February 25, 2004 at 10:23am | Filed under: Food & Drink
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To be articulate with food is a sapid and tactile art. To be articulate about food is something altogether different.…Read More »
It has taken almost five years for Michel Marc Bouchard’s 1995 play, Le Voyage du couronnement, to reach English language…Read More »
February 23, 2004 at 04:04pm | Filed under: Politics & Current Affairs
A generation back, when we kids dressed up as hunter-gatherers and prowled our backyards with bows and arrows, a book…Read More »
February 23, 2004 at 02:48pm | Filed under:
This second work of poetry from Darren Wershler-Henry – Internet guidebook author, online press editor, electronic copyright advocate, and full-time…Read More »
February 23, 2004 at 02:23pm | Filed under: Poetry
With the publication of A Message for Mr. Lazarus, Barbara Lambert joins the growing throng of first-rate female short story…Read More »
February 23, 2004 at 01:46pm | Filed under: Fiction: Short
This is a gentle, fragrant little memoir with a powerful kick: the immense sentimental appeal of visiting one’s unspoiled ancestral…Read More »
February 23, 2004 at 10:42am | Filed under: Memoir & Biography
In 1947 and 1948, Farley Mowat spent time among the Ihalmiut, the inland Inuit whose traditional territory was between Great…Read More »
February 23, 2004 at 10:41am | Filed under: Native Peoples
An unresolved family tragedy is the subject of this historical novel by the victim’s great-grandson, Robert James, a retired Ontario…Read More »
February 22, 2004 at 03:54pm | Filed under: Fiction: Novels
Ted Ryan has been raised by an idealistic father whose socialist beliefs have drawn him into labour protests. In his…Read More »
February 19, 2004 at 04:27pm | Filed under:
Despite its unprepossessing title, Vancouverite Michael David Kwan’s memoir, spanning the mid-1930s to the late ’40s, is an engrossing book.…Read More »
February 19, 2004 at 03:53pm | Filed under: Children and YA Non-fiction, History