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  • av Harold Macy
    200,-

    Harold Macy's newest book, a collection of short stories depicting life in British Columbia, resonates with the land and the people who inhabit it.Whether he's chronicling the death song of a Douglas fir, the brassy orchestra of trumpeter swans, or the sweet sap symphony of a tapped maple, Harold Macy contemplates the beauty of all that British Columbia has to offer with graceful lyricism and appreciation for the natural world, highlighting the particular magic of the West Coast.It is the human ties to the land that shine in Macy's stories: everyday fishermen and loggers, gardeners and wildland firefighters, maple harvesters and weekend missionaries. From the rich bounty of the glacial loam to the wondrous stands of Sitka spruce, BC's natural landscape is as much a character in Macy's tales as any person.With a genuine appreciation for the natural beauty of British Columbia, Macy's collection reflects on how we both shape-and are shaped-by the land we inhabit.

  • av Kennedy Stewart
    200,-

    "A timely, insider account of an important and controversial step in British Columbia's strategic effort to respond to the overdose crisis. Canada is in the middle of an opioid crisis. Since the province of British Columbia declared a public health emergency in 2016, more than 9,400 people have died of drug poisoning in BC--an average of six people a day--with nearly 1,500 apparent opioid-related deaths in the first eight months of 2022. In Decrim, Kennedy Stewart, mayor of Vancouver from 2018 to 2022, recounts historic progress in addressing this crisis. January 31, 2023, is the beginning of a three-year trial period for decriminalizing the possession of small amounts of hard drugs in British Columbia, a ground-breaking change in Canada's approach to drug use. Kennedy Stewart has written Decrim to tell the story of how this remarkable policy change came about and the enormous challenges faced by those who fought for it--including its contribution to him losing his bid for mayoral re-election. In Decrim, Stewart lays out how ending the "war on drugs" and recognizing the overdose crisis as a public health issue will help reduce stigma related to substance use, increase access to health services, and decrease harms related to criminalization in British Columbia."--

  • av Harold Kalman
    280,-

    "This new edition of the classic urban guidebook brings the city's architectural story up to date. Harold Kalman and Robin Ward, long-time chroniclers of Vancouver, offer an authoritative and highly readable book about Vancouver's most interesting places and explain how, why and by whom the city's urban environment was created. Containing more than four hundred entries, ten self-guided tours highlight significant buildings from all eras in the city and its metro region, and feature new projects that transform the skyline more radically than ever before. The tours--organized by neighbourhood and planned variously for walking, cycling, car and transit--reveal Vancouver in a constant state of reinvention, fuelled by real estate speculation, immigration and the egos of civic boosters, developers and architects. Today, this dynamic is colliding with architectural and urban planning responses to climate change. For the first time in the series, this edition includes the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh peoples' role in the narrative, including information on several substantial local projects shaped by these communities and Nations. For wayfinding, entries are numbered and keyed to maps. A glossary of architectural terms and styles is provided. Exploring Vancouver is the perfect companion for curious visitors and citizens of this fascinating metropolis alike."--

  • av Robert Bringhurst
    190,-

    A new collection from one of Canada's finest contemporary poets. In The Ridge, Robert Bringhurst offers a work of nonfiction in poetic form, intensely focused on the ecological past, present and future of the West Coast of Canada.At the book's heart is a long poem, "The Ridge," in which Bringhurst makes meticulous use of scientific language and, with a poet's perspective and precision, translates abstract concepts into tangible and devastating imagery. Global energy consumption is measured in cords of wood instead of BTUs or megawatts; subatomic particles demarcating time and space are prayer flags tearing free in the slow destruction of the solar system. In dazzling prose that weaves together the physical and the metaphysical, Bringhurst shifts his attention from tiny spores to fish farms, the spirit world, telescopes and epistemology.Beautiful, profound and insightful, The Ridge reflects the author's reputation as one of Canada's most esteemed poets.

