89 Results for “%22Caitlin Press%22”



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Hockey with Dad

Hockey with Dad

by Willie Sellars, illustrated by Kevin Easthope
edition:Hardcover
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tagged : native canadian, siblings, hockey

She shoots, she scores! Big Sister's hockey team has worked hard toward the most important game of the season. When the team goalie gets sick, Little Brother excitedly steps onto the ice to play in the Championship game. He always wanted to be part of the lineup, where Big Sister is the ace forward. The closer the game gets, the more nervous he bec …

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Our Backs Warmed by the Sun

Our Backs Warmed by the Sun

Memories of a Doukhobor Life
by Vera Maloff
edition:Paperback
also available: eBook
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tagged : cultural heritage

For many, the Doukhobor story is a sensational one: arson, nudity and civil disobedience once made headlines. But it isn't the whole story. Our Backs Warmed by the Sun: Memories of a Doukhobor Life is an intricately woven, richly textured memoir of a family's determination to live in peace and community in the face of controversy and unrest.

When au …

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The Burden of Gravity

The Burden of Gravity

by Shannon McConnell
edition:Paperback
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tagged : places, women authors, canadian

In her debut poetry collection, Shannon McConnell explores the fraught history of New Westminster's Woodlands School, a former "lunatic asylum" opened in 1878 which later became a custodial training school for children with disabilities before its closure in 1996. Partially set in the 1960s and 70s, The Burden of Gravity uses personas to imagine re …

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Cataline

Cataline

The Life of BC's Legendary Packer
by Susan Smith-Josephy & Irene Bjerky
edition:Paperback
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tagged : adventurers & explorers, historical

In the early days of British Columbia, pack trains of horses or mules were a lifeline for the early pioneer population. Explorers, trappers, traders, miners, merchants, workers and settlers and relied on them for the materials needed to live and work. Packers were also vital to the building of railways, roads, and telegraph lines. Pack mule train d …

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Whale in the Door

Whale in the Door

A Community Unites to Protect BC'S Howe Sound
by Pauline Le Bel
edition:eBook
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tagged : native americans, environmentalists & naturalists, oceans & seas

An exhilarating mix of natural history and personal exploration Whale in the Door is a passionate account of a woman’s transformative experience of her adopted home.

For thousands of years, Howe Sound, an inlet in the Salish Sea provided abundant food, shelter, and stories, for the Squamish Nation. After a century of contamination from pulp mills, …

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Imprint

Imprint

A Memoir of Trauma in the Third Generation
by Claire Sicherman
edition:eBook
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tagged : personal memoirs, death, grief, bereavement, holocaust

Imprint is a profound and courageous exploration of trauma, family, and the importance of breaking silence and telling stories. This book is a fresh and startling combination of history and personal revelation.

When her son almost died at birth and her grandmother passed away, something inside of Claire Sicherman snapped. Her body, which had always …

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Resolve

Resolve

The Story of the Chelsea Family and a First Nation Community’s Will to Heal
by Carolyn Parks Mintz, with Andy Chelsea & Phyllis Chelsea
edition:eBook
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tagged : native american, post-confederation (1867-), native americans

Andy and Phyllis Chelsea met during their years spent at the St. Joseph’s Mission School in Williams Lake, BC. Like the thousands of others forced into the church-run residential school system, Andy and Phyllis are no strangers to the ongoing difficulties experienced by most Indigenous peoples in Canada. The couple married in 1964 but brought the …

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Rising Tides

Rising Tides

Reflections for Climate Changing Times
edited by Cate Sandilands
edition:Paperback
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tagged : canadian, nature, environmental conservation & protection

Ice melt; sea level rise; catastrophic weather; flooding; drought; fire; infestation; species extinction and adaptation; water shortage and contamination; intensified social inequity, migration and cultural collapse. These are but some of the changes that are not only predicted for climate changing futures, but already part of our lives in Canada. …

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When Days Are Long

When Days Are Long

Nurse in the North
by Amy V. Wilson, introduction by Laurel Deedrick-Mayne
edition:Paperback
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tagged : medical, women, native americans

When Amy Wilson accepted the job of field nurse for the Indigenous Peoples in the Yukon and Northern British Columbia in 1949, she was told that the north was a fine country for men and dogs but that it killed women and horses. Undaunted, Wilson travelled the Alaska Highway from Whitehorse (Mile 916) to Mile Zero. She served Indigenous Peoples in t …

