• The City Speaks in Drums (pb)

    The City Speaks in Drums (pb)

    Created by: Shauntay Grant
    Artist: Susan Tooke
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Available for the first time in paperback, the award-winning The City Speaks in Drums follows two boys from North End Halifax as they explore their neighbourhood and the city beyond, finding music everywhere. At the skate park, by the Public Gardens, down Spring Garden Road, and on the boardwalk, drums and saxophones and dancers and basketballs create the jumbled, joyful, pulsing rhythm of Halifax. Shauntay Grant’s playful spoken word-style poem and Susan Tooke’s vivid illustrations create a wildly energetic and appealing journey through the big, bright city.

    $12.95
  • Apples and Butterflies

    Apples and Butterflies

    Created by: Shauntay Grant
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    From patchwork-quilt farmland to the winding red roads, from sandy beaches to the endless stars at night, Apples and Butterflies shows Prince Edward Island shining in the bright blue and gold light of fall. Shauntay Grant’s award-winning poetry and Tamara Thiébaux Heikalo’s rich and wild illustrations pull the reader towards the wide-open space of the island. New softcover edition.

    $12.95
  • Be a Beach Detective

    Be a Beach Detective

    Created by: Peggy Kochanoff
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Can anything eat prickly sea urchins? Can dead jellyfish still sting you? Why does water squirt up when you walk along the beach?

    Biologist and artist Peggy Kochanoff answers these questions and more in this illustrated guide to solving beach mysteries. From the puzzling tidal life of barnacles to the stunning variety of seaweeds, Kochanoff dives deep into our coastal habitats and comes up with an entertaining and enlightening look at life by the ocean. Full of fascinating facts and surprising solutions, Be a Beach Detective is the perfect book for curious beachcombers of any age!

    $17.95
  • Pier 21 Listen to My Story

    Pier 21 Listen to My Story

    Created by: Christine Welldon
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Discover some of the most important moments of Canada’s history by getting to know the children and their families who arrived at Halifax’s Pier 21. From countries as far away as Estonia, Italy, and the Ukraine (just to name a few), these immigrants all travelled through the “gateway to freedom” to call Canada home.

    “Guest child” Jamie from Scotland and Jewish orphan Mariette were both sent to Canada as children to escape the same war. Heili’s Estonian family boarded the Walnut to sail away from Russian Communist rule. Luigi’s family came from Italy to find work in Canada after the war, while Maryke’s arrived from Holland in search of farmland.

    Now renamed the Canadian Museum of Immigration, Pier 21 accepted over one million new Canadians between 1928 and 1971. Many were nervous about their new home, but although they arrived from distinct countries and cultures, each family embraced the safety and possibility of a life in Canada. To arrive was to escape the past while keeping memories of their homelands close. Pier 21 was the first step toward a new life.

    With over 40 photos, a glossary, timeline, and sidebar features on the pier itself and the home countries of those who passed through it, Pier 21: Listen to My Story provides an excellent introduction for chilldren to this key landmark in Canada’s immigration history.

    $15.95
  • Finding Home at the Harbour

    Finding Home at the Harbour

    In these personal essays, Rousseau weaves natural history with her own story and illustrations to highlight the resilience of Prince Edward Island and its inhabitants to ongoing environmental change.

    $22.95
  • In Loving Riddles Selected Poems of Joseph Sherman
  • Be Prepared!

    Be Prepared!

    Ever wonder where clouds come from? Or how meteorologists predict the weather? This brand new book, starring Nova Scotia’s favourite weather reporter, Frankie MacDonald, and written by author Sal Sawler, shares stories from Frankie’s early years, along with facts about all things sunny, rainy, snowy, and stormy. Filled with pictures, graphics, and advice from Frankie himself, this book has everything you need to Be Prepared!

    $16.95
  • She is HOPE for Wildlife
  • The Baby Train

    The Baby Train

    Created by: Stella Shepard
    Publisher: Acorn Press
    $24.95
  • Jujijk

    Jujijk

    Created by: Gerald Gloade
    Artist: Gerald Gloade
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    The English language is noun-based, referring to people, places, and things. Jujijk, an illustrated bilingual guide to bugs and insects in Atlantic Canada, showcases the beautiful verb-based Mi’kmaw language. Featuring vibrant artwork and concise, fascinating descriptions, Jujijk will have you searching out “the one that looks like a little owl” (moth) and “the one that sings before she bites you” (mosquito).

