• The Unnameable

    The Unnameable

    An unflinching coming-of-age novel of two teenaged boys who embark on a clandestine relationship in 1960s Ottawa, for fans of Call Me By Your Name and Young Mungo.

    $24.95
  • The Geography of Home

    The Geography of Home

    Created by: Ed MacDonald

    In The Geography of Home, MacDonald traces the rural Prince Edward Island that he grew up in from the late 1950s through the early 1970s, a landscape on the cusp of far-reaching change. The depiction of an era offered here is a mixed-media portrait, combining prose and poetry, history and memory. MacDonald writes that while history attempts to trace changes over time, “memories are the little, coloured stones that we collect to assemble a mosaic of our lived past.”

    $24.95
  • Visible Ripples
  • These Are the Fireworks

    These Are the Fireworks

    Created by: Vicki Grant

    Award-winning young adult novelist Vicki Grant’s adult debut, perfect for fans of Lucy Foley, Bad Sisters, and The Perfect Couple, follows a family’s unravelling after the death of its patriarch.

    $24.95
  • Twenty-six

    Twenty-six

    Created by: Leo McKay Jr.

    A new edition of the bestselling, Giller Prize finalist work of literary fiction inspired by Nova Scotia’s Westray mining disaster.

    $24.95
  • Amazing 2SLGBTQIA+ People in Atlantic Canada

    Amazing 2SLGBTQIA+ People in Atlantic Canada

    Created by: Rebecca Rose
    Artist: James Bentley

    The newest installment in the popular illustrated series about Amazing Atlantic Canadians, featuring incredible 2SLGBTQIA+ people from across the region.

    $24.95
  • Little Days

    Little Days

    Publisher: Acorn Press

    limited-edition hardcover of this gorgeous new children’s book!

    $24.95
  • Flying High on PEI: Prince Edward Island and Canada's First Transatlantic Flight
  • Nine Bags of Gold: The Real-Life Hunt for the Lost Treasure of Acadie

    Nine Bags of Gold: The Real-Life Hunt for the Lost Treasure of Acadie

    The little-known search for an elusive eighteenth-century New Brunswick treasure, researched like never before, featuring dozens of illustrations.

    $24.95
  • Danger Revealed

    Danger Revealed

    Created by: Teresa LaBella

    Can Rayen escape her ruthless Chicago crime boss? Escape with the riveting rollercoaster ride of “Danger Revealed.” This suspenseful novel will keep you on the edge-of-your-seat until the very end and wanting more!

    $24.97
  • 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
  • Sable Island Shipwrecks

    Sable Island Shipwrecks

    Created by: Lyall Campbell
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Over 300 ships have gone down on Sable Island. The first known wreck was in 1583. This best selling book tells the stories of disaster, danger, rescue and survival.

    $24.99
  • Creative Mind Happy Soul Journal Doodle Your Way to Inner Calm
  • Kuekuatsheu Creates the World / Kuekuatsheu ka Tutak Assinu

    Kuekuatsheu Creates the World / Kuekuatsheu ka Ushitat Assinu (Mushuau dialect)

    Created by: Annie Picard
    Publisher: Running the Goat

    After a great flood, wolverine will rebuild the world if only he can get a handful of dirt. Will the little muskrat succeed in reaching the bottom of the water to find the dirt when others have failed?

    $24.99
  • Kuekuatsheu Creates the World / Kuekuatsheu ka Tutak Assinu

    Kuekuatsheu Creates the World / Kuekuatsheu ka Tutak Assinu (Sheshatshiu dialect)

    Created by: Annie Picard
    Publisher: Running the Goat

    After a great flood, wolverine will rebuild the world if only he can get a handful of dirt. Will the little muskrat succeed in reaching the bottom of the water to find the dirt when others have failed?

    $24.99
  • Unstoppable: Halifax Brings Its First Memorial Cup To Moose Country

    Unstoppable: Halifax Brings Its First Memorial Cup To Moose Country

    Publisher: Chronicle Herald

    The 2012/13 Halifax Mooseheads season will go down in Nova Scotia history as one of province’s greatest sporting accomplishments.   To commentate this occasion, The Chronicle Herald has published a 92-page book that spans the 19-year history of Atlantic Canada’s first QMJHL team. A keepsake for all hockey fans, Unstoppable is filled with amazing stories and photos of past players and memories along with an in-depth look into the making of this season’s championship team.

    $25.00
  • Drawing Opinions MacKinnon,DeAdder & More: Cartoons and the stories that inspire them

    Drawing Opinions MacKinnon,DeAdder & More: Cartoons and the stories that inspire them

    Publisher: Chronicle Herald

    The Chronicle Herald and its predecessor newspapers have been telling Nova Scotians’ stories since 1824. In words, pictures and cartoons, we’ve told the stories and we’ve reflected the sentiment that flowed from the triumphs, conflicts, celebrations and tragedies that are part of life’s inevitability.

    This book, in words, pictures and cartoons, captures some of the rich moments of the last year or so. Political triumphs and embarrassments. Sports, both good and not so good. Official responses that seemed inadequate in the wake of enormous tragedies. And good lives lost.

