• St. Andrews By-the-Sea

    St. Andrews By-the-Sea

    Created by: Ronald Rees
    Photographer: Rob Roy
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Roy captures the character and beauty of St. Andrews, a town alive with history and natural beauty.
    Tucked away on a peninsula inside the tranquil waters of Passamaquoddy Bay stands the scenic town of St. Andrews. The natural beauty and picturesque
    architecture of the town are unsurpassed in New Brunswick and make it one of Canada’s most popular vacation destinations. Rob Roy’s photographs are both practical and artistic, blending together the everyday scenes of the town with the striking landscapes and historical character of St. Andrews.

    $17.95
  • Wicked Woods

    Wicked Woods

    Created by: Steve Vernon
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    A new collection of ghost stories from every corner of New Brunswick.
    Pull up a seat and listen closely-storyteller Steve Vernon has another collection of classic, bone-chilling tales to tell. Steve takes readers from one end of New Brunswick to the other, unearthing dark tales of strange happenings along the way-from the headless ghost that haunts those who pass through Johnville’s covered bridge, to the spirit of a murdered man that guards long-buried treasure at Wolf Point. Drawing on both documented stories and legends passed on by word-of-mouth, Steve sets one spooky scene after another with a storyteller’s attention to every creepy detail, and just a touch of wry humour. It’s as though you’re sitting beside him at the campfire, getting goosebumps as each story unfolds.

    $17.95
  • Talk About the Valley

    Talk About the Valley

    Created by: Norman Creighton
    Editor: Hilary Sircom
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Talk about the Valley is the second book of charming essays by Norman Creighton, whose name is a household word in the Annapolis Vally of Nova Scotia. Norman lived on Avon Street in Hansport, where his keen insight into Valley life, his wry sense of humour, and his obvious love of the natural world provided ample material for his weekly CBC radio broadcasts during the 1960s and 70s.

    This engaging collection-selected from some 600 talks aired on CBC’s “A.M. Chronicle”, “Maritime Magazine” and “Radio Noon”-are the places in the Valley, the people who have lived there, and their way of life. It is beautifully illustrated by Normkan’s older brother Alan, himself a poet, writer and accomplished artist.

    $17.95
  • Louisbourg: Reflet d'un Époque

    Louisbourg: Reflet d’un Époque

    Created by: A.J.B. Johnston
    Photographer: Chris Reardon
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Un merveilleux photographique regarde la forteresse le texte accompagné de qui illumine l’histoire de la forteresse.

    $17.95
  • Wake of the Aspy A Novel of Northern Cape Breton

    Wake of the Aspy A Novel of Northern Cape Breton

    Created by: Stewart Donovan
    Publisher: Breton Books

    Teeming with life and remembrance, Wake of the Aspy is a novel of family, passion, and the beauty of memory’s heart.The coastal steamer Aspy connected northern Cape Breton to the world. It was a lifeline, an escape route, and a threat to the old ways. Rooted in a woman’s hard-won independence, Stewart Donovan’s terrific, often hilarious storytelling—the sounds and rhythm and acid wit of daily life—faces with vitality the local life and its encounters with government and a tourism future. Despite expropriations, war, cutbacks and social injustice aimed at driving them out, these are survivors you still might be lucky enough to meet Down North.

    $17.95
  • As True As I'm Sittin Here

    As True As I’m Sittin Here

    Editor: Ron Caplan
    Publisher: Breton Books

    The wit and good humour—ghost tales-comebacks and outrageous happenings—over 200 Cape Breton stories by 34 storytellers, collected by Archie Neil Chilsholm.

    $17.95
  • This Navy Doctor Came Ashore

    This Navy Doctor Came Ashore

    Created by: Charles Read
    Publisher: Acorn Press

    Dr. Read entered the Royal Canadian Navy in 1943 and worked for three years as a flight surgeon. When the war was winding down, he realized that his career as a flight surgeon was also over. But he remembered how much he had enjoyed the three weeks he spent in Charlottetown when he relieved the medical officer at HMCS Queen Charlotte. This city of 20,000, in which this landship was ‘moored’, was much to his liking partly because he had grown up in Amherst, Nova Scotia, just across the Northumberland Strait, where he thought the culture was very similar. He also knew that as the only medical officer there would be independence, significant responsibility and virtual freedom from naval protocol and politics. One couldn’t ask for more.   But this was during prohibition on the Island and little did he know that a great deal of his time would be spent writing “prescriptions” for alcohol so that the officers could be allowed to drink.  Nor did he know that because of the lack of family physicians on the Island, he would be asked to open a general practice in a rural area of the province.  For a flight surgeon who had little experience in family medicine, this would be a whole new adventure. This book chronicles some of the noteworthy events of the time he spent spent as a country doctor.