  • av Adrian Raeside
    166,-

    Bestselling cartoonist Adrian Raeside captures the special bond between humans and their pets and, with marvelous illustrations, brings gentle humour to a story that will resonate with cat lovers of all ages. Amy and Rocky are best friends, as close as a girl and a cat can be. They have been by each other's side since Amy was born, and seasons pass happily in companionship with tea parties, yarn chasing and warm naps. But as Rocky grows older, her purrs grow fainter-and one night, Rocky disappears. Amy is heartbroken until a helpful but flatulent friend of Rocky brings her to the Rainbow Bridge, a magical paradise for pets of all kinds.There, Amy finds Rocky again and together they explore the Rainbow Bridge, a place where there are fields of catnip and cats never run out of fragile things to break, and where the feline inhabitants have formed a truce with pet birds, mice and hamsters.Since publication in 2012, Adrian Raeside's The Rainbow Bridge: A Visit to Pet Paradise has sold over seventy-five thousand copies in Canada and the United States, providing a story that comforts children as they deal with the loss of a pet. This companion volume will have special appeal for cat lovers.

  • av Katherine Palmer Gordon
    336,-

    This Place Is Who We Are profiles Indigenous communities in central and northern coastal BC that are reconnecting to their lands and waters-and growing and thriving through this reconnection. Indigenous peoples and cultures are integrally connected to the land. Well-being in every sense-physical, social, environmental, economic, spiritual and cultural-depends on that relationship, which is based on a fundamental concept: when the land is well, so are the people.With increasing strength, Indigenous peoples in this vast region of BC-which spans the homelands of more than two dozen First Nations and one of the largest remaining coastal temperate rainforests in the world-are restoring what has been lost through environmental depredation and healing what has been devastated by colonization.This volume is a collection of ten of these inspiring stories. X¿aayda voices explain how their Rediscovery camps are healing and empowering their youth; Dzawadä'enuxw Hereditary Chief Maxwiyalidizi K'odi Nelson shares the story of building a healing centre and ecolodge; Wei Wai Kum Chief Christopher Roberts describes the challenges and opportunities for an urban First Nation looking to prosper while protecting the environment and ancient Lig¿i¿dax¿ history and living cultural values; and many more Indigenous leaders share their own experiences of growth, strength and reconnection.Thoughtful and inspiring, This Place Is Who We Are illustrates what can be accomplished when conservation and stewardship are inextricably intertwined with the prosperity and well-being of communities.

  • av David Zieroth
    190,-

    "From Governor General's Award-winning poet David Zieroth comes a new collection about history, connections and travels in Europe. Impromptu English lessons in a North Vancouver coffee shop, and subsequent trips to Bratislava, bring the speaker in these poems a warmer appreciation of friends and family as well as a wider vision of the interplay of folklore and culture, and of the human-made and natural world. These poems speak of affections that cross borders-- geographical, historical and interpersonal--and that show us ways to love each other. Here are villages, people and landscapes in Slovakia, a post-Communist country with a complicated past and present, where Zieroth seeks what unites us across barriers. He brings this deeper sense of connection home with him, even when a part of his new sense of self and others lingers along the Danube."--

  • av Gaadgas Nora Bellis
    200,-

  • av Maureen Brownlee
    180,-

    CA

  • av Kelly Randall Ricketts
    190,-

  • av Randy Nelson
    200,-

    author is a highly decorated retired fisheries officertrue poaching stories from every Statewide variety of illegal hunting examples, from smuggling narwhal tusk to shooting bison to poaching cactistories cover a range of hunting violations, including killing and/or smuggling endangered animals, using illegal hunting methods and hunting out of season

  • av Michael Gates
    300,-

    In this exciting first-hand account of an unexpected cinematic discovery, Michael Gates delves into the history behind a hoard of silent films found buried beneath the permafrost of an Arctic gold rush town.In 1978, hundreds of reels of silent films were unearthed from beneath the demolished site of an old hockey arena in Dawson City, Yukon. Author Michael Gates witnessed the cinematic discovery of these once-lost films-and in this book excavates and illuminates the history of a gold rush town like no other.An event in the most unlikely of places and circumstances, the Klondike gold rush was unique in the history of Canada and the development of the North. Dawson City, the "Paris of the North," was the hub of the Klondike gold rush 125 years ago. There were more saloons, gambling halls and theatres than there were places serving food, and the live theatre was at the centre of it all. Discover the icons who went from the Klondike to Hollywood: Robert Service, Jack London, Charlie Chaplin, Alexander Pantages, Sid Grauman, Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle, Marjorie Rambeau and more.Join Gates on this cinematic journey as he ponders the question: Did the Klondike help make Hollywood, or did Hollywood make the Klondike? Crafted from Gates's first-hand experience and extensive research, Hollywood in the Klondike casts a spotlight on an exciting piece of Canadian history.

