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Whoever Gives us Bread is a lively people's history from the 1860s to the 1960s, as told by an award-winning historian.
In the early 1860s, Italians began trickling into British Columbia via San Francisco. Fleeing grinding poverty back home, they came north to the isolated valleys and cities of the province to pan for gold, raise cattle, dig coal, fell timber, build railroads, smelt copper and refine lead, or to start small businesses. BC welcomed them grudgingly.
Recounting the stories of individual Italian immigrants, celebrated author Lynne Bowen has crafted a loosely chronological narrative of the Italian settlement of BC. It's a story rife with discrimination and tragedy, with families torn apart when their men left Italy for more promising futures, but always there is a rich sense of community and a sense of pride.
Here we meet Joseph Fontana, who incensed his fellow striking miners when he crossed their picket line near Ladysmith. We meet Sabina Teti, who ran a boarding house in Vancouver's Italian district of Strathcona. We hear stories of the 53 Italians who were rounded up from BC and shipped off to Kananaskis internment camp for fear that they would form a fifth column in support of Mussolini. Through these stories, Bowen also reveals the Canadian immigration, labour, and multiculturalism issues of the time.
Today, the BC Italian community is Canada's oldest by 50 years. Bowen has spent 10 years conducting interviews and combing through newspapers, government records and letters to write this definitive history. Whoever Gives Us Bread will appeal to the large Italian population in BC and across Canada as well as to readers of social history.
.Lynne Bowen, a writer from Nanaimo, has compiled a comprehensive, yet highly readable, account of the contribution made by the Italian community [to British Columbia]...Their memories and achievements would have been forgotten if not for Whoever Gives Us Bread. Bowen...knows how to mine sources for rich detail, and how to weave the stories together into a book that brings history back to life..
.Whoever Gives Us Bread is Bowen’s sixth book on B.C. history...While Bowen doesn’t shy away from the difficult aspects of history, she also presents the joyous side of the Italian community, which valued family, good food and friends..
.Reading through the first few pages of Lynne Bowen's prologue, it becomes clear that Whoever Gives Us Bread is a labour of love. The author's affection for both Italy and British Columbia has been translated into a seamless narrative based on diligent research....
.Lynne Bowen does not just write about Italians in British Columbia, she evokes their ethos and brings them to life vividly and dramatically. Under Bowen's guidance we understand what it was like to be a shop owner or railway labourer or mill worker or miner; we smell the aromas in Italian kitchens and the scents of lovingly tended family gardens. Bowen is a consummate storyteller..
.Whoever Gives Us Bread is a well-sourced, timely, and highly readable book. It colours the familiar and lesser-travelled places of British Columbia with the imprint of Italian experiences...Thanks to Lynne Bowen, we know much more about the Italians who sojourned or settled 'beyond the frozen wastes'..
.Nanaimo writer Lynne Bowen is well known for her history books, many of which, like Boss Whistle and Three Dollar Dreams, deal with the history of the Central Island. Her newest book, Whoever Gives Us Bread...[looks] at the immigration of Italians to cities all over British Columbia, including Nanaimo, and the impact these immigrants had on the history of the province. It's a book that's been more than a decade in the making....
.British Columbia's Italian immigrants came as miners and mill hands, dreamers and desperate economic refugees. They included strikers and strikebreakers, Bolsheviks and bootleggers, prosperous merchants and flamboyant saloon keepers. Stroll through B.C.'s cemeteries, from the valleys of Vancouver Island to the Rocky Mountain passes, and Italian names stand out in the chronicle of underground explosions, labour strife and family hardship on a hard frontier. Lynne Bowen's Whoever Gives Us Bread, employing the same smooth prose and meticulous research that earned her a Lieutenant-Governor's Medal, unearths in its entire human dimension, the drama, tragedy and triumph of this remarkable chapter in the history of Canada's Pacific province..