• You Are Loved

    You Are Loved

    Created by: Tom Urbaniak
    Artist: Tammy Krasniqi
    Publisher: Breton Books
    $19.95
  • The Irish in Cape Breton
  • Rita Joe—The Middle Years
  • The Life of Wanda Robson
  • The Wreck of the Auguste
  • Sibley's Backyard Birds of the Pacific Northwest-Folding Guides

    Sibley’s Backyard Birds of the Pacific Northwest-Folding Guides

    Created by: David Sibley
    Publisher: Earth, Sky + Water

    • Must order minimum of 10

    • Laminated, indestructible, beach & waterproof

    • Instant access to just what you need to know

    • Written and illustrated by local experts

    • Perfect for backpack, beach bag, boat, or tacklebox

    $11.95
  • Common Bees of Eastern North America - Folding Guide
  • Sibley's Birds of the Pacific Northwest Coast- Folding Guides

    Sibley’s Birds of the Pacific Northwest Coast- Folding Guides

    Created by: David Sibley
    Publisher: Earth, Sky + Water

    • Must order minimum of 10

    • Laminated, indestructible, beach & waterproof

    • Instant access to just what you need to know

    • Written and illustrated by local experts

    • Perfect for backpack, beach bag, boat, or tacklebox

    $11.95
  • Sibley's Raptors of Western North America - Folding Guides

    Sibley’s Raptors of Western North America – Folding Guides

    Created by: David Sibley
    Publisher: Earth, Sky + Water

    • Must order minimum of 10

    • Laminated, indestructible, beach & waterproof

    • Instant access to just what you need to know

    • Written and illustrated by local experts

    • Perfect for backpack, beach bag, boat, or tacklebox

    $11.95
  • Common Butterflies of the Northeast-Fold
  • Butterflies of the Pacific Northwest - Folding Guide
  • Butterflies of the Rocky Mountain Press - Folding Guide
  • Common Bees of Western North America - Folding Guide
  • Malagawatch Mice and the Church that Sailed

    Malagawatch Mice and the Church that Sailed

    Created by: Caroline Stellings

    When the Highland Village Museum adopted and moved Malagawatch Church across the Bras d’Or lake in 2003, children’s author-illustrator Caroline Stellings asked herself: “What about the church mice?”

    The answer is an imaginative tale of The Malagawatch Mice who, after living under the church for generations, learn that they are about to lose the floorboards from over their heads.

    Ms. Stellings’ soft watercolour illustrations and delightful rhyming narrative follow the Malagawatch Mice–and the church–to their new home in Iona.

    $11.95
  • Storied Shores

    Storied Shores

    Created by: A. J. B. Johnston

    Cape Breton Island has many claims to fame, yet far too few people are familiar with the rich and storied past of the coastal areas of Richmond County.For centuries the Mi’kmaq, and later the early European explorers and settlers, shortened their journeys between the Bras d’Or lake and the Atlantic Ocean by means of the narrow isthmus at St. Peter’s. This portage area -eventually a canal – became a haul-over road in the mid-1650s. The portage area and the surrounding shores and waterways of Cape Breton were sites of early and prolonged interaction between the French and the Mi’kmaq during a time when dreams of expansion and empire among European nations, met head on with the realities of North America’s aboriginal peoples.The busy corridor between Chapel Island, St. Peter’s, and Isle Madame was the backdrop for a colourful and intriguing era of our shared histories. Storied Shores presents a history of that time and place – the story of the promise of prosperity and the hope for new lives and the story of the ravages of greed, rivalry, and war.

    $19.95
  • Skippers Save the Stone

    Skippers Save the Stone

    Created by: Caroline Stellings
    Artist: Hector MacNeil

    Skippers Save the Stone is the second adventure of the Skipper dogs. When they travel to Scotland, the Skippers learn that the legendary Stone of Scone has been stolen by a clan of squirrels! The only way they can save the stone is to win a boat race, but the crafty Chief McNut has a trick up his sleeve. Can the Skippers bring back the Stone of Destiny?

    $11.95
  • Heartsong

    Heartsong

    Created by: Maxine Trottier

    Heartsong is an illustrated children’s book which tells of the loving creation of a fiddle which is passed along and enjoyed through several generations. Told in English and Gaelic.

    $11.95
  • Voyage of Wood Duck

    Voyage of Wood Duck

    Created by: Maxine Trottier

    Some people say that dreams are foolish. Some people say that you can search you whole life long and never find what it is you are looking for. But long ago when dreams were more real than they are today; there was a young boy who lived by the sea. He was called Wood Duck. His people had always lived beside the ocean. Its salty water flavoured their days. Its currents flowed through their nights. The power of the sea ran very strongly in Wood Duck. In his dreams, fish swam and sea birds flew.