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Surveying the 120th Meridian and the Great Divide

Surveying the 120th Meridian and the Great Divide

The Alberta/BC Boundary Survey, 1918-1924
by Jay Sherwood
edition:Paperback
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tagged : historical, post-confederation (1867-), surveying

Surveying the 120th Meridian and the Great Divide is the second book of a two-part series describing the initial Alberta/BC boundary survey undertaken between 1913-1924. Surveying the 120th Meridian focuses on the years 1918-1924, when the Alberta crew continued the survey of the 120th meridian while the BC crew split off to continue mapping the Gr …

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Invisible Generations

Invisible Generations

Living between Indigenous and White in the Fraser Valley
by Jean Barman
edition:Paperback
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tagged : native american, native americans, post-confederation (1867-)

Born of Indigenous grandmothers and white grandfathers, Irene Kelleher lived all her life in the shadow of her heritage. Her local community in British Columbia's Fraser Valley treated her as if she was invisible. The combination of white and Indigenous descent was beyond the bounds of acceptability by a dominant white society. To be mixed was to n …

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New Ground

New Ground

A Memoir of Art and Activism in BC's Interior
by Ann Kujundzic
edition:Paperback
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tagged : women, artists, architects, photographers, post-confederation (1867-)

In the late fifties, Ann Kujundzic, her husband and artist Zeljko, and three children--with a fourth on the way--packed up their lives in post-war Edinburgh and emigrated to the Kootenays in BC, seeking adventure and opportunity. In Nelson, Ann was involved in establishing the Kootenay School of Art in 1960, a remarkable institution whose history h …

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The Co-op Revolution

The Co-op Revolution

Vancouver's Search for Food Alternatives
by Jan DeGrass
edition:Paperback
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tagged : post-confederation (1867-), culinary, personal memoirs, food industry

"We were undercapitalized, inexperienced, practiced democratic decision-making and some of us smoked dope occasionally. All elements that would make us grow as human beings and as business people. We ran a helluva show.''

In the spring of 1975, a free-spirited Jan DeGrass backpacked across Canada in search of adventure and greater meaning in life. W …

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How She Read

How She Read

by Chantal Gibson
edition:Paperback
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tagged : canadian, women authors, african

How She Read is a collection of genre-blurring poems about the representation of Black women, their hearts, minds and bodies, across the Canadian cultural imagination.

 

Drawing from grade-school vocabulary spellers, literature, history, art, media and pop culture, Chantal Gibson's sassy semiotics highlight the depth and duration of the imperialist i …

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Before We Lost the Lake

Before We Lost the Lake

A Natural and Human History of Sumas Valley
by Chad Reimer
edition:Paperback
also available: eBook
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tagged : post-confederation (1867-), human geography, lakes, ponds & swamps

For thousands of years, the broad expanse between Sumas and Vedder Mountains east of Vancouver lay under water, forming the bed of Sumas Lake. As recently as a century ago, the lake's shores stood four miles across and six miles long. During yearly high water, the lake spilled onto the surrounding prairies; during high flood years, it reached from …

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Food Was Her Country

Food Was Her Country

The Memoir of a Queer Daughter
by Marusya Bociurkiw
edition:Paperback
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tagged : lgbt, sexuality & gender studies, prejudice

The follow-up to Independent Publisher Award winner, Comfort Food for Breakups: The Memoir of a Hungry Girl, reflects on the tenious relationship between a queer daughter and her terminal mother. At turns tender, dark and funny, FOOD WAS HER COUNTRY tracks a tempestuous mother-daughter relationship and the life-long culinary journey that leads them …

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Blossoms in the Gold Mountains

Blossoms in the Gold Mountains

Chinese Settlements in the Fraser Canyon and the Okanagan
by Lily Chow
edition:Paperback
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Third book by de facto expert on Chinese Immigration to BC reveals never-before-told stories relevant to food, politics and national heritage. In this long awaited third book, author Lily Chow further explores Chinese settlement in BC. In the nineteenth century, thousands of Chinese immigrants arrived in British Columbia to work as labourers. After …

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Fernie at War

Fernie at War

1914-1919
by Wayne Norton
edition:Paperback
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tagged : canada

