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  • - An Explorer's Guide Pioneer Churches of British Columbia
    av Liz Bryan
    351

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    631

    A breathtaking full-colour photography book celebrating the architectural splendour and cultural heritage of Winnipeg's famed Exchange District, a National Historic Site and one of the city's most vibrant artistic, commercial, and tourist hubs. The Exchange District is the architectural jewel of Winnipeg's downtown core, a thirty-block area featuring 150 remarkably preserved heritage buildings dating back to the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. These iconic buildings are among the best examples in North America of several turn-of-the-century architectural styles, including Romanesque, Italianate, Beaux-Arts, and Chicago School. From its origins in the 1880s as a commercial and industrial gateway to the Canadian West to its current revitalization, the Exchange exemplifies the spirit of a modern city embracing its past while creating a bright and dynamic future.Treasures of Winnipeg's Historical Exchange is a sumptuous visual feast for residents and visitors. With stunning photography highlighting the impressive scale and intricate detail of the Exchange's imposing banks, sprawling warehouses, and commercial towers, this book will amaze and delight anyone interested in Winnipeg's history and architecture. In addition, the book captures the renewed energy, creativity, hospitality, and entrepreneurial spirit that have invigorated the Exchange in recent years, making it one of Canada's most vibrant up-and-coming neighbourhoods.

  • - A History of Barnard's Express
    av Ken Mather
    327

  • - Purposeful Wandering in Vancouver's Stanley Park
    av Nina Shoroplova
    387

  • av Sara Cassidy
    287

  • av David Giblin
    287

    Tall tales of coastal adventures, colourful locals, privileged tourists, and elusive fish abound in this hilariously offbeat sequel to The Codfish Dream."David Giblin is a marvellous storyteller."--Ian Ferguson, author of The Survival Guide to British Columbia David Giblin's stint as a seasonal salmon fishing guide on Stuart Island provides a seemingly endless supply of hilarious and bizarre stories that reveal as much about the quirkiness of small coastal communities as they do about human nature itself. Now, in his second book of short interconnected stories set in the 1980s, Giblin introduces us to Gilly, the first female fishing guide to grace the tiny island, whose mere presence is enough to shake the foundations of the very insular, all-male guiding community. With the return of delightfully eccentric characters including VOP, Troutbreath, Lucky Peterson, and Wet Lenny, this rollicking maritime adventure will appeal to anyone who ever gutted a fish and lived to tell the tale.

  • - True Stories from the Western Front, 19141918
    av Jacqueline Carmichael
    327

  • - The True Adventures of Yukon's Favourite Bard Amazing Stories
    av Elle Andra-Warner
    161

  • - Dispatches from a Reluctant Senior in the Trenches of Modern Grandparenthood
    av Ian Haysom
    327

  • - A Memoir
    av Verity Sweeny Purdy
    287

  • - A Rookie Reporter in the Cariboo
    av Mark Leiren-Young
    281

  • av R.M. Patterson
    301

  • av Charlie White
    180

  • av Charlie White
    167

  • - Shipwrecked in the Arctic
    av L.D. Cross
    161

  • - Adventures in the Cariboo-Chilcotin
    av Patricia Joy MacKay
    301

  • - Inspiring Stories of Animal Rescues
    av Roxanne Willems Snopek
    167

  • - Whisky Wars of the Pacific Northwest, 19182012
    av Rich Mole
    167

  • - Expeditions to Destiny
    av Anthony Dalton
    167

  • - Whisky Wars of the Pacific Northwest 1840-1917
    av Rich Mole
    161

  • - Early Canadian Encounters with Asia
    av Anne Shannon
    341

    In contrast to the widely known experiences of Asian immigrants who came to Canada, this book looks at movement in the opposite direction. Using text and images, it is a collection of stories about how Canadians "found Japan," the first place they reached when travelling westward across the Pacific. These connections began as early as 1848, when the adventurous son of a Hudson''s Bay Company trader tempted fate by smuggling himself, disguised as a shipwrecked sailor, into the closed and exotic land of the shoguns. He was followed by an intriguing cast of characters--missionaries, educators, businessmen, social activists, political figures, diplomats, soldiers and occasional misfits--who experienced a rapidly changing Japan as it underwent its remarkable transformation from a largely feudal society to a modern state. Now, when the world is becoming more Asia-centric, Finding Japan provides glimpses into an earlier era that challenged conventional perceptions about Canadian connections across the Pacific.

  • - A Deckhand's Tales of the BC Coast
    av Sylvia Taylor
    271

    It''s 1981, and Sylvia Taylor has signed on as rookie deckhand on a wallowy 40-foot salmon troller. Looking forward to making money for university, she is determined to master the ins and outs of fishing some of the most dangerous waters in the world: the Graveyard of the Pacific. For four months, she helps navigate the waters off northern Vancouver Island, learning the ways of fisherfolk and the habitat in which they breathe, sleep and survive. The politics of selling fish, the basics of tying gear, near-death experiences, endless boat troubles, the emotional perils of sharing cramped quarters--all are part of a steep and unforgiving learning curve. Taylor''s story captures the reality of life on a fishboat and documents the end of an era, a time when the fishing industry wasn''t yet marred by unchecked overfishing or hyper-regulation. Her lyrical, simple prose explores the tight-knit relationship of fishers with the west coast''s wild, untamed waters. Her memoir bursts with all the humour and hell, peace and upheaval that is the Pacific Ocean.

  • - The Trail of 1885
    av Wayne F Brown
    167

  • av Andrew Peter Bradley
    261

  • - Humorous Tales of Rural Life
    av Gayle Bunney
    167

  • - A Secret Ship Made of Ice
    av L.D. Cross
    167

  • - Steamboats on Great Canadian Rivers
    av Anthony Dalton
    167

  • - The Scots Who Built BC
    av Jan Peterson
    341

  • av Bruce Burrows
    157

    Danny Swanson, Department of Fisheries and Oceans employee and ex-fisherman, isn't exactly upset when he's reassigned from a desk job in Ottawa to an at-sea job on the West Coast. His superiors think they're punishing him for his indiscretions, but Danny is pleased to be back on the Pacific, reconnecting with his old fishing buddies. Revisiting his past life, though, is trolling up some old memories, including a troubling incident from ten years ago, when Danny and his crew pulled up a deformed fish. It was young Billy who decided to bring the odd creature to the DFO in Vancouver for examination. Billy and the fish were never seen again. Now, Danny's buddy is on his mind when he stumbles across a photo of the fish in the DFO databases, and suddenly, Danny can't let Billy's disappearance get swept under the rug. With the help of RCMP Sergeant Louise Karavchuk, Danny starts hauling old histories to the surface and delving into what he starts to believe may be a massive conspiracy. Who can Danny trust in his search for the truth? The organized, well-dressed officials of the DFO? Or his somewhat rowdy and rough-around-the-edges fishing buddies from the past?

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