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  • av Jim Kerr
    250,-

  • av Linda Dayan Frimer
    450 - 486,-

  • av Dr. Brian Hayden
    200,-

    It is the Stone Age of France; a prehistoric era of giant mammoths, painted caves, and fearsome cave lions. Fleeing starvation in their home territory, thirteen-year-old Sev and his family have been grudgingly accepted into the powerful Bear Clan. Yet as his father climbs the ranks of the mysterious group of shamans known as the Lion Lodge, Sev finds himself questioning the strange beliefs of his adopted band. Determined to unravel the secrets of the Lodge and prove his bravery, Sev accepts a dare to enter the Cave of Lions-a forbidden cavern high on the mountain where the shamans of the Lodge commune with powerful spirits. When Sev's trespass is revealed by his rival, Bakar, he is forced to make an impossible choice: join the Lodge or be exiled from the Clan-and exile is a potentially fatal sentence in the Ice Age world. Even joining the Lodge is no guarantee of survival, as their deadly politics are reinforced with dangerous tests of loyalty. ¿A YA adventure novel set in France during the last Ice Age, The Eyes of the Leopard is inspired by archaeologist and anthropologist Dr. Brian Hayden's lifetime experience in the field studying prehistoric and ethnographic hunter-gatherer societies. Hayden's expertise brings realistic depth to this classic coming-of-age story, painting Sev's life of communal hunts, ritual feasting, and spiritual ceremonies "with the vivacity of a graphic novel" and providing an excellent introduction for young readers interested in archaeology. With art by professional archaeological illustrator Eric Carlson, the novel has been acclaimed by other archaeologists as a successful union of scientific work and storytelling.

  • av Duane Lawrence
    210,-

  • av Michael Frimer
    316,-

  • av Santo Mignosa
    296,-

  • av Anton Von Stefan
    160,-

    A Very Strange Christmas! is a compelling story of a loner set in England at the height of the world-wide depression of the 1930s. Finding himself hungry and penniless on Christmas Eve, he is bent on carrying out a most nefarious action to satisfy his self-centred craving. Events occur which thwart that intended action, twisting and turning to bring about a completely different outcome, affecting everyone they touch. A remarkable book with a happy ending; a book which should be in everyone''s library.

  • - memoir and essays by an astronomer who became a psychiatrist
    av Jaime Smith
    246,-

  • - a woman's journey to a fulfilled life
    av Tricia Cook
    260,-

  • av Clarissa P Green
    256,-

    Pivotal events in Clarissa P. Green’s childhood altered the trajectory of her family relationships, personal life and career. Within the course of one year, her youngest sister passed away within seven months of her birth, and both her father and grandmother suffered near-fatal heart-attacks. In the 1950s, silence was considered an appropriate response to tragedy. Green writes, “my parents believed the right way to handle misfortune was to ‘turn the page.’ This meant they didn’t talk with their children about our sister’s death or any of the other awful events around that time. It’s taken me most of my life to understand how this crisis changed my family so profoundly, how it shaped my future.” It took a move from New York to Florida to bring the family back together.In her twenties, Green was drawn to study the ins and outs of family crisis. In graduate school, and then as a professor in Vancouver, British Columbia, Green began to help grieving families regain balance — comforting the parents of premature newborns and helping families whose wives or mothers were diagnosed with life-threatening illness. Her support of these families led to a decades-long career in clinical therapy, working with aging parents and their mid-life children.Green writes, “The lengthy journey through aging involves numerous reasons to stumble — burdensome caregiving, coping with illness, sibling strife, money dynamics, unfinished business… No matter what they were particularly upset about, mid-life children and old parents alike wanted to be seen as adult, to act grown-up in front of one another. Parents’ aging, especially illness, called for responsible approaches to tough situations, respect for differences in perspective, authentic and open conversation, boundaries.”An award-winning teacher and advocate for the power of a learner’s personal connections in making theory and research meaningful, Green listened to her clients stories. As the storyteller of her own family, in Grownupedness Green weaves together her personal experiences alongside those of her clients — in humorous and touching detail — to make her deep understandings of family and aging available to all.In Part I, Green explores what it means to be an “elderly young girl,” breaks down the anatomy of a crisis, and shows how the influence of past trauma stays with us as we age. Part II dives deeply into Green’s own personal experiences as she shares with the reader the challenges of supporting loved ones as they and their partners face growing old, illness and end of life. In Part III, Green delves into what she has learned as a daughter, a sibling, a wife, a mother, a teacher and a therapist. Coupled with stories and lessons learned from her clients and family, she brings together stories and advice on difficult conversations — finance, dementia, touch, independence — and shares with vulnerability how she herself navigated the changing relationships with her own adult sons. Finding humor in difficult situations, Green manages to find humanity in experiences that are simultaneously personal and yet universal. 

  • av Brigid Mylod & Rameen Peyro
    146,-

  • - From Charity to Parity
    av Graeme McCreath
    280 - 396,-

  • - Jazz Greats Were My Mentors
    av Stephen T. & MD Botek
    316 - 390,-

  • av Ted Hunt
    316,-

    Based on three fascinating, romantic and exciting stories during the turbulent period of 1914-1920: how the first woman invited to serve with the Czar's Treasury hides the wealth of Russia from Lenin, how a language student from Stanford University leads a clandestine invasion of Siberia to thwart Bolshevism and how a graduate student from Charles University in Prague leads a regiment of elite athletes in mutiny against Germany to side with Russia. This factual story of love and escape is complex, and at times challenging to popular views, but every situation is accurately framed within well-researched historiography. The only fiction in this novel lies within two of the main characters, who are composites. All others are presented accurately.

