Canada Above & Beyond

One of the country’s most celebrated photographers brings Canada to vivid life with this brand new aerial photography book, featuring spreads of all thirteen provinces and territories, as well as […]

A Journey of Love and Hope

The long-awaited collection of talks, presentations, prayers, and ceremonies of renowned Mi’kmaw Elder, human rights activist, and language and culture warrior, Sister Dorothy Moore. Mi’kmaw Elder Sister Dorothy Moore has […]

The Girl Who Could Fly

A 400-year-old book of dark spells, a mysterious vial of volcanic ash and a late grandfather’s World War II secret, lead to the kidnapping of twelve-year-old Olive Hanson from her […]

Memoir

Memoir opens doors we could never ordinarily walk through—into the lives of Olympians, queens, victims of war and other tragedies, teenage rock stars, former streetwalkers or geishas—along with the doors to the lives of extraordinary/ordinary people. The best memoirs are maps of the heart and mind, and Marjorie Simmins invites you to explore the map of your own life. Here are the probing questions and dynamic writing ideas, coupled with inspirational interviews with best-selling memoirists, to light your own imagination afire. How do you access the details of your earliest memories, make them immediate and dramatic? How do you drive the story forward? How do you make a stranger care about your life?

Memoir: Conversations and Craft is intended for any reader or writer who is fascinated by the renegade memoir form—personal life stories that demand to be read, refuse to be forgotten. Whether you wish to compile memories from childhood to share with grandchildren, or whether you burn with the makings of a literary memoir, this reflection on writing can galvanize you.

Donna Morrissey, Linden MacIntyre, Plum Johnson, Lawrence Hill, Edmund Metatawabin, Diane Schoemperlen, and Claire Mowat—some of Canada’s top fiction and non-fiction writers—speak with candour, humour, and compassion about their journeys to memoir. Often touching, always helpful and frank, the interviews cover a broad spectrum of the writing experience. The time to write a memoir is always now—and the benefits are transformative.

Shadowboxing (2nd ed)

[…] murdered for simply being Black. Sam Austin, the larger-than-life sports editor at America’s first tabloid newspaper, the Police Gazette, described George Dixon as “The Fighter Without a Flaw.” Said Austin, […]

Mitji- Let’s Eat! Launch

Join us for the launch of Mitji-Let’s Eat! At Red TeePee Creations! 179 Island Dr, Richibucto-Village, NB E4W For more info on the book click here.

La petite robe rouge / Apje’ji’jk Mekwe’k Mtoqan / The Little Red Dres

Sakari loves to rummage through her grandmother’s house, but she doesn’t know what’s hidden in the woven basket her nukumi keeps in the attic. Then, one day, she sees her […]

The Little Book of Prince Edward Island

Award-winning photographer John Sylvester is back with a new book of stunning photography. Sylvester captures Prince Edward Island like no other photographer. With beautiful images of every corner of the […]

You Know You’re an Islander When….

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You might be an Islander if…

  • You cried when Stompin’ Tom died
  • You still give directions based on the purple house on St. Peter’s Road
  • You were born knowing how to break down a lobster

A book about the Island for Islanders.

“Prince Edward Island is far more than postcard vistas, bountiful food and literary heroines with red hair. This book is full to the scuppers with everything that makes it unique and colourful!” – Chef Michael Smith

“Brilliant!” – Brad Richards, 2 time Stanley Cup Champion and PEI’s best hockey player ever.

Welcome to Camp Fill-in-the-Blank

Page’s perfectly organized life turns upside down when her parents send her to Prince Edward Island to babysit her cousins Crusoe and Danger (those are their real names) for the summer. The only problem is that her cousins feel that they are too old to have a babysitter—they would rather be at summer camp. Page realizes the solution to the problem is to give her cousins exactly what they want: summer camp in their own backyard. Despite Page’s meticulous efforts to plan a different theme for each week of Camp Fill-in-the-Blank, she quickly learns that life with her cousins rarely goes according to plan.