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NEVER HEARD of Bonds of Love? Neither has anybody else |
And here's 26 reasons why we kept asking that question.
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HE'S SO FRIENDLY, his project almost makes sense! |
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BOOK'EM STEPHEN: No book under 35. |
PAUL |
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ME, ALEX, ED, when we were younger. Mitch Hedberg: "Every photo is of you when you were younger. I'd like to see the camera that takes a picture of you when you were older." |
happened. Paul could have wound up in Northern Scarborough and Eddie near Jane and Finch. Plus if you visit the benches, you can read about these two extraordinary men and take a shot of the QR code that my other brother, Alex, had installed on Ed's bench. That code will take you to an audio/video Ed history, including a clip of him telling me a joke about a sailor coming across a man stranded on a desert island. He goes to recue the guy and he sees three buildings. He asks what they're for. The guy points to the first and says 'that's my house.' He points to the second and says 'that's my church,' Then he points to the third and says 'that's the church I used to got to.'"
That also might have been the first time I slept overnight in this city. My dad rented a hotel room; a suite, actually, in the King Edward Hotel and I went for my very first subway ride. The subway trains roared in and out of the station with such ferocity I found it a bit scary. And they also arrived every few minutes. Back home in Sudbury, the local buses rolled around on the half hour! I should know. Our family owned the bus company. But here in Toronto? The transit system was breathtaking. Believe it or not that first thrilling ride comes back to me almost every single time I walk down the stairs to the subway platform. As for the hippies, about 100 metres east of Paul's bench in High Park, stands a statue of some anonymous dude wearing a sports coat, sunglasses and a badge that says "LOVE." According to every source I checked, the statue's called The Hippy, and if you're visiting the miracle benches you might as well drop over and say peace.
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SATURDAYS AT THE STEER: Shelley on left. |
J is for John O'Callaghan. John and I have been friends since the early '70s. He, too, was a page boy in the Ontario Legislature and he, like Michelle, couldn't tell a boring story if you held a Glock to his head. I hope he and Michelle meet and if I'm there, I'll ask if he recalls the time he, Ed and I were in a pub on Yonge Street and somebody suggested we try something called John Courage Brown Ale. The beer arrived, Ed took a small sip, looked disgusted, held the bottle to his lips, chugged the contents, wiped his mouth with his sleeve and announced, "Waiter! This horse needs his kidneys checked!"
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MILES OF MEALS AT THE MANDARIN |
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MOMMY MEETS THE TWO-HEADED CALF |
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YOUR TOUR GUIDE AT Accordions Canada |
S is for Squeezeboxes. Michelle's from Newfoundland. If she doesn't visit Accordions Canada on Eglinton Avenue in the heart of Little Jamaica. I'm telling on her.
T is for the Tranzac. More accordions. More cowbell. You name it. The Tranzac's on Brunswick Avenue. Not far from Albino's house, come to think of it. Something musically interesting is going on at the Tranzac, almost every day of the year. Somebody should write a book or make a documentary about the Tranzac. An undersung musical treasure. Musically undersung? See what I did there?
U is for us. Me and Helena. We love visitors. Plus, because we have been to every place on this list, we'll be happy to get you there. Including the entry for "V," because for "V," you will need a car. Oh wait. We haven't been to Fatima. Yet. If Helena's sore muscles don't soon get better I'm going to insist. Meantime, come visit our little library. Sit on the adjacent bench. Read a spell.
V is for the flea market downstairs the Dixie Value Mall, a few clicks west of downtown Toronto. When my sister Mary gave me a ticket to join her at a Shania Twain concert at the Scotia Centre last year, she needed some sparkly jeans, and come concert day we found a pair at the Value Mall. The flea market downstairs is not for the squeamish but for the curious? If Albino Carreira of the Wood Cake House ever went into sales, this is the kind of joint he'd run.
W is for--and it's about time you asked--"Who is Michelle Donovan. And why are you writing this for her?" When I was the still editor of Today's Trucking magazine (before I wrote about the all-dark restaurant) I penned an editorial about trucking
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MICHELLE IN GUIDE TO TORONTO: Get it? |
X might as well be for "The Expositor," the beloved weekly newspaper that I still subscribe to and sometimes write for and two summers ago, I covered the opening, downtown Toronto, of the Lillian McGregor park, named for a former resident of the Whitefish River First Nation and if you're going to be downtown Toronto, you really might like to pay attention. Especially to the huge metal sculpted eagle feathers. The older I get, the more I understand that, if you just stop and look around you will never be bored in downtown Toronto. Or anywhere, for that matter.
Y as in YYZ; Toronto's airport code. I highly recommend hopping a ride on the Union Pearson Express (UPS) train that goes from downtown out to the airport and back. It's a quick fun trip that lets you see the backyards and unpublicized sides of the city. When the UPS first opened, Ed and I rode it out to the Airport, had a beer there and then returned downtown, and even though we'd lived here about 20 years already, we saw parts of our beloved city that we would have never otherwise passed through. Not coincidentally, one of the places the train goes alongside of is the Henderson Craft Brewery which brews a very tasty IPA named after the train: Pearson Express. And Henderson's a 15-minute walk from my house, is open every day of the year, including holidays like today. I'm probably headed there after this one last entry.
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Where zines can be seen |