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  • - In Search of Food Sovereignty
    av Kristeva Dowling
    260,-

  • av Adam Pottle
    156,-

    In this jarring collection, Adam Pottle cracks open the world of disability, illuminating it with an idiom that is both unsettling and exhilarating. His subjects are gritty and multifarious: drug related shootings; amputee sex swingers; tattooed Parkinsons patients; institutionalized adolescents coerced into sterilization.

  • - The Journey Poems
    av Ursula Vaira
    156,-

  • av David Thompson
    176,-

  • - A Novel
    av Janet Romain
    296,-

  • - In the Chilcotin Backcountry
    av John Schreiber
    200,-

  • - Collected Poetry from Northern BC Women
     
    190,-

  • - An Anthology to End Violence Against Women
     
    196,-

    There is an epidemic of violence against women in Canada and the world. For many women physical and sexual assault, or the threat of such violence, is a daily reality. Walk Myself Home is an anthology of poetry, fiction, nonfiction and oral interviews on the subject of violence against women including contributions by Kate Braid, Yasuko Thahn and Susan Musgrave.

  • av Christian Petersen
    158,-

  • - Murder, Perjury & Trial by Newspaper
    av Betty Keller
    240,-

  • - The Flying Fur Buyer of Anahim Lake
    av Darcy Christiensen
    240,-

  • - Adventure in Wild Waters
    av Jack Boudreau
    196,-

  • - Tales from a Frontier Doctor
    av Sterling Haynes
    176,-

  • - Letters from the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway
    av Bernice Medbury Martin
    296,-

    The story of the railway has never been told in such a charming voice as in these letters by Bernice Medbury Martin. Bernice Medbury married railroader Leslie Martin in 1912 and arrived later that year in Prince Rupert at the height of rock blasting and railroad building. Lonely for her family in Wisconsin, Bernice wrote frequent letters home in which she described in striking detail the machinery and mudslides, the weather and the wilderness, the local characters and the outrageous cost of supplies. She wrote of her frustration at the slow pace of the railway work and her happiness at an invitation to a social event many miles away. She lived in a tent at Kitselas, a hotel in Hazelton, a shack in the Bulkley Valley and a hand-hewn log cabin at Decker Lake. Bernice's letters span the two final years of Grand Trunk Pacific Railway track building and are neatly woven together by Jane Stevenson's well-researched narration. A stunning collection of photographs illustrates the enormous task of constructing a railway along the Skeena River, through the Bulkley Valley and on to Burns Lake. Bernice travelled to a land her friends and family could not imagine, where she experienced the challenges and joys of the Canadian western frontier and witnessed the construction of the truly "Grand" Trunk Pacific Railway, until the last spike was driven near her home early in the spring of 1914.

  • av Al Rempel
    150,-

  • - Stories
    av Sarah Roberts
    166,-

    In this debut collection of short stories, Roberts introduces thought-provoking characters caught between the encroaching modern, industrial world and the hard truths of lives lived at the edge of everything.

  • - More Campfire Stories
    av Jack Boudreau
    196,-

    In 1934, international entrepreneur and filmmaker Charles Bedeaux hires a team of Canadian men to trailblaze from Edmonton, Alberta, to Telegraph Creek, British Columbia. What starts out as adventure for Carl Davidson and Bob Beattie soon becomes a treacherous and heartbreaking journey. Photos.

  • - A Woman's Journey to the Canadian Arctic
    av Dianne Whelan
    270,-

    Whelan became the first woman to accompany the Canadian Rangers on a never-before-patrolled route of the northwestern coast of Ellesmere Island. Here, she shares her personal journey and the global significance of the Canadian High Arctic.

  • - Poems
    av Kuldip Gill
    156,-

    Memorials and the yearning to re-create the past permeate this new collection by award-winning poet Gill. The voices of East Indian communities and families speak up, reminding readers that history is not just what is recorded in documents and ledgers, but is a mixture of smells, tastes, and textures.

  • - Conversations with BC Women in Politics
    av Anne Edwards
    270,-

  • av Rob Budde
    150,-

  • av Gillian Wigmore
    156,-

  • av Marita Dachsel
    156,-

  • - Whitewater Freighting on the Upper Fraser
    av Jack Boudreau
    158,-

    The story of men who braved the dangerous waterways of the upper Fraser River to build the GTP Railway.