    Created to promote and preserve the Mi’kmaw language, this book includes a pronunciation guide, a Mi’kmaw-English matching game, and an abridged version of the Smith-Francis orthography.

    $10.95
  • Evangeline for Young Readers

    Evangeline for Young Readers

    Created by: Helene Boudreau
    Artist: Patsy MacKinnon
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s epic poem, Evangeline, tells the story of two young people deported from beautiful Acadie just before they are to be married and their search for each other that lasts the rest of their lives. First published in 1847, the poem has been important to Acadian identity ever since.

    In Evangeline for Young Readers, the tragic story of Evangeline and Gabriel’s Deportation is recounted to a new generation. In simple prose true to Longfellow’s poem, Hélène Boudreau describes the utopian village of Grand-Pré where Evangeline grows up, the traumatizing Deportation, and Evangeline’s relentless search across America for her true love. Patsy MacKinnon’s stunning illustrations bring the story to life in full colour.

    Evangeline for Young Readers is a vital interpretation for children of Longfellow’s classic.

    $17.95
  • How to Kidnap a Mermaid
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  • Because We Love, We Cry

    Because We Love, We Cry

    Created by: Sheree Fitch
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    During the global pandemic, Sheree Fitch shared what she calls “moments”—her first-burst warm-up writing exercises, on social media almost every day. Sometimes funny verse, other times lyrical prose or poetry, these daily missives were one way to negotiate the strange, unpredictable times. On April 20, immediately upon waking, as the full story of the tragedy in Portapique, Nova Scotia, was unfolding, Fitch thought of all affected, the painful day ahead, of what parents would say to their children. She thought about grieving when apart.

    These words moved through her immediately that day. Fitch shared “Because We Love, We Cry” on social media and it was embraced by Nova Scotians and those who love them across the country. It was read aloud in Canadian Parliament and during a provincial news conference about COVID-19, and by Fitch herself during a nationally broadcast vigil held for the twenty-two victims of the Portapique tragedy.

    After many requests, Nimbus and Sheree have come together to make the poem available in book form. Featuring colour line drawings and the full poem on heavy cardstock for safekeeping, as well as a pull-out postcard to send to loved ones near and far, Because We Love is a mantra, a prayer, a lament, a talisman, a paper rosary, a beating heart to keep close to your own.

    A portion of the book’s proceeds will be donated annually to the families of victims.

    $17.95
  • The Lonely Little Lighthouse
  • The Lonely Little Lighthouse
  • Reverse Ripples

    Reverse Ripples

    When a forensic pathologist accidentally falls into a bioluminescent bay on the Bermuda Triangle, she discovers she has the power to cheat death. Now she faces the ultimate moral dilemma—deciding who to save.

    $24.97
  • milktooth

    milktooth

    Created by: Jaime Burnet
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    A powerful work of contemporary literary fiction set in Cape Breton and Scotland exploring the clandestinity of queer abuse from the Thomas Raddall Award–shortlisted author of Crocuses Hatch from Snow.

    $23.95
  • Living with Dementia The Collected Columns of Darce Fardy
  • LaHave Bakery The Building, the Baker, and the Recipes that Revitalized a Community
  • It's Tracy & Martina, Hun A Guide to Cape Breton Livin'
  • Four Billion Years and Counting Canada's Geological Heritage

    Four Billion Years and Counting Canada’s Geological Heritage

    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Canada’s diverse landscape speaks to its fascinating geological history, from towering peaks to Prairie plains, from fertile farmlands of the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Lowlands to rugged cliffs of the Atlantic shore. However, the modern landscape is just the latest episode in an epic story spanning more than 4 billion years.

    Four Billion Years and Counting unveils the geological history of Canada and makes connections between geology and social issues such as climate change, hazards such as landslides and earthquakes, and other environmental factors. The text features contributions from some 100 specialists, and is richly illustrated with over 500 colour photographs and diagrams. Four Billion Years and Counting is a fascinating exploration of Canada’s geology for those who are intrigued by the landscape and the vital connection between ourselves and what lies beneath our feet.

