• An Illustrated History of Nova Scotia Twentieth-anniversary edition

    An Illustrated History of Nova Scotia Twentieth-anniversary edition

    Created by: Harry Bruce
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    In vivid, accessible prose, award-winning author Harry Bruce documents, in text and image, Nova Scotia’s complex and fascinating history. With updates and a new chapter from author Dan Soucoup, An Illustrated History of Nova Scotia is back in print for a whole new generation.

    $24.95
  • D'une rive à l'autre

    D’une rive à l’autre

    Created by: Harry Thurston
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Le profil gracieux du pont de la Confederation mystifie le voyageur. Concu pour durer 100 ans, le plus long pont au monde au-dessus d’une mer glacee est un defi d’ingenierie qui a ete releve par les meilleurs esprits techniquees de l’heure et qui a pousse la technologie canadienne aux primiers rangs du genie civil en eaux glaciales.

    Entre-temps, le pont de la Confederation, qui s’etire en un “S” allonge au-dessus des eaux blues de detroit de Northumberland, est certes une raison de plus our attirer les voyageurs cenus de loins pour “venir houer dans mon ile.”

    $12.95
  • Place Between the Tides

    Place Between the Tides

    Created by: Harry Thurston
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Based upon childhood memory and his naturalist’s journals, A Place between the Tides is the story of Harry Thurston’s return to the beloved environment of his boyhood when he moves to the Old Marsh on the banks of the Tidnish River in Nova Scotia. The book describes the seasons in the life of the marsh as filtered through two decades of Thurston’s living there.Blending acute analysis and a poet’s lyricism, Thurston explores and examines one of the most productive and biologically diverse habitats on Earth. This is a story of the salt marsh, but it is also the story of a personal odyssey, a homecoming for Thurston as a naturalist, culminating in the re-discovery of the bounty of nature where land meets sea.

    $22.95
  • Tidal Life

    Tidal Life

    Created by: Harry Thurston
    Artist: Stephen Homer
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Tidal Life is the definitive natural and human history of the unique and massive Bay of Fundy. With visual reminders of the Bay’s immensity and impact. Winner of the Evelyn Richardson Award for non fiction, the Dartmouth Book Award for non-fiction and the Atlantic Provinces Booksellers Choice Award.

    $29.95
  • Dawning of the Dinosaurs

    Dawning of the Dinosaurs

    Created by: Harry Thurston
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Author of Tidal Life and Against Darkness and Storm, naturalist Harry Thurston has spent his life exploring the mysteries of the Bay of Fundy. Over the last decade, he has followed the major fossil discoveries made along Fundy’s dramatic coastal cliffs. The result is Dawning of the Dinosaurs, which throws new light on the rise and eventual demise of the dinosaurs.

    $13.95
  • Twenty-First Century Irvings (Revised)

    Twenty-First Century Irvings (Revised)

    Created by: Harvey Sawler
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Three generations after the Irving family arrived in Canada from Scotland, the name K. C. Irving hit the Forbes top billionaires list, making K. C. one of the richest men in the world and the most powerful businessperson in Canada.

    But there is much more to the Irving story than the fascinating and brilliant K. C. and his immediate legacy. Twenty-first Century Irvings takes a careful look at both the family foundations upon which this empire was built and the dozen or more individuals who, in the twenty-first century, constitute the future of this important business family.

    A business story, a family story, and a Maritime story, Twenty-first Century Irvings is a book for anyone interested in or affected by the legendary Irvings of New Brunswick.

    This new edition includes an afterword from the author about recent developments in the Irving family business.

    $16.95
  • Last Canadian Beer pb

    Last Canadian Beer pb

    Created by: Harvey Sawler
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Featuring important insights from the company’s current executives and employees, Last Canadian Beer: The Moosehead Story is not only a fascinating company history, but also a candid look at how a small New Brunswick business remains competitive in a difficult global marketplace. While other Canadian beer brands long ago sold out to American and European interests, Moosehead has remained fiercely independent.

    Last Canadian Beer is the remarkable story of a time-honoured business, a complex family, and a beloved beer.