  • - Elisabeth, Empress of Austria
    av Gloria M. Allan
    260,-

    Living in a shallow and jealous court society, greedy for position and power, Elisabeth's strength of character, her determination, her skill as a horsewoman and love of travel allowed her to endure her life and gave her freedom from her domineering mother-in-law. Tragedy haunts the pages of her life, but she lives again, beautiful, charming and strong, in Allan's novel. Born of royal blood, 15-year-old Elisabeth (Sisi) is a free-spirited child of nature, with no social graces to speak of, when Franz Joseph, Emperor of Austria, falls madly in love with her. In 1854, as the new Empress of Austria, she is swept into the harsh world of the Habsburg Empire, with its power struggles and political intrigues. Her mother-in-law is determined to crush her into submission and her husband has a roving eye that never misses a pretty lady. But Elisabeth is no ordinary woman. In the face of adversity, her determination knows no bounds and her beauty becomes her strength. While blazing her own path to power and freedom, love comes into her life. A Walk on Broken Glass is a compelling story of Elisabeth's loves, tragedies and triumphs. Her love of Hungarians brought about her greatest achievement - helping to influence the formation of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

  • av Matthew Kalkman
    256,-

    This strongly researched and well written book examines the evolution of Liberalism from its early beginnings to its potential future incarnations. The author argues that New Liberalism is the next step in this evolution: the notion that, in order for a society to be maintained and to evolve, it is necessary to take into account Liberal responsibility to future generations. There needs to be realignment in understanding that there is a common humanity that extends to all people on this planet.

  • - A Chilcotin Mystery
    av Bruce Fraser
    260,-

    On Thanksgiving of '58, rancher Bordy Hanlon is gunned down in his living room. His adopted son, Noah, is charged with his murder. Stan Hewitt, an alcoholic lawyer from Williams Lake, defends the young man before a white jury and later before a Native circle of elders. On Potato Mountain is not only a tale of love and mystery, but is also a story of a remarkable land and its people.

  • - Travel Diary of Joseph S. Werlin & History Lessons from My Father
    av Joseph S Werlin
    316,-

  • av Bruno Huber
    260,-

    Two young lovers are forced apart by their different social strata and years later find themselves on opposite sides of a proposed nuclear plant near a pueblo in central Mexico. He forms an activist group while she is a reporter for a conservative newspaper. It's a fight for a way of life and the environment against the insatiable need for power.

  • av Susan Hyatt
    506,-

  • - A grandmother's love and a little boy's brilliance
    av Pauline Daniel
    246,-

  • - Stories and History of ILWU Local 502
    av Chris Madsen
    350,-

  • av John Ellis
    260,-

  • av Pnina Granirer
    296,-

    This is a lively and moving memoir that chronicles Pnina Granirers life as an artist, wife and mother. Conceived as a play in three acts, it begins in her hometown in Romania, moves to its second act in Israel, and concludes with her life in North America. It encompasses her years in Israel, the USA, France and Canada, and her travels to Japan, Spain and Mexico, all of which inform her understanding of the world which is then reflected in her art.

  • - & Other Gothic Tales
    av Anton Von Stefan
    270,-

    The Curse of the Red Crystal and Other Gothic Tales celebrates gothic horror. These eleven tales of terror span the distance from Victorian times to the present day, from Egyptian tombs to modern streets, from creaking ships to stately mansions, and from good intentions to damnation. Mysterious locales, mystical artifacts, eerie omens, and macabre machinations converge to delight and horrify even the most complacent among us in these atmospheric accounts of guilt, revenge and obsession. Be it mad science performed on human bodies or madness infecting the soul, Anton von Stefan examines what lies beneath the veneer of familiarity to see what hides from us in the shadows.Be prepared — your hair will bristle and your jaw will drop.Covering your eyes won’t make the words on the page go away,only plant the images deeper into your mind.Read in daylight.

  • - Helping Children to Educate Themselves
    av Lael Whitehead
    260,-

  • - The Life of the Canadian Journalist Who Interviewed Hitler
    av Colin Castle
    260,-

    As they shook hands and sat down across from each other in the stark office, Rufus knew that history was being made... Chronicling the true life of Canadian newsman Lukin "Rufus" Johnson, this never-before-told biography explains how one man went from labouring across the Canadian prairies and through the farms of Ontario to becoming the first Canadian newsman to interview Hitler. After beginning his career as a journalist only to be pulled away to serve in World War I, Rufus was not yet aware that his inevitable return to journalism would eventually lead him to interview the man who initiated a world war of his own. After grinding out years in the journalistic trenches, working for the Vancouver Province and Southam newspapers, Rufus was desperate for a headline-making scoop. He began to cover international events and newsmakers, simultaneously infuriating his superiors while gaining their respect. He was eventually given the magazine section of the Province and was later dispatched to London to lead their first overseas bureau. Rufus's stories from abroad were wildly popular back home in Canada, but as European skies darkened, his investigative reports left readers in no doubt about the danger of a new war on the horizon. And while they digested his interview with Hitler in November of 1933, they also heard of his mysterious disappearance aboard the ship back to England, never to be seen again. Rufus's untimely and mysterious death cut short not only a writing career that significantly affected the Canadian journalistic and political landscapes, but cut short a life that was worthy of its own headlines.

  • - Coal Dust in My Genes
    av Jim Elliot
    260,-

  • - The Making of a Hero of Two World Wars
    av Sam McBride
    296,-

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