    $39.95
  • Be a Close-up Nature Detective Solving the Tiniest Mysteries of the Natural World
  • Africadian Mi'kmaq Songs in the Key of The Universal Anthem
  • The Majestic Sisters
  • The Sky's The Limit! Canadians Who Blazed a Trail in Aviation

    The Sky’s The Limit! Canadians Who Blazed a Trail in Aviation

    Created by: Wanda Taylor
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    The first juvenile non-fiction book celebrating diverse Canadian aviators, from the author of Birchtown and the Black Loyalists.

    $19.95
  • The Nowhere Places

    The Nowhere Places

    Created by: Susan LeBlanc
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    An incisive, skilful debut historical novel tracing the lives of a middle-aged woman and a teenaged girl through one pivotal year (1979-80) in North End Halifax.

    It’s 1979, and June has raised her son, Gerald, into adulthood as an unwed mother. She is in middle life now, sandwiched between Gerald—who developmentally disabled and still lives in the family Hydrostone rowhouse—and her aging mother, Margie. When Gerald goes missing, it throws the family into chaos, leaving June shaken and open to the advances of a long-ago ex who’s back in Halifax and looking to reunite.

    Teenaged Lulu, too, worries about Gerald’s absence from the pharmacy where she works. Lulu is reckoning with life as a girl transitioning into womanhood in this buttoned-up, patriarchal city. Her parents’ marriage is on the rocks, as is her relationship with her best friend now that they’ve started high school. Lulu will never be cool, will always be threatened by the rough boys who live in her neighbourhood, will always live in a body that feels unwieldy and undesirable.

    The Nowhere Places puts the secret stories of girlhood and womanhood—sexual violence, accidental pregnancy, shame, ambition, and yearning—centre stage, as they occur in the wild insecurity and shifting sands of Lulu’s teenage life, and the powerful, decisive growth of June’s middle age.

    Lulu and June, though divided by decades, are both learning who they are and who they belong to—and what they might be capable of in a world still deeply unfair to women. And both find their solid foundations in their patched-together families, and the safe joy of female friends.

    $24.95
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  • Mi'kmaq Campfire Stories of Prince Edward Island

    Mi’kmaq Campfire Stories of Prince Edward Island

    Publisher: Acorn Press

    The Mi’kmaq people have been here since the ice began to melt over this great land. They learned the medicines in nature to keep them healthy and they hunted the animals of the land and fished the waters of the sea. During the summer months they would gather in large community groups to celebrate, dance and sing. When the cold winds started to blow, they would go off in their own little family units to survive the winter. It was a hard life and it was always a struggle to make it through the long cold winters. One thing is certain, at night, by the campfire under the stars those families would tell stories, stories about who they were, where they came from, and all the lessons they needed to learn about life. Those stories passed on traditions, songs, language and the culture of the Mi’kmaq people.

    Here we present to you just a couple of those stories that were passed down from generation to generation. Hear them, learn from them, experience them, but most of all enjoy them!

    $16.95
  • What's the Point?

    What’s the Point? An Irreverent History of Point Pleasant Park

    Created by: Steven Laffoley
    Publisher: Pottersfield Press

    Here is a book of history in its most entertaining form: the story of Point Pleasant Park, a unique 190-acre collection of paths, ponds, and port-o-potties; flora, fauna, and fungi; battlements, monuments, and burial mounds all situated at the far south end of Halifax, Nova Scotia.

    $21.95
  • Our December Guest

    Our December Guest Maritime Christmas Stories

    Created by: Wayne Curtis
    Publisher: Pottersfield Press

    In Our December Guest, Wayne Curtis once again draws on his own experiences to craft nineteen stories of autumn and winter life in rural New Brunswick in an age gone by. Authentic and true in every detail, his characters combine the strength and resilience required to eke out a living from the woods and the rivers as well as a sensitivity to the beauty of nature and an appreciation of the arts.

    $21.95
  • The Book Witch, the Wee White Dog, and the Little Free Library (pb)

    The Book Witch, the Wee White Dog, and the Little Free Library (pb)

    Created by: Lana Shupe
    Artist: Tegan Thomas
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    After years of travelling and collecting books, the book witch now spends her days reading, surrounded by piles and piles of books. One stormy day, a massive gust of wind blows a heavy book over onto her wee white dog’s tail! What can the book witch do with all these books? With whimsical illustrations, this delightful story captures the unique kind of magic that little libraries can inspire in communities everywhere.

    $14.95