From "enemy alien" internment camps to WWI disillusionment - these are the five pivotal years that shaped Fernie, BC, a city instrumental to the national identity of Canada. Fernie, a small community located in BC's Kootenay region, entered the First World War in 1914 with optimism and a sense of national pride-it emerged five years later having ex …

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The Land on Which We Live

The Land on Which We Live

Life on the Cariboo Plateau: 70 Mile House to Bridge Lake
by Barbara MacPherson
edition:Paperback
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tagged : post-confederation (1867-)

Legendary tales of pioneers and adventurers cultivating BC's Cariboo Plateau in between the 19th and 20th century. The romantic backwoods landscape known as the North Bonaparte, stretches east from 70 Mile House to Bridge Lake and is full of small remote ranches, hidden abandoned homesteads, and rutted roads leading to graves in forgotten meadows. …

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Butch

Butch

Not Like the Other Girls
by SD Holman
edition:Paperback
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tagged : essays, photoessays & documentaries, lgbt

Butch: Not Like the Other Girls is a photographic exploration of the liminal spaces occupied by female masculinity in contemporary communities. Its first incarnation exhibited as a public art project in transit shelters around Vancouver in March-April 2013, with a simultaneous gallery show at the Vancouver East Cultural Centre (the Cultch). Accordi …

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Chilcotin Chronicles

Chilcotin Chronicles

Stories of Adventure and Intrigue from British Columbia's Central Interior
by Sage Birchwater
edition:Paperback
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tagged : post-confederation (1867-)

A collection of historical stories about the early indigenous people, settlers, trappers, and adventurers of BC's Cariboo Chilcotin. A compilation of stories that meld both culture and bloodlines, Chilcotin Chronicles by Sage Birchwater is set in the wild and untamed country of central British Columbia's Chilcotin Plateau. West of the Fraser River, …

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Wherever I Find Myself

Wherever I Find Myself

Stories by Canadian Immigrant Women
edited by Miriam Matejova
edition:Paperback
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tagged : canadian

An anthology of Canadian immigrant women and their experiences of being caught between the world of their past and the world of their future. In this third anthology in the Canadian women series by Caitlin Press, Canadian immigrant women from a variety of ethnicities and intersecting identities share their diverse and personal stories.

A woman takes …

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How Deep Is the Lake

How Deep Is the Lake

A Century at Chilliwack Lake
by Shelley O'Callaghan
edition:eBook
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tagged : lakes, ponds & swamps, personal memoirs, post-confederation (1867-)

Curious about the previous inhabitants of the lake community where her family has vacationed for over one hundred years, author Shelley O’Callaghan starts researching and writing about the area. But what begins as a personal journey of one woman’s relationship to the land and her desire to uncover the history of her family’s remote cabin, soo …

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How Deep is the Lake

How Deep is the Lake

A Century at Chilliwack Lake
by Shelley O'Callaghan
edition:Paperback
also available: eBook
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tagged : personal memoirs

Curious about the previous inhabitants of the lake where her family has spent the summer for over one hundred years, author Shelley O'Callaghan starts researching and writing about the area. But what begins as a personal journey of one woman's relationship to the land and her desire to uncover the history of her family's remote cabin turns into an …

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Making Room

Making Room

Forty Years of Room Magazine
edited by Meghan Bell
edition:Paperback
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tagged : women authors

Star-studded collection of CanLit's most notable and diverse women authors to be published in Canada's oldest literary journal by and about women. Making Room: Forty Years of Room Magazine celebrates the history and evolution of Canadian literature and feminism with some of the most exciting and thought-provoking fiction, poetry, and essays the mag …

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Acquired Community

Acquired Community

by Jane Byers
edition:Paperback
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tagged : lgbt

Jane Byers' Acquired Community is both a collection of narrative poems about seminal moments in North American lesbian and gay history, mostly post-World War II, and a series of first person poems that act as a touchstone to compare the narrator's coming out experience within the larger context of the gay liberation movement.

The "parade" poems such …

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The Amazing Mazie Baker

The Amazing Mazie Baker

The Story of a Squamish Nation's Warrior Elder
by Kay Johnston
edition:Paperback
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tagged : native americans

When author Kay Johnston first met Mazie Baker, she came to know her as the reigning queen of bannock, selling out batch after batch of fluffy, light frybread at local powwows. She soon learned that Mazie, a matriarch and an activist, had been nurturing and fiercely protecting her community for a lifetime.