    Now available in softcover.

    $17.95
  • Unforgettable Atlantic Canada

    Unforgettable Atlantic Canada

    Created by: Harvey Sawler
    Photographer: George Fischer
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    A photographic guide to the 100 must-see destinations and events in Atlantic Canada.

    Organized by province for easy reference, Unforgettable Atlantic Canada is more than a travel guide. George Fischer’s magnificent images showcase Atlantic Canada’s vibrancy and beauty and Harvey Sawler’s text provides a context and background for the one hundred destinations included here. Whether you’re “from away” or live in the region, Unforgettable Atlantic Canada is an indispensible resource and a stunning portrait of a unique part of the world.

    $24.95
  • Reeling Roosters and Dancing Ducks: Celtic Mouth Music

    Reeling Roosters and Dancing Ducks: Celtic Mouth Music

    Created by: Heather Sparling

    Though puirt-a-beul are popular with both Gaelic-speaking and non-Gaelic speaking audiences, this book offers the first comprehensive study of the genre. Heather Sparling considers how puirt-a-beul compare to other forms of global mouth music and examines its origins, its musical and lyrical characteristics, and its functions.

    Sparling brings together years of research, including an array of historical references to puirt-a-beul, interviews with Gaelic singers in both Scotland and Nova Scotia, observations of puirt-a-beul performances on both sides of the Atlantic as well as on recordings, and analysis of melodies and lyrics. Her Nova Scotia viewpoint allows her to consider puirt-a-beul in both its Scottish and diaspora contexts, a perspective that is too often absent in studies of Gaelic song.

    $19.95
  • Folk Tale Journey Through the Maritimes

    Folk Tale Journey Through the Maritimes

    Created by: Helen Creighton
    Publisher: Breton Books

    These are the folk tales from Dr. Helen Creighton’s life journey through the Maritime Provinces, collecting songs and ghost stories and old cures–and folk tales. Helen serves as our guide, introducing us to storytellers, setting the scene of the telling–and then she lets the person tell the story just as it was told to her.

    The feel of the kitchen and the fish shed still cling to these stories. Some are long, really miraculous folk tales–miraculous in detail and in that they have managed to survive. Others are the brief riddle or the tantalizing quick-telling that a folklorist can expect along the way. Helen kept it all. And taken as a whole, the reality and intensity of those rare smaller pieces reveal their value in among the more finished, well-told tales.

    Both Helen Creighton and A Folk Tale Journey Through the Maritimes are Atlantic treasures. Edited with an Introduction and Notes by Michael Taft and Ronald Caplan, and a Motif Index by Michael Taft.

    $21.95
  • Cape Breton Railways: An Illustrated History An Illustrated History

    Cape Breton Railways: An Illustrated History An Illustrated History

    Created by: Herb MacDonald

    Cape Breton’s rail lines are perhaps best known for their substantial roles in the coal and steel industries-and their decline as those industries faded away. Yet, despite their prominent connections to coal and steel, railways played many other important roles in the life of the Island. From transporting mail and freight to giving Cape Bretoners the ability to travel to and from the Island, they were important to the community culture. This book looks at those railways in the contexts of what was happening on and beyond the Island.Cape Breton’s railways were shaped by factors such physical geography, availability of both capital and customers, and the distribution of population and industries. In response to those factors, railway builders and operators often had to make difficult choices and try to deal with factors they could not control.

    $24.95
  • Revenge of the Lobster Lover A Shores Mystery

    Revenge of the Lobster Lover A Shores Mystery

    Created by: Hilary MacLeod
    Publisher: Acorn Press

    It’s lobster season at The Shores, a fishing village isolated from The Island in a storm surge. Parker, a collector of antiquities, has moved there with his partner Guillaume, a chef just out of rehab. “Hy” McAllister, a website writer looking for lobster recipes for a client’s newsletter, also needs a speaker for her Women’s Institute meeting. Enter Camilla, founder of the Lobster Liberation Legion, spouting crustacean right-to-life rhetoric. The legion starts freeing lobsters from their traps, angering the villagers and the man who runs Parker’s fisheries empire. In the tragic events that follow, the hidden connection between Parker, Guillaume and Camilla reveals itself.