  • av Caroll Simpson
    210,-

    "The inspiring story of how an urban woman came to own and operate a remote fishing lodge nestled deep in the British Columbian wilderness. When Caroll Simpson fell in love with a cabin located on pristine Babine Lake in BC, many miles away from her home in Washington State, she knew her life was about to change. After convincing her husband to abandon their dream of living aboard a sailboat, they began the complicated process of buying the lodge and moving north. For two years, their adventure was a blissful dream. Then, tragedy struck. Following the sudden death of her husband, Simpson was forced to decide her next move alone, amidst deep grief--would she sell the lodge, or would she stay, continuing the process of pursuing Canadian citizenship and running this remote lodge by herself? No easy feat, given accessing the lodge in summer required a forty-mile round trip by boat and, in the winter, a passage on an ice breaker barge and a treacherous snowshoe trek. This heartfelt memoir tells Simpson's story--of living in the remote wilderness and managing the lodge, becoming an accidental environmental activist, fending off wild animals, working as an angling guide and finally, at the height of her career, fighting off a proposed mining operation and participating in the development of a government land plan as a spokesperson for the wilderness tourism industry."--

  • av Robert D. Turner
    580,-

    "By 2020 working steam railways around the world were all but extinct, except for in China. Containing exhaustive text and hundreds of stunning colour photographs, The Last Fires Within documents the final days of steam railways throughout China and illustrates their amazing quantity and diversity. In the last half of the 20th Century, China built 10,000 coal-burning steam locomotives across the country. These powerful engines ran in a variety of settings, from an open cast coal mine near the Siberian border to the semi-tropical remote hills of Sichuan, powering passenger trains that stretched 1000 km across Inner Mongolia and pulling the local trains on forestry railways in the countryside of northern China. Then in 2001, Chinese Railways retired almost all its steam locomotives. Nonetheless, some regional, local, and industrial operations continued using steam for another decade or more. The photographs and photo essays in this book are a result of visits to dozens of these often-remote railways where steam was still being used. They highlight the skills of workers as they overhauled and maintained the locomotives and reflect on the lives of the people who depended upon them in a rapidly changing world. The Last Fires Within chronicles the last two decades of China's fascinating and picturesque steam railways in a visually dramatic and authoritative presentation. The first of three volumes take the story of the last steam railways across Asia, Africa, Europe, and the Americas. With over 500 original colour photographs, graphics, maps, and tables, this is a spectacular addition to any history collection."--

  • av Jean Barman
    310,-

    "Esteemed historian Jean Barman brings new insights on the seemingly disparate events that converged to lay the foundation of the present-day province. By examining newly accessible private correspondence exchanged with the Colonial Office in London, Barman pieces together the chain of events that caused the distant colony of British Columbia to join the Canadian Confederation as opposed to the very real possibility of becoming one or more American states. Following the division of the Pacific Northwest between Britain and the United States in 1846, it took British Columbia just a quarter of a century to be transformed from a largely Indigenous territory in 1871, into a province of the recently formed Canada Confederation. In this detailed exploration of colonial politics, including fur trader and politician James Douglas's governance and the critical role played by the many unions between white settlers and and Indigenous women, Barman expertly weaves together seemingly disparate events that converged to lay the foundations of today's Canadian province."--

  • av Robin Fisher
    336,-

  • av Grant Lawrence
    206,-

  • av John Pass
    160,-

    A new collection from John Pass, author of Stumbling in the Bloom and crawlspace.

  • av Patricia Sorbara
    177,99

    Patricia Sorbara has been a political operative for more than forty years-a mainstay in the background of both federal and provincial politics in Ontario, dedicating her career to the Liberal Party. She's worked for and with Liberal Opposition Leaders, Premiers, Members of Parliament, Members of Provincial Parliament and more candidates than any staffer could imagine. Sorbara became known as the woman to have on side, the one who knows the ground game and never backs down from a challenge. In December of 2014, all of that changed. A potential candidate in Sudbury, ON, went to the media with the allegation that Sorbara, acting on behalf of the Party, had offered a bribe in exchange for stepping down from a nomination race. She was blindsided.While on trial in Sudbury in the fall of 2017, Sorbara found herself leaning on the unique education of decades in politics, one that came with being a lifelong female political staffer, which saw her through the first emotional moments of the trial to the eventual verdict nearly seven weeks later. But it didn't end there. In Let 'Em Howl: Lessons from a Life in Backroom Politics, Sorbara shares her best lessons from the back room-the ones that sustained her in the darkest hours-illustrated by stories featuring key political figures in Canadian politics. The result is required reading for anyone interested in Canadian politics or government.

