• OWL

    Owl (pb)

    Created by: Kara Griffin
    Artist: K. Shawn Larson
    Publisher: Acorn Press
    $14.95
  • Natalie Macmaster
  • Tunes and Wooden Spoons III: Come In, the Kettle's On!
  • The Luckiest Ones
  • I Wish You Well
  • Things That Stink
  • Mermaids of Prince Edward Island
  • OWL

    Owl

    Created by: Kara Griffin
    Artist: K. Shawn Larson
    Publisher: Acorn Press
    $24.95
  • Place of Miracles

    Place of Miracles

    Created by: Linda Stewart
    Publisher: Acorn Press
    $22.95
  • Wild Foods of Prince Edward Island

    Wild Foods of Prince Edward Island

    Created by: Kate MacQuarrie
    Publisher: Acorn Press

    Prince Edward Island is famous for potatoes and seafood, but our forests, meadows, marshes, and shores are home to hundreds of species of edible plants and fungi. Of course, edible and palatable are not the same and award-winning biologist and forager Kate MacQuarrie knows the difference!

    $29.95
  • Freda the Fry

    Freda the Fry

    Created by: Patsy Dingwell
    Artist: Marla Lesage
    Publisher: Acorn Press
    $14.95
  • The Sand Castle that Jack Built
  • L’Acadie de L’Ile-du-Prince Édouard / The Acadians of Prince Edward Island

    The Acadians of Prince Edward Island (bilingual)

    Created by: Georges Arsenault
    Publisher: Acorn Press

    This book on the Acadians of Prince Edward Island shows the cultural and historical importance of carefully documented and organized collections of photos. From some points of view this book is like an old-fashioned family album, except that it illustrates the ordinary life of not just one but many Acadian families.

    $27.95
  • Prince Edward Island ~ Epekwitk ~ Climate Almanac

    Prince Edward Island ~ Epekwitk ~ Climate Almanac

    Created by: Don Jardine
    Publisher: Acorn Press

    From devastating hurricanes to blizzards that have shut down the Island for days, Jardine creates a fascinating deep-dive into the changing weather patterns of Prince Edward Island and their effect on the landscape. Complete with maps, photos, and tables, this month- by-month guide is an essential reader for those interested in weather, climate change and Island history.

    $27.95
  • When the Banyan Sways Folktales from India

    When the Banyan Sways

    Created by: Sharada Eswar
    Publisher: Running the Goat

    Four folktales from India—full of magic and wisdom.

    $21.99
  • Someone Else's Saint How a Scottish Pilgrimage Led to Nova Scotia
  • Bluenose Ghosts 3rd Edition Nimbus Classics Cover

    Bluenose Ghosts

    Created by: Helen Creighton

    The classic work of Nova Scotia folklore, available in an attractive new edition.

    $22.95
  • Black Ice The Lost History of the Colored Hockey League of the Maritimes, 1895–1925 Twentieth-anniversary edition Cover

    Black Ice

    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Expanded and revised edition of the pioneering work of history about the Coloured Hockey League, founded in Halifax, NS. Now a documentary film.

    Black Ice is the first written record of the Colored Hockey League in the Maritimes, founded in Halifax, Nova Scotia, in 1895, more than 20 years before the founding of the National Hockey League. The Colored Hockey League was a force in Canadian hockey that was conveniently ignored and whose contributions were stolen as other leagues emerged. Black Ice explores the unique culture that still exists today.

     

    $27.95
  • Titanic

    Titanic

    Created by: Nicola Pierce

    This book tells the lives of the passengers on the Titanic‘s ill-fated voyage, and shines a spotlight on the vessel’s lost treasures, its celebrated send-off from Belfast, its animal passengers, the iconic music and movies inspired by the story, and the many, many tales of heroism and bravery that arose from this tragedy. Richly illustrated with archival photographs and newspaper clippings, as well as a comprehensive index, timeline, and suggested further reading, this all-ages book presents an accessible, fascinating history of the world’s most famous ship. Includes over 50 black and white photos.