In 1931, Mazie Antone was born into the Squ …

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In Fine Form

In Fine Form

The Canadian Book of Form Poetry
edited by Sandy Shreve & Kate Braid
edition:Paperback
also available: Paperback
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tagged : canadian

In the decade since the publication of the first edition of In Fine Form, there has been a resurgence of Canadian poets writing in "form" - in sonnets and ghazals, triolets and ballads, villanelles and palindromes - and formal poetry has become more visible in books, literary journals and classrooms. The first edition of this anthology was called " …

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The Native Voice

The Native Voice

The Story of How Maisie Hurley and Canada's First Aboriginal Newspaper Changed a Nation
by Eric Jamieson
edition:Paperback
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tagged : native american

In 1945, Alfred Adams, a respected Haida elder and founding president of the Native Brotherhood of British Columbia (NBBC), was dying of cancer. After decades of fighting to increase the rights and recognition of First Nations people, he implored Maisie Hurley to help his people by telling others about their struggle. Hurley took his request to bot …

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Great Fortune Dream

Great Fortune Dream

The Struggles and Triumphs of Chinese Settlers in Canada, 1858-19966
by David Chuenyan Lai, with Guo Ding
edition:eBook
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tagged : emigration & immigration, asian american studies

In 1858, gold was discovered in the Fraser River. News of this discovery travelled to the Pearl River Delta, where, in the aftermath of the Opium Wars, many Chinese sought to escape the poverty, overcrowding, political unrest and even slavery—invaders from western Asia captured and shipped many Chinese to South America as “piglets.” This tumu …

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The Landscape of Ernest Lamarque

The Landscape of Ernest Lamarque

Artist, Surveyor and Renaissance Man, 1879-1970
by Jay Sherwood
edition:Paperback
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tagged : post-confederation (1867-)

At the age of sixteen, Ernest Lamarque travelled from England to North America, to begin a life as a Victorian adventurer. Born in 1879 and orphaned at age twelve, he would go on to become an artist, a writer and a surveyor, creating some of the earliest visual records of the people of remote regions of Canada. At seventeen, Lamarque started workin …

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The Miracle Mile

The Miracle Mile

Stories of the 1954 British Empire and Commonwealth Games
by Jason Beck
edition:Paperback
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tagged : post-confederation (1867-)

The 1954 British Empire and Commonwealth Games in Vancouver changed both the city and world sport forever. The Games will always be remembered for the "Miracle Mile," the much-anticipated showdown between the first two men to break the four-minute barrier, England's Roger Bannister and Australia's John Landy. But as the press focused the world's at …

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The Dirty Knees of Prayer

The Dirty Knees of Prayer

by Timothy Shay
edition:Paperback
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tagged : canadian

The poems in The Dirty Knees of Prayer are hot and dark as night rain. The new Honeywell fan blows whips of simmered air against Shay's glistening back. He suspects a dystopian future and apparently it has arrived. These poems shrug at death. A tide of smoke rises and hovers over the city. Shay's picture is taken for his collection of grief and apo …

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Silenced

Silenced

The Untold Story of the Fight for Equality in the RCMP
by Bonnie Reilly Schmidt
edition:eBook
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tagged : post-confederation (1867-), women, law enforcement

When thirty-two women were hired as mounted police officers in 1974, it was a media sensation. After all, these were not the brawny heroes of Canadian history, or the dashing and handsome Mounties portrayed in over two hundred Hollywood movies. Women were thought to be afraid of guns and incapable of protecting themselves. Training officers at the …

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Sonia

The Life of Bohemian Rancher and Painter Sonia Cornwall, 1919-2006
by Sheryl Salloum
edition:Paperback
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tagged : contemporary (1945-)

After Sonia Cornwall's father died in 1939, her mother inherited the Onward Ranch and a huge debt. To make the ranch viable, a twenty-year-old Sonia traded paintbrush for pitchfork, labouring alongside the male ranch hands. But after marrying Hugh Cornwall in 1947, Sonia had time for painting once again. She learned techniques from some of Canada's …

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Skeena

Skeena

by Sarah de Leeuw
edition:Paperback
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tagged : nature, places, canadian

An elegy to and celebration of British Columbia's second-longest river, one at the centre of contemporary conversations about resource extraction and northern geographies, Skeena is an assemblage of voices, stories and histories both about the river and from the river's perspective. As a single poetic narrative spanning more than ninety pages, this …