  • av Michael Gates
    340,-

  • av Russell Thornton
    230,-

    A masterful new collection by Griffin Poetry Prize finalist Russell Thornton.The poems in The Broken Face explore a sacramental, imaginative vision within contexts of crime, perception, memory and love. In this collection, Russell Thornton returns to the vital themes of intimacy and family, loss, fear and hope, bringing to each poem the essential quality of a myth or incantation. Reverent and revealing, within those familiar relationships he ushers in a connection with something transcendent: "A man has come floundering late in the night / to stand alone at the shore of a sleeping infant's face."The poems capture life at the periphery, whether describing homelessness or incarceration, or even the universal experiences of aging and mortality, love and fear of love, all of which bring the speaker into a detached yet energized state of watching and waiting: "the door that was my grandfather into our passing lives / will arrive at a house where each of us is his own door / that opens on our first selves, fundamental together."With intense lyricism, Thornton displays a mastery of craft so complete as to be nearly invisible. While stunningly beautiful, his imagery is also in such complete service to the deeper emotional resonance of each poem that it feels inevitable, making the collection deeply moving.

  • av Tom Wayman
    256,-

    A new collection by celebrated poet Tom Wayman that contemplates how to live in a fractious time.

  • av Lucas Crawford
    160,-

    The author's first book (in manuscript form) was awarded the Robert Kroetsch Award for Innovative PoetryCrawford's work has been widely published in journals internationally, including English Studies in Canada, Transgender Studies Quarterly and The Journal of Homosexuality, and in books such as New York University's Queering the Countryside, The Transgender Studies Reader (Vol. 2), Rutgers' Trans Studies and Best Canadian Poetry in English (2015, 2018)

  • av W. Scott Persons
    136,99

  • av Carol Rose GoldenEagle
    226,-

    GoldenEagle's first book, Bearskin Diary, won the 2017 Aboriginal Literature Award and was the First Nation Communities READ selection for 2017-2018. It was also shortlisted for three Saskatchewan Book Awards (for the Aboriginal Peoples' Writing Award, Fiction Award and First Book Award)Author is well-known and well-connected. She is the first Aboriginal woman to anchor a national newscast (CBC Newsworld) in Canada. She was also the original host of In-Vision News on APTN and the anchor of CBC News Northbeat on CBC Radio NorthGoldenEagle was winner of the 2009 National Aboriginal Achievement Award

  • av Adrian Raeside
    147,99

  • av Diane Pinch
    306,-

    Replete with firsthand accounts, maps, and photos, Pinch's homage to Sierra Club BC is a heartfelt, in-depth look at environmentalism in Western Canada through the years.

  • av Robert Budd
    310,-

    In this collaboration with oral historian Robert Budd, celebrated artist Roy Henry Vickers is inspired by voices from the past to illustrate the rich history of the Skeena River.

  • av Dan Jason
    176,-

    Part garden guide, part manifesto, this is an invitation to preserve our dynamic, sustainable food supply-one seed at a time.

  • av Graeme Truelove
    186,-

    Un-Canadian: Islamophobia in the True North is a provocative warning to Canadians that the values they cherish are being eroded through a pattern of political, legal and social prejudice directed towards Muslims in Canada since September 11, 2001. Featuring never-before-published interviews with key politicians and journalists, influential Muslim leaders and ordinary Canadians who have suddenly found themselves thrust into what might become a full-fledged culture war, this book sounds the alarm about our politicians, our commitment to the rule of law and the changing value of our citizenship.Spanning settings from dark prison cells in Guantanamo Bay and Syria to the gilded corridors of power on Parliament Hill, this book centres on fundamental notions of social cohesion and the value of Canadian citizenship-issues which continue to make headlines. Canadians who are worried about the direction our country is headed will consider this a must-read.

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