    $17.95
  • Nathan MacKinnon The NHL's Rising Star

    Nathan MacKinnon The NHL’s Rising Star

    Created by: Paul Hollingsworth
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    A dominant minor hockey player from Cole Harbour, Nova Scotia, Nathan MacKinnon was ticketed for NHL stardom from an early age. He did not disappoint. MacKinnon would lead his hometown team, major junior’s Halifax Mooseheads, to their first Memorial Cup in 2013, and fulfilled the dream of every young hockey player when he was selected first overall in that summer’s NHL draft. In his first season (2013-2014) for the Colorado Avalanche, MacKinnon met the considerable expectations placed upon him by scoring 63 points and winning the Calder Trophy as the league’s top rookie. While his second season was largely a disappointment before a broken foot ended his season prematurely, MacKinnon’s future is bright.

    In this stat-packed biography, TSN correspondent Paul Hollingsworth traces the development of one of the NHL’s most exciting young stars. Starting with MacKinnon’s jaw-dropping minor hockey career and continuing through his NHL career to date and his play as part of Team Canada at world championships, the book includes 40 colour photos, as well as interviews and analysis from well-known hockey commentators. With a foreword from broadcaster Dan Robertson.

    $17.95
  • 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
  • Be a Wilderness Detective
  • Ava Comes Home

    Ava Comes Home

    Created by: Lesley Crewe
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    From the author of Relative Happiness and Shoot Me comes a riveting story about one terrible secret—a secret kept in shame, buried deep for self-preservation, and exposed in a moment that changes forever the lives of everyone involved.

    Ava Harris is a famous actress living the life of the rich and fabulous in L.A. when a family crisis calls her home. It’s been ten years since she’s set foot in Glace Bay, Cape Breton—back when she was plain old Libby MacKinnon. Why she ran away, no one knows. Returning home, she must face her family, her friends, and her first love, Seamus O’Reilly, whose heart broke the day she left.

    Ava is a good little actress, determined that no one will know what happened. She will keep the truth buried at all costs—even if she has to run again. But secrets have a way of surfacing, especially in a small town, and love has a way of blasting through the toughest barriers. While Ava can never go home again, perhaps Libby finally can.

    $17.95
  • Instant Boats

    Instant Boats

    Created by: Harold Payson
    Publisher: WoodenBoat Books

    How to build simple, well-designed plywood boats without a complicated building jig, featuring complete scaled-down plans for five easily-built boats designed by Phil Bolger. From a small punt to a 31′ daysailer with a schooner rig. The step-by-step example being a 12′ double-ended sailing skiff.

    $17.60
  • Titanic A Century of Remembrance

    Titanic A Century of Remembrance

    Publisher: Chronicle Herald

    On April 10, 1912, Titanic set sail from Southampton, England, bound for New York on its maiden voyage. The disaster that followed will be forever etched in history and seared on the psyche of Nova Scotians. One hundred years ago, when Titanic met its fate, we delivered the news as a breathless world waited. One hundred years later, as the world again turned its gaze toward Nova Scotia, The Chronicle Herald delivered an enduring tribute to an unthinkable tragedy. In words, pictures and graphics, we present a lasting collection of a century of news.

    $17.39
  • I'm Just Sayin' My Shorter Writings

    I’m Just Sayin’ My Shorter Writings

    Created by: David Muise
    Publisher: Breton Books

    I’m Just Sayin’ is a collection of short essays about Cape Breton life and David Muise’s own childhood in Cape Breton—a book that keeps alive the joy of growing up in this rare world that once was Industrial Cape Breton. A generous river of good humour and empathy flows through this book.

    $17.00
  • Doodled In Canada Educational Colouring Book
  • Asp of Ascension A Nefertari Hughes Mystery

    Asp of Ascension A Nefertari Hughes Mystery

    Created by: B.R. Myers
    Publisher: Fierce Ink Press

    Nefertari “Terry” Hughes has three rules for surviving high school: #1 Don’t attract attention, #2 Don’t get involved, and #3 Don’t make trouble.

    A year after the accident that left her disabled and took her mother’s life, sixteen-year-old Terry just wants to keep her head down and survive her new high school. When she catches the eye of cute basketball star Zach, all hopes of flying under the radar are gone.

    She is thrust even further into the spotlight when Fraser, the editor of the school newspaper, learns her father Mr. Hughes is the renowned archaeologist overseeing the new Egyptian display at the museum, which is rumored to include Cleopatra’s sarcophagus. When Fraser stumbles upon the fifty-year-old mystery of a girl who vanished in the museum and Terry’s father falls into a mysterious coma, Terry’s caught up in a whirlwind of events that leads all the way back to ancient times.

    Before long, the stakes become too high for Terry to ignore. Tossing aside her rules for survival, she teams up with Fraser and her candy-loving new friend Maude to solve the mystery and save her father — before she loses everything.

