BC Books Online was created for anyone interested in BC-published books, and with librarians especially in mind. We'd like to make it easy for library staff to learn about books from BC publishers - both new releases and backlist titles - so you can inform your patrons and keep your collections up to date.
Our site features print books and ebooks - both new releases and backlist titles - all of which are available to order through regular trade channels. Browse our subject categories to find books of interest or create and export lists by category to cross-reference with your library's current collection.
A quick tip: When reviewing the "Browse by Category" listings, please note that these are based on standardized BISAC Subject Codes supplied by the books' publishers. You will find additional selections, grouped by theme or region, in our "BC Reading Lists."
From the author of Dead Man in the Orchestra Pit and Foozlers comes another tale of madcap human folly.
Louella Debra Poule is doing an eighteen-month stint on a weapons charge at a minimum-security institution up the Fraser Valley. Her drug-dealing, sometime-boyfriend Jimmy Flood and his sidekick, Blacky Harbottle, should have taken the rap, but their list of “priors” would have put them in the slammer for quite a little stay. Louella “did the right thing” and took the fall.
Six months into Louella’s sentence, her mother, whom she hasn’t seen in years, dies suddenly. After Louella’s early release, she discovers she has inherited a fair bit of money and a nice condo in a treed and quiet suburb of Vancouver. It is here that Louella sits in relative safety and obscurity, here that she decides to take some time away from the influence of her prior associates, reassess her life, tend her mother’s garden, and work through the agonizing steps from addiction back to the world of “normal” living.
But, needless to say, her past comes a-callin’ …
Praise for Budge:
“Budge is one of the more quirky, unconventional, picaresque novels to come along in a while. … To fully appreciate Budge, we must relinquish our trust to Osborne, a somewhat loopy shaman. … Tom Osborne warrants a great deal of praise for freshness of content, viewpoint, and plot. He knows how to use language with skill and verve. …” (Foreword Reviews)
"Writer's latest entry full of grit. Tom Osborne’s new novel explores friendship, betrayal, rehabilitation, and addiction. Tom Osborne’s third novel Budge centers around a female character who took the fall for her sometimes-boyfriend, and ended up doing an 18-month stint in a Fraser Valley prison. A few of the central characters in Tom Osborne’s latest novel Budge are so gritty, readers may feel the need to wash their hands after leafing through a few chapters. That may just be the desired effect of Budge, an unabashed fictional effort that draws you in and then smashes you square in the mush. The story explores Vancouver and the Fraser Valley’s seedy drug and crime." (The Maple Ridge Times)
Praise for Dead Man in the Orchestra Pit by Tom Osborne:
“‘Only connect’ was E.M. Forster’s advice to writers, and Osborne connects like a mad electrician in a power plant.” (The Vancouver Sun)
From the author of Dead Man in the Orchestra Pit and Foozlers comes another tale of madcap human folly.
Louella Debra Poule is doing an eighteen-month stint on a weapons charge at a minimum-security institution up the Fraser Valley. Her drug-dealing, sometime-boyfriend Jimmy Flood and his sidekick, Blacky Harbottle, should have taken the rap, but their list of “priors” would have put them in the slammer for quite a little stay. Louella “did the right thing” and took the fall.
Six months into Louella’s sentence, her mother, whom she hasn’t seen in years, dies suddenly. After Louella’s early release, she discovers she has inherited a fair bit of money and a nice condo in a treed and quiet suburb of Vancouver. It is here that Louella sits in relative safety and obscurity, here that she decides to take some time away from the influence of her prior associates, reassess her life, tend her mother’s garden, and work through the agonizing steps from addiction back to the world of “normal” living.
But, needless to say, her past comes a-callin’ …
Praise for Budge:
“Budge is one of the more quirky, unconventional, picaresque novels to come along in a while. … To fully appreciate Budge, we must relinquish our trust to Osborne, a somewhat loopy shaman. … Tom Osborne warrants a great deal of praise for freshness of content, viewpoint, and plot. He knows how to use language with skill and verve. …” (Foreword Reviews)
"Writer's latest entry full of grit. Tom Osborne’s new novel explores friendship, betrayal, rehabilitation, and addiction. Tom Osborne’s third novel Budge centers around a female character who took the fall for her sometimes-boyfriend, and ended up doing an 18-month stint in a Fraser Valley prison. A few of the central characters in Tom Osborne’s latest novel Budge are so gritty, readers may feel the need to wash their hands after leafing through a few chapters. That may just be the desired effect of Budge, an unabashed fictional effort that draws you in and then smashes you square in the mush. The story explores Vancouver and the Fraser Valley’s seedy drug and crime." (The Maple Ridge Times)
Praise for Dead Man in the Orchestra Pit by Tom Osborne:
“‘Only connect’ was E.M. Forster’s advice to writers, and Osborne connects like a mad electrician in a power plant.” (The Vancouver Sun)
"Writer's latest entry full of grit. Tom Osborne’s new novel explores friendship, betrayal, rehabilitation, and addiction. Tom Osborne’s third novel Budge,/i> centers around a female character who took the fall for her sometimes-boyfriend, and eded up doing an 18-month stint in a Fraser Valley prison. A few of the central characters in Tom Osborne’s latest novel Budge are so gritty, readers may feel the need to wash their hands after leafing through a few chapters. That may just be the desired effect of Budge, an unabashed fictional effort that draws you in and then smashes you square in the mush. The story explores Vancouver and the Fraser Valley’s seedy drug and crime culture."- Maple Ridge Times