    $11.95
  • Loon Rock

    Loon Rock

    Created by: Maxine Trottier
    Artist: Dozay Christmas

    The story of a loon and a young Mi’kmaq boy written in English and Mi’kmaq.

    $9.95
  • As A'Bhraighe

    As A’Bhraighe

    Created by: Effie Rankin

    It has been said that the greatest Gaelic poets were from Lochaber in the Scottish Highlands. Those who emigrated to Nova Scotia in the 18th and 19th centuries were the living memory of clan history and tradition. Allan the Ridge MacDonald stands out as one poet who inherited and maintained an extraordinary wealth of vocabulary and a superior knowledge of clan and legendary history. In this first compilation and translation of the known Gaelic songs of Allan the Ridge in print, Effie Rankin gives all readers an insight into the life of the poet and the traditions that made him a highly regarded seanchaidh.

    $22.95
  • Community Economic Development

    Community Economic Development

    Communities have long been ahead of governments in responding to changes in the economy, forging ahead with innovative grassroots projects that now make up a substantial portion of economic development initiatives.

    Having made major gains in practice and having built local capacities through innovation, Community Economic Development now stands at a crossroads. In Building for Social Change, Eric Shragge, Michael Toye and colleagues from across the country offer a timely critical examination of CED practices and debates.

    This book is designed for CED practitioners, for others working in community-based organizations and those being trained. There are a growing number of post-secondary programs in English Canada that educate students in CED and related fields such as regional development, yet there are not many publications that provide analytical perspectives and debate.

    The goal of this book is to describe and analyze CED practice, primarily in Canada, through a wide range of subjects—the evolution of its definitions, economic dimensions and the key elements that form its context.

    Building for Social Change situates CED in wide political, economic and social contexts: rich examples of the scope and practices, and some of the limits—in Aboriginal communities, as a tool to support women, psychiatric survivor enterprises, housing and worker ownerships—are explored to help spur further critical discussion and debate.

    $27.95
  • Cape Breton Fiddle

    Cape Breton Fiddle

    Created by: Glenn Graham

    In the Cape Breton Fiddle, Glenn Graham, an accomplished Cape Breton fiddler, explores the rootes of the Cape Breton fiddling tradition, an art firmly rooted in Scottish Gaelic cultural forms, through an evolution that has made Cape Breton an icon of creativity recognized throughout the world.

    $24.95
  • Cape Breton Weather Watching

    Cape Breton Weather Watching

    Created by: Bill Danielson

    Supported by stunning photographs of every imaginable weather phonomena familiar to us all, and diagrams that illustrate just how the weather works, Danielson bring’s Cape Breton’s natural history to life.

    $28.95
  • Reflections of Care

    Reflections of Care

    Down the hall, across the street, around the corner an around the world, the education, experience and care of Cape Breton’s nurses are testimony to that capacity–in hospitals, clinics, neighbourhoods and on foreign soil.

    The need to capture their experiences has resulted in these reflections spanning 100 years–from the opening of the first nursing school on the Island in 1905. By car, on foot, on horseback, by boat, snowmobile, small aircraft and helicopter, Cape Breton’s nurses have distinguished themselves as caregivers, observers, listeners and advocates. These are just some their stories.

    $18.95
  • Tokens of Grace

    Tokens of Grace

    Beginning in the 17th-century Scotland, when Covenanters met in open defiance of religious repression, open-air communions –the Sàcramaid – evolved to become the social and spiritual highlight of the year. Primarily a mixture of prayer and religious and kinship feasting, open-air communions were an expression of core communal values and basic kin and religious loyalties.

    Particularly between 1840 and 1890, but well into the 20th century as well, the sacramental season and its open-air communions was a dominant symbol in the lives of Cape Breton’s Scots Presbyterians. Whole communities, numbering in the thousands, converged for this great religious occasion, taking part in as many as five days of exhaustive preparatory self-examination.

    $19.95
  • A Better Life A Portrait of Highland Women in Nova Scotia

    A Better Life A Portrait of Highland Women in Nova Scotia

    Created by: Teresa MacIsaac

    MacIsaac interviewed nearly 100 descendants of Highland Scots women and provides this heart-and-soul treatment of the lives of Scots immigrants from women’s perspective. She includes an extensive look at women in teaching, nursing and religious congregations. This is an exploration of the traditions and experiences in the lives of Highland Scottish women – in the Highlands and Islands of Scotland and in the eastern counties of Nova Scotia where so many of them settled (Pictou, Antigonish, Inverness and Victoria counties primarily). In A Better Life, oral accounts obtained from descendants, enriched by written sources – precious archival collections and rare books – offer insight into the influences central to the cultural, religious, working, caring and devotional lives of Highland women: the dreams and realities of a better life if Nova Scotia.