    $22.95
  • Mind Over Mussels A Shores Mystery

    Mind Over Mussels A Shores Mystery

    Created by: Hilary MacLeod
    Publisher: Acorn Press

    Nothing big ever happens in The Shores. Ceilidhs, yes. Killings, no.

    That all changes when amateur sleuth, Hy McAllister trips over a body on the beach and tumbles head first into a murder case. Cottager Lance Lord, dressed like Jimi Hendrix, has had his head split open with an axe. As Hurricane Angus storms up the coast, Hy and Mountie Jane Jamieson vie against the elements to uncover the murderer in a village where almost everyone has something to hide.

    $22.95
  • All is Clam A Shores Mystery

    All is Clam A Shores Mystery

    Created by: Hilary MacLeod
    Publisher: Acorn Press

    It’s Christmas at The Shores. There’s no snow yet, but there are so many outdoor lights that the tiny coastal village can be seen from space. Apart from Ian Simmons’ place, and he’s considered odd, there’s only one house in the village that isn’t lit up. It’s been dark for years. That’s about to change. Wild Rose Cottage is about to come to life, and death, once again. Meanwhile, the villagers wish for snow to complete the Christmas portrait. When it comes, it’s with the body of newcomer, Fitz Fitsimmons, a former acrobat turned bully and drunk. Mountie Jane Jamieson has seen murder here before, but none where she’d rather not catch the killer.

    $22.95
  • Green Shutters Cookbook

    Green Shutters Cookbook

    Created by: Hilda Zinck
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    The Green Shutters Cookbook, with its hearty, simple, downhome recipes, has been a Nova Scotia favourite for over 50 years. Featuring recipes from Hilda Zinck’s Green Shutters Inn, now closed, the book includes timeless favourites like hot cross buns, fish chowder, meatloaf and banana bread.

    $18.95
  • From the Hearth

    From the Hearth

    Recipes from the World of 18th-century LouisbourgThe recipes presented here are those that the authors believe were once served in the house and inns of historic Louisbourg. Modern interpretations?giving specific quantities and cooking times?have been provided for all but a few preparations.Though research has not turned up any individual recipes used in 18th-century Louisbourg, historians and archaeologists do know most of the foods they ate. They also know the regions in France from whence many of the inhabitants of Louisbourg (or their parents) originally came.

    $12.95
  • Landmarks:  An Anthology

    Landmarks: An Anthology

    Created by: Hugh MacDonald
    Editor: Brent MacLaine
    Publisher: Acorn Press

    Poetry by 50 of the Atlantic region’s finest poets

    $16.95
  • A Bountiful Harvest

    A Bountiful Harvest

    Created by: Hugh MacDonald
    Publisher: Acorn Press

    Little did organizers know when they planted the seed 15 years ago that the Literary Awards would reap such a bountiful harvest. This collection of over 35 first-prize short stories, poetry, and writing for children represents the best new writing in Prince Edward Island. Readers will recognize several of the names – people who have gone on to be published or produced – including Rai Berzins, Lesley-Anne Bourne, Judy Gaudet, Elaine Hammond, Hugh MacDonald, Brent MacLaine, Steve McOrmond, Dianne Hicks Morrow, Melissa Mullen, Libby Oughton, and Nancy Russell.

    $22.95
  • Historic Annapolis Royal

    Historic Annapolis Royal

    Created by: Ian Lawrence
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Annapolis Royal, one of Nova Scotia’s most historic towns, is the oldest permanent European settlement in North America north of Florida. This visually evocative and informative book traces the history of Annapolis Royal through its architecture, streetscapes and industries, its public, military, and domestic life. Fort Anne, Canada’s first historic park, adds to the towns visual charm, as does the fact that many of the town’s historic buildings are still standing. Also treated in images and text are the surrounding villages of Granville, Lequille and Bear River, and of course, the replica of ht e1605 Habitation of de Monts and Champlain.

    $21.95
  • You Know You're an Islander When....