    $16.99
  • L'oeil bleu
  • Tartan NB- Pocket Campbell Ancie
  • Terminus ventre-ville cover
  • Beyond Amelia
  • Our Mom is Sick- Really, Really Sick, But She Rocks! (an ALS Story)
  • The Last Epistle of Tightrope Time
  • 100 Things You Don't Know About Atlantic Canada (For Kids)
  • Heartbreak Homes
  • Father Jimmy
  • Sterling Silver

    Sterling Silver

    Publisher: Breton Books

    The personal essay has so much potential as a literary form that it’s gratifying to see it being skilfully and engagingly employed in this book. Silver Donald Cameron has plenty on his mind, and he knows how to hold our attention. Cameron easily entices us into his essay “Rocky Mountain High” with this for openers:”Downhill skiing is a certifiably silly sport, I whimper to myself as the chair-lift bears me inexorably over the treetops and gullies, like a slab of beef going around the overhead conveyors in an abattoir. “.

    $16.95
  • Forest Magic

    Forest Magic

    Created by: Sarah Grindler

    What do you notice when you walk in the forest? Different types of trees, plants, and mushrooms? Maybe you hear a squirrel chattering or birds singing. Can you feel all the different kinds of moss? And look there! Hidden animal homes and interesting bugs.

    With this compact non-fiction guide, young readers will be equipped to seek out, identify, and appreciate the woodland magic that exists all around them. Featuring rich vocabulary words like “nurse log,” “lichen,” and “sapling,” this beautifully illustrated book is the ideal companion for little forest explorers. Incorporating all five senses and encouraging imaginative play, it even includes pixies and fairies (pixie cup lichen and fairy slipper wildflowers)! Forest Magic will be the book you reach for on the way out the door to explore your own backyard.

    There’s so much to see in a forest. What will you discover?

    $16.95
  • The Last Time I Saw Her

    The Last Time I Saw Her

    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    It’s been almost a year since Charlotte Romer set foot in her hometown of River John, Nova Scotia. She’s been living at a boarding school hours away, safe from the trauma and broken relationships she left behind. All she has left in the small town is her older brother, Sean, who is struggling to keep the lights on in their run-down family home. Charlotte hasn’t spoken to her best friend, Sophie, since the night she fled. It’s not exactly a celebratory homecoming.

    On her first night home, Charlotte shows up unannounced to Sophie’s eighteenth birthday party. The trickle-down effects of that decision haunt Charlotte for weeks. But when Charlotte reconnects with Sophie’s ex-boyfriend, Max, the two of them begin to slowly unravel what happened the night of the accident the summer before—the night that changed everything. Somebody knows something, and that somebody really doesn’t want Charlotte and Max to figure it out.

    With a fast-paced, high-stakes plot, Alexandra Harrington’s debut YA novel will leave readers breathless until the final, shocking conclusion.

    $16.95
  • 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
  • To See the Stars

    To See the Stars

    Created by: Jan Andrews
    Artist: Tara Bryan
    Publisher: Running the Goat

    A compelling story of one young Newfoundland woman caught up in the struggle for women?s and workers’ rights in the sweatshops of New York City’s garment district in the early 1900s.

    $16.95
  • The Birth and the Babyhood of the Telephone A Talk to Telephone Pioneers by The Other Man on the Line

    The Birth and the Babyhood of the Telephone A Talk to Telephone Pioneers by The Other Man on the Line

    Created by: Thomas A. Watson
    Publisher: Breton Books

    While Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone, Thomas A. Watson was the craftsman who gave the telephone life. Model after model, night and day, together they battled disappointment, and were spurred on by hints of success. Then in 1875, Watson’s hands created the first telephone that actually carried the human voice.

    Yet the world barely remembers Thomas Watson beyond the first sentence transmitted over the telephone: “Mr. Watson—come here—I want you.”

    In this classic book, restored and expanded, The Birth and Babyhood of the Telephone delivers both a detailed record of the development of the first telephone as it also reveals the very human story of the relationship between Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas Watson. We see the younger Watson grow up through the guidance of the better educated and more sophisticated A. G. Bell, as Watson receives books, and lessons in elocution and even table manners.

    This moving first-person account keeps alive the story of a relationship between two brilliant, impassioned men who changed the world.

    $16.95
  • Annaka

    Annaka

    Created by: Andre Fenton
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Upon returning to her childhood home of Yarmouth, Anna—once known as Annaka—relives memories from her younger self and faces some uncomfortable truths. This bittersweet homecoming forces Anna to reconcile who she was with who she is becoming. From the celebrated spoken-word poet and author of Worthy of Love comes a YA novel about family, identity, and reclaiming the past.

    $16.95