“…Increasingly, we are arguing for a refocusing on the craft of writing as a means of expressing affective and deeply felt orientations to places, landscapes, and the spaces of our lives (Wylie 2009;Lorimer and Parr 2014). And in producing poetry (see Cresswell 2013Cresswell , 2015de Leeuw 2013de Leeuw , 2015Magrane and Cokinos 2016) or visual and sound art (Driver et al 2002;Foster and Lorimer 2007;Hawkins 2013;Kanngieser 2015), or curating and co-producing with artists (Driver 2012), geographers are also responding to a long lineage of geographers (e.g., Meinig 1983;Watson 1983;Cosgrove 1978) who have called for geographers to become artists, to produce creative expressions, to acknowledge that "life [itself] will reside in poetry" (Hawkins and Straughan 2015, 96). This is a concept dating back decades in geography, when Watson (1983, 391--392) Still, while there is admittedly a growing amount of poetic work at play in geography, almost none of the creative geographic writing circulating within geohumanities or the creative re-turn tackles the ways that writing might work to not tell, to un-tell, or to break the traditions of telling so as to narrate and undertake geo-graphing in radically and new critical ways, including ways that open new spaces through which to consider colonial violence in a moment-in Canada, in particular-of truth and reconciliation (remember here not forget truth, reaching for some kind of truth, it is about truth and reconciliation, truth-writing truth, truths, and perhaps there can never be a truth, singular).…”