    You Know You’re an Islander When….

    Created by: Ivy Knight
    Publisher: Acorn Press

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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.

    $14.95
  • Pier 21 Gateway that Changed Canada (new)

    Pier 21 Gateway that Changed Canada (new)

    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    From 1928 to 1971, Pier 21 in Halifax served as the front door to Canada, the entryway through which more than 1.5 million people passed. A legion of volunteers, medical staff, and immigration personnel kept vigil at the pier from one decade to the next, greeting and directing the human tide that flowed and ebbed through its doors. The work helped shape who they were, and gave rise to stories that they and those who passed through collected in tattered notebooks or in corners of their minds.

    Beginning with the first wave of European settlers and the early problems with the first wave of European settlers and the early problems of quarantine, Pier 21: The Gateway that Changed Canada is a moving account of the human drama that unfolded at this historic site. This new edition updates the Pier 21 story to the present day, including its confirmation as Canada’s national museum of immigration in 2011.

    $21.95
  • Louisbourg: From its Foundation to its Fall

    Louisbourg: From its Foundation to its Fall

    Created by: J.S. McLennan
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    The only complete history of Louisbourg.

    “J.S. McLennan’s Louisbourg From Its Foundation To Its Fall is in several ways a remarkable book. To begin with, it is because of its continuing popularity. Though it was first published many decades ago, it remains the standard work on the 45 year history of the French settlement at Louisbourg. Dozens, perhaps hundreds, of detailed studies have been done on Louisbourg since McLennan’s appeared, each one illuminating some theme or aspect of life there, but none has replaced it as the authoritative chronicle of the town’s history.” –A. J. B. Johnston, Historian and Author

    $29.95
  • Greater/Grand Moncton

    Greater/Grand Moncton

    Created by: Jacques Boudreau
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Greater/Grand Moncton is a delightful and important new visual record of one of Canada’s greatest little cities. Moncton native Jacques Boudreau has captured this dynamic city with spectacular flair and memorable detail.

    $29.95
  • The Cape Breton Giant

    The Cape Breton Giant

    Created by: James D Gillis
    Publisher: Breton Books

    James Gillis was born on July 11, 1870, at Strathlorne, not far from the residence of John MacIssac, Donald’s son. In early childhood he moved to Upper Margaree. He attended school there and later on became proficient enough to teach.

    $16.95
  • Hidden Heritage

    Hidden Heritage

    Created by: James Lamb
    Publisher: Breton Books

    From 1629 to the 1821 settlement of Rev. Norman McLeod, St. Ann has a rich and diverse history. Captured here with zest and detail.

    $14.95
  • You Could Believe in Nothing

    You Could Believe in Nothing

    Created by: Jamie Fitzpatrick
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Jamie Fitzpatrick’s debut novel tells of a muddled adulthood in St. John’s, Newfoundland. Derek is forty-one years old. His girlfriend has just left him for a job in Ottawa, his father, a DJ at the local classic rock station, is about to go to court, and his rec hockey team is up in arms about a TV reporter’s attempts to glorify their weekly games. When Derek’s half-brother, Curtis, comes home, the visit stirs up nagging questions about their parents’ early days, and Derek examines again what it means to make commitments that may or may not bring real happiness.

    Fitzpatrick captures the subtleties of casual conversation and the often understated wit that emerges between old friends. Having grown up after the decline of whatever might have been the real Newfoundland, Derek and his teammates are generally at a loss to defend the urban, mostly wayward lives the occupy. Set into a wet spring in St. John’s, its rinks, streets, and landmarks, and the sunken map of old haunts and years gone by, You Could Believe in Nothing is a study in familiarity and self-definition, underlining how little we sometimes know about ourselves and the people we know best.

    $19.95
  • Return of the Wild Goose

    Return of the Wild Goose

    Created by: Jane Ledwell

    Return of the Wild Goose explores the life of writer and activist Katherine Hughes. Set against the intimate relief of a PEI landscape, these poems are inspired by what is known—and unknown—about her contradictory life and character as Catholic teacher, journalist, public servant, and Irish nationalist. This (auto) biographical dialogue between Jane Ledwell and Katherine Hughes offers the reader a fierce remembrance of a PEI radical.

