until tonight due to illness.
Joining Hunter at the launch of the
collection will be fellow writer Marga-
ret Sweatman.
The event is free; for those who
aren’t able to attend, the launch will
be available via McNally Robinson’s
YouTube channel.
— Ben Sigurdson
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 2025
what’s up
FREE PRESS STAFF RECOMMENDS THINGS TO DO THIS WEEK
TOP
6 PICKS
Tragic Queendom: A Tribute to No Doubt
+ Gen X: The Ultimate 90s Rock Show
LEIF NORMAN PHOTO
Catherine Hunter
SUPPLIED
Harte Trail tour features 20 local artists.
SUPPLIED
Katharine Bruce’s Magic in the Night (2025) is one of the paintings included in Prayers and Secrets, her solo exhibition at Soul Gallery.
JENN TAPLIN / MANITOBA MUTTS PHOTO
Katharine
Bruce:
Prayers
and Secrets
Soul Gallery, 65 Albert Street
Opening reception tonight, 6-9 p.m.
KATHARINE Bruce is a big believer in trusting the
process.
The new paintings in Prayers and Secrets, the
latest solo exhibition from New York-born, Manito-
ba-raised visual artist, slowly revealed themselves
to her over the past year.
“Daily I go into my studio with an open heart, a
willingness to explore my medium, and trust what
flows through my body,” she writes in her artist
statement. “What comes is a line, a choosing of
colour, a brushstroke. It’s all magic to me. My job is
to get out of the way.”
Twenty-three works will be on view at Soul Gal-
lery until Oct. 4. The gallery will host an opening
reception tonight with live music and refreshments.
— Jen Zoratti
BarkFest the Ultimutt Dog Party at Red River Exhibition Park
Red River Exhibition Park, 3977 Portage Ave.
Saturday and Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Tickets $16 to $39 at barkfestmb.ca
DOGS and dog lovers are invited
to Red River Exhibition Park this
weekend for pooch-friendly festival in
support of local animal rescue groups.
BarkFest the Ultimutt Dog Party
runs Saturday and Sunday with live
canine entertainment, including agili-
ty events, a talent contest and a dapper
dog fashion show. Pet owners can also
take in educational presentations on
car safety, trick training and first aid.
You can also catch a glimpse of your
companion’s future with the dog fortune
teller — unclear if the seer is a human
offering spiritual guidance to hounds or
a particularly perceptive dog.
Stop by the indoor market to find
vendors offering pet-centric products
and services. Visit the barks and
brews tent, puptail bar, barkery or K9
café for treats and refreshments.
Dogs (and kids under 12 years old)
get in free and are welcome to zoom
around the off-leash dog park and
make use of the many pooch potties
stationed throughout the grounds.
Proceeds and 50/50 raffle sales
will support K9 Advocacy Manitoba,
Manitoba Mutts Dogs Rescue and
Manitoba Underdogs Rescue.
— Eva Wasney
Harte Trail Studio Art Tour
Various locations along the trail
Saturday and Sunday, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
Free
EXPLORE the creative spaces of 20
Winnipeg artists in this curated tour,
which winds its way through homes
and studios close to the Harte Trail in
Headingley, Charleswood and Tuxedo.
Established in 2018 as a way to take
art outside the gallery and into every-
day life, the tour provides an opportu-
nity for artists to engage with the local
community.
Now in its seventh year, the annual
event gives visitors a chance to meet
and talk to 20 local artists across 18
locations, as well as purchase their art-
works. Download a brochure and map
from www.hartetrailstudiotour.net
The Harte Trail, a 6.5-km section of
the Great Trail, runs along the south
side of Charleswood on a former rail
bed. The active walking, cycling and
running trail is maintained by volun-
teer group Friends of the Harte Trail.
— AV Kitching
Blue Note Park, 220 Main St.
Tonight, 8:30 p.m.
Tickets are $25 at eventbrite.ca
RELIVE music’s best decade (and
no, it’s not up for debate) at Blue Note
Park tonight.
Headlining is Tragic Queendom,
Winnipeg’s tribute to No Doubt.
A nod to the California ska-punk
outfit’s breakout 1995 album Tragic
Kingdom, Tragic Queendom is front-
ed by vocalist TJ Pepper (Big City
All Star Band), who will be bringing
her very best Gwen Stefani, and also
features a four-piece brass section
arranged by multi-instrumentalist
Sean Irvine, who is known for his
work with Royal Canoe, the Winni-
peg Jazz Orchestra, David Braid and
the Ron Paley Big Band.
Opening the show is GenX: The
Ultimate 90s Rock Show, which
plays tribute to all your favourite
’90s bands (Soundgarden, Pearl Jam,
Green Day and more) in full cos-
tume. Get ready to flick those Bics.
— Jen Zoratti
Great Wealth EP Release
The Handsome Daughter, 61 Sherbrook St.
Saturday, 8 p.m.
Tickets: $15 online at reallovewinnipeg.com,
$20 at the door
ON their latest release Blackout
Summer, Great Wealth waves good-
bye to memorable seasons they wish
they could forget, wryly revisiting
youthful cities that keep slipping
through their fingers. Last Day of
Summer is set in West Broadway; I
Don’t Want to Remember You takes
a ride on Vancouver’s Millennium
Line, gentrification nearing in the
rearview mirror. “Some people said
they’d take me in, old friends of
friends of friends,” sings Andy Cole,
formerly of Eagle Lake Owls. “Man,
you wouldn’t believe the rent. You
would have loved the city then.”
“The EP wraps up where it
started,” the indie quartet — which
evokes the Hold Steady and the
Rural Alberta Advantage — writes.
“Our main characters’ younger
selves facing an uncertain future as
autumn looms ahead.”
Closer Six St. James — set deep in
Munson Park and featuring a ripping
saxophone from Gage Salnikowski —
is the standout on the four-track EP,
a followup to last year’s Runaways.
Joining GW on the bill are Prairie
emo standouts Leon’s Getting Larger
and Solaire, whose latest single,
Tetanus, has as much bark as it does
bite.
— Ben Waldman
ARTS ● LIFE I ENTERTAINMENT
;