    $24.95
  • Black Boy, Black Boy

    Black Boy, Black Boy

    Created by: Angela Bowden
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    A powerful spoken-word poem encouraging Black boys of every shade, size, and passion to reach for the stars. Features vibrant artwork depicting famous Black men such as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Chadwick Boseman, and more.

    $14.95
  • The Last Farm on McNabs Island Cover

    The Last Farm on McNabs

    Created by: Bruce Scott

    A personal, historical portrait of Halifax Harbour’s largest and most storied island from 1920–1970, featuring anecdotes, photographs, and maps.

    $19.95
  • Where the Ghosts Are
  • Westray

    Westray

    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Vernon Theriault was off shift when the Westray mine exploded in 1992, killing twenty-six men in Plymouth, Nova Scotia. Theriault took part in the perilous rescue operation that followed. As the magnitude of Westray took hold, Theriault found himself struggling with post-traumatic stress disorder and nightmares. When he tried to re-educate himself for another line of work, he discovered that he was both illiterate and dyslexic. Theriault found new purpose when he became part of a labour movement that successfully lobbied the federal government to bring in a worker-safety law that became known as the Westray Bill.

    Theriault openly discusses his complicated journey in this straightforward, simply written memoir, which begins with the promise of a good job with good pay at Westray.

    $21.95
  • The First Ones on the Ice (pb)
  • Tent Dwellers  (Trade Edition)

    Tent Dwellers (Trade Edition)

    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Albert Bigelow Paine (1861-1937) was an American novelist, biographer, and editor. He was the official biographer and literary executor for Mark Twain.

    Albert Bigelow Paine’s account of his three-week fishing adventure in the wilderness of Nova Scotia is a true classic. For over one hundred years, the adventures of the author and his companions, Eddie, Del, and Charlie, have been enjoyed by fishers, canoeists, and armchair travellers alike. Written with an unassuming wit, this nimble narrative captures the camaraderie of the journey and the appeal of life in the woods. Paine’s observations on the art of fishing conveys the elements of meditation, competition, and obsession familiar for those who practise, and enlightening for those who do not. His humorous and poetic depictions of campfire meals, tenting, navigation, encounters with wildlife, and assorted triumphs and blunders are as engaging and entertaining today as when The Tent Dwellers was first published in 1908.

    $19.95
  • Stories From the Six Worlds (2nd edition)

    Stories From the Six Worlds (2nd edition)

    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    In Stories from the Six Worlds, it is their stories, passed down by word of mouth, that best preserve and present Mi’kmaw culture. For in their tales, the People themselves speak about their world and give us glimpses of how their universe manifests, in all its fascinating otherness. Mi’kmaw stories have many levels: entertainment, instruction, warnings. They might subtly encode maps of the land’s important resources, or of the wheeling skies at night. Telling stories, Elders wove humour and stark tragedy, terror and beauty, to teach their listeners how to survive. More importantly, they underlined, over and over again, how their listeners, as humans, must conduct themselves. Their tales resound with the universal themes included in any worldview—Order and Chaos, Courage and Fear, Change, Revenge and Mercy, Death, Rebirth, and Power—yet are powerfully rooted in Mi’kmaw tradition, Mi’kmaw land. Their voices still speak to us, down the centuries.

    Drawing on various sources, Ruth Holmes Whitehead retells the tales in a voice close to that of the original storytellers. This new edition includes an updated design and the original collection of twenty-nine stories. In Stories from the Six Worlds, Mi’kmaw legends are offered to all people whose search for meaning draws them again to the ancient cultures.

    $22.95
  • Sailing Alone Around the World (Nimbus)
  • Oak Island Gold

    Oak Island Gold

    Created by: William S. Crooker
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    For over two centuries, the mysterious labyrinth of shafts and tunnels under Oak Island, a tiny island on Nova Scotia’s South Shore, has been the scene of a frantic search by scores of treasure hunters from two continents. They believe that the shafts and intricate man-made flooding system hold the secret to a treasure of untold wealth. Although millions have been spent, bitter feuds have erupted, and men have died, the treasure has remained as elusive as the answers to who built the labyrinth, why and how it was constructed, and the nature of the treasure itself. Until now.

