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."
With wisdom and humour, forty-one remarkable, mature women over 50 revel in the joys of aging.
Nora Ephron struck a chord with I Feel Bad about My Neck. Women's advocate and acclaimed writer Shari Graydon set out to counter the supposed downhill slide-inspired grief by inviting notable women of age from across Canada -- all over 50 -- to provide an alternative perspective.
I Feel Great about My Hands is a collection of stories, essays and poems celebrating life, and embracing the changes, discoveries and wisdom that come with age. This colourful anthology includes:
Royalties from the book will benefit Media Action, an organization dedicated to challenging the under-representation and sexualization of women in the media.
"[I Feel Great About My Hands is] a warm, wise, witty response to Nora Ephron's I Feel Bad About My Neck. "
"I found the book as a whole quite heartwarming and am moved to describe some of the entries as 'a thing of beauty'. The overall experience of reading it was quite life-affirming."
"I Feel Great About My Hands offers honest reflections of individuals who have struggled with times of loss and transition to reach a place where they can celebrate the miracles within and the benefits of maturity. This affirming vision is bound to appeal to women of all ages."
"Readers will probably cry as much as they laugh because this is no lightweight, 'meno-positive' collection. Older women take the lioness' share of the challenges and heartaches of empty nests, caring for aging and dying parents, living below poverty level, and becoming invisible. These writers do not shirk from sharing these realities."
"I Feel Great About My Hands and Other Unexpected Joys of Aging edited by Shari Graydon, has notable Canadian women celebrating their golden years."
"I applaud these fine women for trying to resolve and accept the dilemma of aging that affects us all, and doing so with such humour and poignancy. A wonderful read."
"Graydon put together remarkable, inspiring stories that are so honest that you can't help but want to be as smart as these women...I'd like to thank the women in this book for helping me stare down my fear and realize that aging isn't what will shorten my life. Not working hard for what I believe in might, though; not being willing to take on risks and try new things absolutely will; not living well or loving well are guaranteed life-shorteners. But aging? Not so much."
"Ottawa author and women's advocate Shari Graydon has answered Ephron with an upbeat response, a Dropped Threads-like collection of stories, essays and poems in which more than 40 Canadian women over 50 celebrate aging and their lives well-lived...I Feel Great About My Hands sends a strong and supportive message about the future."
"A Canadian cadre has delivered a response to Nora Ephron's witty tome on the hazards of aging, I Feel Bad About My Neck. I Feel Great About My Hands opts for the earnest, and tots up the things that get better after age 50. These include everything from being more confident to enjoying the sight of adult children well-raised."
"I Feel Great About My Hands is an anthology of anger and hope, loss and love, regret and humour. It's about growing old gracefully, fighting sexism and railing against impossible cultural standards, about accepting that our aging flesh, with its wrinkles and scars and loose folds and liver spots, is not only a visible charting of our life's well travelled road map but a subject for celebration."