  • - Selected Hikes of Northern British Columbia
    av Vivien Lougheed
    296,-

    Insatiable traveller Vivien Lougheed has hiked many of the world's most renowned peaks, including the Andes and the Himalayas, and published several books detailing her adventures. Now, with "From the Chilcotin to the Chilkoot", she turns her attention to the northern woods and the place she calls home. Hiking, says Lougheed, doesn't have to be a strenuous adventure. It can be as simple as a walk in the park. The hikes in the book illustrate her philosophy, ranging from laid-back, one-hour, off-the-highway meanders to challenging, multiple-day trips.

  • - Poems
    av Jeremy Stewart
    156,-

    This is a young poet''s search for and discovery of his place in the local landscape. The poet is haunted by the legacy of colonialism and propelled by the struggles of a community seeking its own identity. "(flood basement" is the raw, shocking and innocent journey of an emerging artist in a seemingly inflexible world. In this collection Stewart shares a collage of fragments that amount to a portrait of the Prince George of his youth, a transcription of a midnight audio journey, and an introspection of the fluctuating and sometimes fragile identity of the writer. Stewart''s work pushes the boundaries of innovative and experimental poetry while weaving a visual narrative of the world in which he lives.

  • - Loss & Resilience at Alkali Lake
    av Lorne Dufour
    230,-

    In 1974 Lorne Dufour moved to Alkali Lake Reserve, a Shuswap community near Williams Lake in British Columbia, to help reopen the local elementary school. Like many First Nation communities across Canada, Alkali Lake had been ravaged by decades of residential schools and forced religion. Colonialism had robbed them of their language and culture and had left a legacy of abuse and alcoholism. But in 1972, Chief Andy Chelsea and his wife Phyllis took it upon themselves to lead their community on a long and painful road to sobriety and what ensued was a dramatic transformation of a people enslaved by a seemingly unstoppable plague. By 1985, Alkali Lake was almost a hundred percent dry and had become a role model for many other communities in BC. "Jacob''s Prayer" takes place during this time of transformation and it speaks to the unexpected existence of resiliency in the most unassuming of characters. It centres around one tragic Halloween evening in 1975 when two men lose their lives and another is saved by a friend who chooses not to be destroyed by his own tragedy and devastating loss. Jacob''s Prayer is the haunting and poetic story of a community''s suffering, loss and eventual healing.

  • av Fiona Tinwei Lam
    210,-

    This is a luminous collection that takes us on a keen-eyed journey from childhood to parenthood: from a child''s perspective of her parents, through to the transition to adulthood as a single parent, then finally to the witnessing of a parent''s decline and death. Lam details the slow and sometimes painful transformation into motherhood, the transition of generations, the inherent politics behind relationships, and the essential solitude and struggle of being outside the traditionally defined family. In her title poem "Chrysanthemum", Lam remembers her mother''s gentle hand with the watercolour brush: "Then, from the finest brush, the outline/ of each petal. Flesh flowed from the fuller one,/ tipped with yellow or lavender,/ until every crown had bloomed/ amid the throng of leaves./ How her hand knew paper through brush/ If only I had been paper,/ that upturned and delicate face,/ stroked and stroked again with such/ precise tenderness, such a patient hand". Lam''s new collection is fundamentally as much an exploration of profound loss as it is of love and an individual''s reconnection to humanity. This is her second book of poetry.

  • - A Sequence of Poetics
    av Ken Belford
    156,-

    In Ken Belford''s fifth book of poetry he takes us on a journey through Canada''s roadless north where he has discovered a third world gaze, looking out at industrialism and its impact on a region abundant in resources and natural beauty. This is an unsentimental and non-reactionary perspective, a deep investigation of the psychology of both the electronic revolution and postmodernism. It is also a collective conversation having to do with the mobile geographies of inequality. The poems are a study in the social cost of privilege and what it means to have access to power, surveillance and identity.

  • - The Glenn Gould Poems
    av Kate Braid
    150,-

    This is an exploration of loose correspondence between one of Canada''s greatest musicians, Glenn Gould, and "K", an admiring fan. Braid weaves an intimate dynamic as K struggles with the loss of her hearing in one ear, finding her greatest comfort in Gould''s music -- particularly when he plays Bach. Gould''s poems don''t directly reply, but they do echo a response as he struggles with his own difficult life; his family, his health, his strong beliefs in how music should be presented and his personal habits considered "eccentric" by an ever-watchful press. K starts to accept her changing world, just as Gould begins a downward spiral into disintegration. In his final reflection, Gould acknowledges that in spite of his personal trials, his music now circles the world in the spacecraft Voyager as Earth''s example to other possible life forms of what is most beautiful in this civilisation. This is a striking and masterful volume of poems that does justice to Gould''s brilliance, offering insights into his personal life and art, even as it showcases Braid''s own virtuosity.

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