    $14.95
  • Elaine Harrison: I am an Island that Dreams I am an Island that Dreams

    Elaine Harrison: I am an Island that Dreams I am an Island that Dreams

    Publisher: Acorn Press

    Elaine Harrison was born in Petite-Rivere in Nova Scotia, but moved to Prince Edward Island to teach in 1938. There, she and her companion spent their summers at “Windswept,” the 200 year-old farmhouse on the cliffs near Seacow Head, where they lived a simple life, and for over fifty years were involved in the intellectual life of the Island and beyond, playing host to numerous summer visitors and corresponding with some of Canada’s top writers. In 1968, retirement gave Elaine the freedom to turn to her interests: her poetry, the campaigning for favoured causes, but above all her painting. Inspired by the Group of Seven, she found her subject matter in the cliffs and waves at Windswept, the sunflowers in her garden, the trees of the local hardwoods, and latterly her own cats and kitchen. In the early days she frequently gave her paintings away to anyone who appreciated them, but from the 1970s she began to get the recognition and financial returns they merited. She died in 2003, but her work is still much-loved by Islanders.

    $24.95
  • One Potato Two Potato

    One Potato Two Potato

    Created by: Janet Reeves
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    The definitive book about potatoes, from growing them to eating them and everything in between. A cookbook and more with special emphasis on Prince Edward Island’s unique role in Canada’s potato industry.

    $20.95
  • Ketchum's Folly

    Ketchum’s Folly

    Created by: Jay Underwood
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    “Even today, after man has been to the moon and regularly takes jaunts into space, the idea of a huge ship being transported by rail over dry land in order to avoid the stormy waters elsewhere sounds like science fiction.” The author states in his introduction. “Perhaps that was the Chignecto Ship’s Railway’s problem.” IN examining Henry Ketchum’s dream, and both his spectacular successes and failures, Jay Underwood contributes to a better understanding of an interesting segment in Maritimes’ history.

    $13.95
  • Pattie Pitter She Hates Litter

    Pattie Pitter She Hates Litter

    Created by: Jill Hickey
    Artist: Jeffrey Domm
    Publisher: Breton Books

    Pattie Pitter HATES LITTER. She picks up everyone’s candy wrappers and pop cans. But no one wants to help. So, Pattie quits. Soon the school is filled with garbage and the schoolyard is buried. NOW everyone is ready to help!

    $7.95
  • Green Horizons

    Green Horizons

    Created by: Jim Lotz
    Publisher: Pottersfield Press

    Veteran journalist Jim Lotz tells the history of how the forests of the province have been both ravaged and occasionally preserved over the centuries. It begins with the Mi’kmaq people who relied on the woods for game and useful products. Green Horizons then traces the history of the forests in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries when the ethic of “cut and run” ran rampant, destroying huge numbers of trees as did massive forest fires. The story moves on to the time of saw millers who “took the best and left the rest.”

    In the first decade of the twentieth century, concern arose among those in the forest industries that the province would run out of wood to sustain them. The first scientific survey by a forester revealed the deplorable state of the province’s woodlands because the government’s policy towards the forests was one of benign neglect.

    Green Horizons also recounts the history of the past 50 years in Nova Scotia’s forests through interviews of those directly involved in forestry. Environmentalists add their perspective to the debate that still rages today about fair use of our forests. In recent years, the woodlands of Nova Scotia have been the scene of conflicts and tensions between those who seek to preserve them and others who simply see trees as sources of wealth, to be cut down and made into commercial products.

    Born in Liverpool, England in 1929, Jim Lotz has held 25 different jobs ranging from grouse beater in the Scottish Highlands to glacial meteorologist in the Arctic. Coming to Canada in 1954, he was fired from his first job (for just cause) and crashed his car on same day. Since 1960, he has been actively engaged in community-based development and has taught at the Coady International Institute. His travels in search of learning have taken him from Alaska to Slovakia and from the High Arctic to Lesotho. He has written 20 books.

    $22.95