Old Edmunston Bridge and Border Crossing in Madawska, Maine. photos by Michael Heenan & Jacques Poitras (CBC)

seen from United States

seen from Argentina

seen from Japan

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Mexico

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Hong Kong SAR China

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Yemen
seen from Switzerland

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
Old Edmunston Bridge and Border Crossing in Madawska, Maine. photos by Michael Heenan & Jacques Poitras (CBC)
#Streetart by #NickSweetman @nick_sweetman in #Edmunston, Canada, for #FestivalInspire @festivalinspire More pics at: https://barbarapicci.com/2022/09/17/streetart-nick-sweetman-edmunston-canada/ #streetartEdmunston #streetartcanada #canadastreetart #art #graffiti #murals #murales #urbanart #muralism #muralismo #streetarteverywhere #instastreetart #streetartphotography #streetartpics #streetartaddicted #streetartlover #igersstreetart #graffitiart #arteurbana #wallart #spraypaint #spraypaintart #contemporaryart #artecontemporanea https://www.instagram.com/p/Cinx-I5LOwv/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
#Streetart by #SBuONe @sbuone in #Edmunston, Canada, for #FestivalInspire @festivalinspire More pics at: https://barbarapicci.com/2022/09/04/streetart-sbuone-edmunston-canada/ #streetartedmunston #streetartcanada #canadastreetart #art #graffiti #murals #murales #urbanart #muralism #muralismo #streetarteverywhere #instastreetart #streetartphotography #streetartpics #streetartaddicted #streetartlover #igersstreetart #graffitiart #arteurbana #wallart #spraypaint #spraypaintart #contemporaryart #artecontemporanea https://www.instagram.com/p/CiGl0CSIK6-/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
new brunswick | january 2018
Weekend de conférence, Trois Rivieres et Edmundston avec @pascaledore_coach #conference #speakerontour #troisrivieres #amphitheatrecogeco #edmunston #greyrockcasino #firewalking #marchesurlefeu🔥 #jpbeaudoinlive (à Trois-Rivières, Quebec)
Chemin de citrouilles #marctalbot #drivenbluephotographies #citrouille #citrouilles #chemin #chemindecitrouilles #pumpkin #pumpking #pimpkinphoto #halloween #halloween🎃👻 #halloweenphotos #decorationhalloween #photonight #lifestylephotography #jardinbotanique #edmunston (à Edmundston, New Brunswick)
Belle gang #marctalbot #drivenbluephotographies #bellegang #francoislemay #juliebeaulieu #edmunston #bnw #bnw_halloween (à Edmunston NB)
Bad Things Happen & Petit Sault La Buckdjeuve
THE BOOK
Kris Bertin is a bartender at a local bar I quite enjoy. I can’t imagine how many other twisted stories he has in his back pocket. It’s genius. Some people may wonder why his Author Bio says nothing more than “tends bar” but I say, why give up the goldmine? He’s got nothing to prove, anyway. These stories are not precious, they are dank, they are grotesque, they are gorgeously obscene, and at the same time darkly realistic. The title story isn’t even the strongest, in my opinion, but it opens the collection affectively by showing us we probably won’t like any of its characters, won’t approve of their lives, will both feel sad for and be disgusted by them, but we’ll keep reading anyway, because we can’t look away. Between these pages are schemers, lowlifes, unfortunates, and they’re realer than you and I ever will be. Bertin’s language is poignant without being dramatic, and he has an eye for detail I’d kill for; this is the kind of writing that comes across as effortless but which you know has been polished like a newly washed beer stein with a bar rag. With opening sentences like, “There are two kinds of emptiness. The one I had and the one I needed,” how dare you not read on? Though each of these ten stories is prime re-reading material, my favourite, by far, is “The Narrow Passage”: what I’d call Atlantic Canadian domestic horror; noir of the mundane. I can’t prepare you, but I ask that you read it.
THE BEER
I’m a sucker for a stubbie bottle, and for mythical creatures, so you can probably guess that I enjoyed this one. Superficial reasons aside, this is a pretty tasty “festive ale” from Edmunston’s Belgian-style craft brewery, Les Brasseurs du Petit-Sault. It’s distinctly spicy cinnamon and candied ginger on the nose—to be nostalgically specific, this beer smells exactly like the candy store I used to frequent as a child: aged licorice and grimy penny candy (in the best possible way). While the head is pretty light and disappears quickly for a strong ale, carbonation is high up front. But it’s a tease—just as quickly as the prickle of carbonation and the malt and spices hit your tongue, they’re gone. Much like the fabled Buckdjeuve, the flavours of this ale play play hide and seek. Those “mythic spices” referred to on the label are likely traditional holiday spices—cinnamon, clove, ginger. I could’ve used more. This ale is on the brink of something I’d love, but where it’s smooth, I wish it were creamier, and where it’s carbonated, I wish it were even more so. But overall an enjoyable, tasty, sneak-up-on-you 7% ale.
PAIRED
You’ll consume both this book and beer so quickly you might not even have time to ask yourself if you enjoyed either, but you will remember them: they will both leave you wanting -- the beer, more for what it might be/is on the verge of being, and the book for the way its author tosses you to the wolves, lets you get mauled nearly to death, and then simply calls them off. I’ll be keeping my eye out for the little Belgian-style brewery that could, and the bartender who drinks the stories you leave behind like water -- you should too.