    $22.95
  • Honour Roll

    Honour Roll

    Created by: W. James MacDonald

    The Nova Scotia Highland Brigade sailed on the SS Olympic, from Halifax on October 12, 1916, and played a significant role in the victories of World War I, including the now-infamous Vimy Ridge.In time for the 90th anniversary of the battle for Vimy, historian James MacDonald has catalogued information about members of the Highland Brigade (85th, 185th, 193rd, 219th Battalions) killed or mortally wounded in action.The Honour Roll collates, for the first time in a single publication, the name, date of birth, family origin, vocation, enlistment details, date and where they were killed in action and final resting place and of each member. Fifteen battle maps showing troop movements are included, along with a description of Commonwealth war graves where the soldiers are buried.

    $19.95
  • Sustainable People

    Sustainable People

    This book deals with a new role that has emerged as communities all over the world struggle to gain more control over their destinies as globalization accelerates.Community entrepreneurs create organizations that encourage people to learn their way out of poverty, dependency and marginalization. By participating in such innovative ventures, individuals become more self-sustaining and able to create good lives for themselves and others in their own communities or wherever the choose to settle.Sustainable People moves discussion about social and economic change from abstract terms such as “community” and “development” by focusing on what individuals and groups are actually doing to encourage personal and community development, it documents the background of the role of the entrepreneur, the kinds of organizations they create, their learning process and the moral basis of their initiatives.

    $19.95
  • Percy Willmot: A Cape Bretoner at War

    Percy Willmot: A Cape Bretoner at War

    Created by: Brian Tennyson

    When Britain went to war with Germany in August 1914, Canada and the rest of the British empire followed without question and without being asked. By the time the Great War finally ground to an end in November 1918, 619,636 Canadians had enlisted in the struggle. One of them was Percy Willmot.Percy wrote frequently to his sister, no matter where he was or what was going on and he was a gifted writer, whose sparkling personality still clearly emerges more than eighty years later.Willmot’s letters tell us much about the experiences of thousands of soldiers: progress of the war and daily experiences of the men, sometimes pointing out the contrast between the beauties of nature and the unspeakable horrors of modern warfare. They remind us of the intense intimacy of the shared experience of the trenches, perhaps especially for someone like Percy, serving in a unit with many comrades from his own community.

    $23.95
  • Dance to the Piper

    Dance to the Piper

    Created by: Barry Shears

    Barry Shears is a native of Glace Bay, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, and an acknowledged expert on the history of traditional piping in Nova Scotia and its intrinsic connection to the Gaelic language, music and culture. An award-winning musician, Barry has performed at concerts and festivals throughout North America, as well as in Scotland and Europe. He has previously published several books of bagpipe music and history.

    $23.95
  • Endgame 1758 The Promise, the Despair and the Glory of Louisbourg's Last Decade

    Endgame 1758 The Promise, the Despair and the Glory of Louisbourg’s Last Decade

    Created by: A. J. B. Johnston

    The story of what happened at the colonial fortified town of Louisbourg between 1749 and 1758 is one of the great dramas of the history of Canada, indeed North America. The French stronghold on Cape Breton Island, strategically situated near the entrance to the Gulf of St. Lawrence, was from soon after its founding  a major possession in the quest for empire. The dramatic military and social history of this short-lived and significant fortress, seaport, and community, and the citizens who  made it their home, are woven together in A. J. B. Johnston’s gripping biography of the colony’s final decade, presented from both French and British perspectives. Endgame 1758 is a tale of two empires in collision on the shores of mid-eighteenth-century Atlantic Canada, where rival European visions of predominance clashed headlong with each other and with the region’s Aboriginal peoples. The magnitude of the struggle and of its uncertain outcome colored the lives of Louisbourg’s inhabitants and the nearly thirty thousand combatants arrayed against it. The entire history comes to life in a tale of what turned out to be  the first major British victory in the Seven Years’ War. How and why the French colony ended the way it did, not just in June and July 1758, but over the decade that preceded the siege, is a little-known and compelling story.

    $26.95
  • One God, One Aim, One Destiny

    One God, One Aim, One Destiny

    The story of African settlement in Cape Breton was barely documented and on the verge of being lost. In 2006, the African Nova Scotian community in Glace Bay decided to restore a derelict meeting hall of the Universal Negro Improvement Association from the early decades of the 20th century. As part of that project, the community created a museum to recognize and celebrate the history of the black community in Cape Breton.

    $22.95