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He Leaves His Face in the Funeral Car

He Leaves His Face in the Funeral Car

by Arleen Pare
edition:Paperback
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tagged : women authors

He Leaves His Face in the Funeral Car is elegiac, lyrical, ironic; a series of reflections, recollections; a collection about relationships-to family, clocks, water, trees, ungulates, endings-recognizing that not all relationships are straightforward: a mother's secret false teeth, a teakettle riddled with bullet holes, pears and small knives. To l …

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Silenced

Silenced

The Untold Story of the Fight for Equality in the RCMP
by Bonnie Reilly Schmidt
edition:Paperback
0 ratings
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tagged : women's studies

When thirty-two women were hired as mounted police officers in 1974, it was a media sensation. After all, these were not the brawny heroes of Canadian history, or the dashing and handsome Mounties portrayed in over two hundred Hollywood movies. Women were thought to be afraid of guns and incapable of protecting themselves. Training officers at the …

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Ground-Truthing

Ground-Truthing

Reimagining the Indigenous Rainforests of BC's North Coast
by Derrick Stacey Denholm
edition:Paperback
also available: eBook
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tagged : essays

Candid, poetic and forensic, Derrick Stacey Denholm's Ground-Truthing walks the reader slowly and nimbly through the tangle of social, ecological and economic slash piles that dominate BC's North Coast. Having lived and worked for twenty-five years as both a forestry field worker and a multidisciplinary artist, Denholm brings a rare perspective to …

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The Last Patrol

The Last Patrol

Following the Trail of the Royal Northwest Mounted Police’s Legendary Lost Patrol
by Keith Billington
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
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tagged : personal memoirs, post-confederation (1867-)

In Keith Billington’s The Last Patrol, he shares one of the most tragic stories of the far north.

It was a quiet December morning in 1910 when Inspector Fitzgerald and his crew left Fort McPherson, Northwest Territories, on a dog team patrol to Dawson City, Yukon. Their departure was without fanfare, and after a brief handshake and a salute, the m …

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Pedal

Pedal

by Chelsea Rooney
edition:eBook
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tagged : literary

Julia Hoop, a twenty-five-year-old counselling psych student, is working on her thesis, exploring an idea which makes her graduate supervisor squirm. She is conducting interview after interview with a group of women she affectionately calls the Molestas - women whose experience of childhood sexual abuse did not cause physical trauma. Julia is the e …

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Accidental Eden

Accidental Eden

Hippie Days on Lasqueti Island
by Douglas Hamilton & Darlene Kay Olesko
edition:Paperback
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Lasqueti Island has a rowdy and divided reputation. Between the 1970s and early 80s, the island attracted a flood of counter-culture seekers - communards, hippies, utopians, revolutionaries and other exotic characters looking for an alternative lifestyle. Today many perceive it as a romantic fantasy: an existence of bucolic peace, surrounded by iso …

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Back to the Red Road

Back to the Red Road

A Story of Survival, Redemption and Love
by Florence Kaefer & Edward Gamblin
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
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tagged : personal memoirs, native american, native americans

In 1954, when Florence Kaefer was just nineteen, she accepted a job as a teacher at Norway House Indian Residential School of Manitoba. Not fully aware of the difficult conditions the students were enduring, Florence and her fellow teachers nurtured a school full of lonely and homesick young children.

Edward was only five when he was brought to the …

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Women of Brave Mettle

Women of Brave Mettle

More Stories of the Cariboo Chilcotin
by Diana French
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
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tagged : women, women's studies, post-confederation (1867-)

In this much-anticipated second volume in the Extraordinary Women Anthology series, Diana French follows up on Gumption and Grit with more stories of the women who have contributed, or who are still contributing, to the vibrant mosaic that is the Cariboo Chilcotin. The area has more than its share of remarkable women, from educators to rodeo stars, …

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The Junction

The Junction

Stories of Land and Place in the BC Interior
by John Schreiber
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
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tagged : post-confederation (1867-), western provinces

In his third book, The Junction, John Schreiber invites us to join him on a journey into the hidden corners of BC’s Cariboo Chilcotin, where he observes and describes a land of mountains and old trails, coyotes and bighorn sheep, Aboriginal folk, homesteaders, ranchers and the stories of long ago.

Driven by his love of this land, Schreiber wanders …

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