    In his second book on the Oak Island mystery, William Crooker meticulously sifts through the evidence unearthed by treasure hunters on the island, past and present. Then, armed with some starling new discoveries, he neatly fits the pieces together to offer a plausible solution to the baffling puzzle of Oak Island.

    $22.95
  • Mi'kmaq Medicines (2nd edition)

    Mi’kmaq Medicines (2nd edition)

    Created by: Laurie Lacey
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    In this delightful book, Laurie Lacey’s reflections on the magical world of plant life and the gathering of remedies chronicles more than 70 plants used by the Mi’kmaq as medicines. Since the Mi’kmaq healing process begins with the gathering and preparation of medicines, Lacey takes us into swamps and bogs, the barrens and woods, to explore the habitats of plants with healing properties. He then illustrates each medicinal plant and describes its traditional use or uses. Whether one is hiking through a field listening for the sound of the “sacred plant,” the yellow rattle, exploring bogs in the hope of finding the elusive blue flag, or simply interested in the Mi’kmaq approach to health and healing, Mi’kmaq Medicines will prove a helpful and enjoyable companion.

    This new edition includes a fully revised text and a new preface from the author on current perspectives in Mi’kmaq medicines.

    $16.95
  • Indian School Road

    Indian School Road

    Created by: Chris Benjamin
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    In Indian School Road, journalist Chris Benjamin tackles the controversial and tragic history of the Shubenacadie Indian Residential School, its predecessors, and its lasting effects, giving voice to multiple perspectives for the first time. Benjamin integrates research, interviews, and testimonies to guide readers through the varied experiences of students, principals, and teachers over the school’s nearly forty years of operation (1930-1967) and beyond. Exposing the raw wounds of Truth and Reconciliation as well as the struggle for an inclusive Mi’kmaw education system, Indian School Road is a comprehensive and compassionate narrative history of the school that uneducated hundreds of Aboriginal children.

    $25.95
  • Glooscap Legends
  • Dear Dad

    Dear Dad

    Created by: Laura Best

    An intimate YA novel from the celebrated author of the Cammie Turple series depicting one teen boy’s reckoning with his father’s terminal illness, and his right to choose MAID.

    It’s not some abstract debate. It’s his dad’s life.

    It’s 2014 and the Ice Bucket Challenge is everywhere. You know, people posting videos of themselves dumping freezing ice water over their heads to raise money for ALS research.

    It’s weird, everyone suddenly talking about ALS, because Sam’s family has been dealing with it ever since his dad, Gregory, was diagnosed three years ago. His dad, a brilliant lawyer, stopped working, then stopped walking, and now he can’t even talk. His mom quit her job to take care of him. And now Sam is quitting the one thing he’s amazing at: hockey. It sucks to have to stop, but it’s exhausting trying to do normal-life things when life is anything but normal.

    Everything is complicated and messy and hard—especially the way Gregory has been thinking about things since his diagnosis. Death. Medical assistance in dying. The right for terminally ill people—people like Gregory—to choose when they go.

    Sam’s trying to be supportive; he reads all the arguments for legalizing MAID, and even goes to a rally. But the idea of helping his father die is like a weight pressing down on him, and it gets heavier and heavier until something snaps, and he does the only thing he can think of. Sam bolts.

    He takes a job as a farmhand for a weird old guy way out in the country. From here, in the middle of the woods, it’s not clear if Sam will ever find a way back to his family…or if he even has a family to go back to.

    How can a fourteen-year-old possibly wrap his head around something the whole country is fighting about?

    Dear Dad is a brave and hopeful look at a teen boy’s struggle with his father’s terminal illness, disability, and death.

    $14.95