    $25.00
  • Vittorio's Journey

    Vittorio’s Journey

    Created by: Ruth Rappini

    Vittorio Rappini was born in Bologna in 1921. At the start of World War II, he survives the sinking of his submarine in the Mediterranean Sea and, for six years, suffers the degradation, drudgery and hardships of life in Allied prisoner of war camps. Finally able to return home, Vittorio confronts the aftermath of war in Italy, which sets him on the road to emigration to Canada. Vittorio’s Journey fits into the broader historical memory of all those who fought, suffered or perished on both sides during this tragic period of modern history.

    $25.00
  • Cable Captain

    Cable Captain

    Created by: Julian Bloomer

    This is the remarkable story of Captain Melville Henry Bloomer and the cable ships he commanded. The Lord Kelvin participated in the repair of cables damaged by the great seaquake of 1929 and the five year expedition to develop an undersea plough to bury cables in the ocean bed. That project is considered one of the greatest marine accomplishments of all times. The Minia was one of the ships that rescued Titanic survivors. Complemented by nearly 150 photos and drawings.

    $25.00
  • 25 Woodworking Projects For Small and Large Boats

    25 Woodworking Projects For Small and Large Boats

    Created by: Peter Spectre
    Publisher: WoodenBoat Books

    Well-known as the editor of the best-selling annual Mariner’s Book of Days, Peter Spectre lives in Spruce Head, Maine.

    $25.25
  • An Islander Strikes Back

    An Islander Strikes Back

    Created by: Patrick Ledwell
    Publisher: Acorn Press

    New from P.E.I.’s most beloved comedian! 

    In his new book “An Islander Strikes Back,” humourist Patrick Ledwell admits his little province is way behind the mainland. But it means Islanders like Ledwell can see where they’re going– about 10 years before they manage to get there.

    $25.95
  • Indian School Road
  • If I Had an Old House on the East Coast

    If I Had an Old House on the East Coast

    Created by: Wanda Baxter
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    If I had an old house on the East Coast I would fall in love at first sight.
    It would grab me by the heart, and not let go.

    With introspection and deep appreciation for the East Coast, this inspirational gift book shares a dream, in words and images, of falling in love with an old house and breathing new life into it. Exploring, with lyrical prose, everything from an old house’s foundation to its layers of antique wallpaper to its decades-old gardens bursting with wildflowers, this book is a love letter to a vanishing way of life. Fully illustrated with gentle watercolours from celebrated local artist Kat Frick Miller, If I Had an Old House on the East Coast also includes practical tips for the old-home-owner, from how to clear your home of ghosts to instructions for making rosehip jelly and maple syrup.

    $25.95
  • Genius at Work

    Genius at Work

    Created by: Dorothy Harley Eber
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    In 1885, nine years after his invention of the telephone, Alexander Graham Bell and his wife built a house and laboratory in Nova Scotia, where they summered for the next thirty-seven years. In Genius at Work, Eber weaves together the reminiscences of neighbours with excerpts from family journals, diaries and letters, to create an engaging account of this energetic, exuberant and occasionally eccentric man. Equally fascinating are the photographs that document his work and family. Together with the text, they shed new light on the career and character of this great inventor.

    $25.95
  • New Brunswick Was His Country

    New Brunswick Was His Country

    Created by: Ronald Rees
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Regularly described as New Brunswick’s greatest scholar, William Francis Ganong (1864-1941) wrote more than many people have ever read. His range of interests is reflected in his vast body of work: botany, zoology, physiography, cartography, and native languages were all within his reach. But his greatest interest, subsuming all others, was New Brunswick.

    Ganong endeavoured to write even his most scholarly papers for the general reader, and that is what historian Ronald Rees had done with New Brunswick Was His Country. An appreciation of Ganong’s work and a biography of the man behind it, rather than an exhaustive critical assessment, this fascinating overview will appeal to any reader interested in the natural and settlement history of New Brunswick and the working life of its most extraordinary scholar, from his summers conducting field research in Passamaquoddy Bay to his pivotal role in founding the New Brunswick Museum.

    Richly illustrated with historical photographs, Ganong’s own maps and drawings, and contemporary images, New Brunswick Was His Country is an essential addition to Atlantic Canada’s historical canon.

    $25.95
  • Escape to Reality How the World is Changing Gardening, and Gardening is Changing the World

    Escape to Reality How the World is Changing Gardening, and Gardening is Changing the World

    Created by: Mark Cullen
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Why do we garden? Why should we? How is gardening changing the world?

    These are just some of the philosophical gardening questions pondered in this heartfelt and gorgeously designed book. An informed and personal reflection on gardening in Canada from the country’s preeminent horticultural expert, Escape to Reality goes beyond the hows that are the focus of most gardening books and explores the whys. In short, narrative essays, topics range from garden and nature as therapy to who we are as gardeners and what life values we gain through the experience of gardening. It also includes some practical tips for cultivating and coexisting with your garden. Co-written with son, Ben Cullen, bestselling author and horticultural consultant Mark Cullen’s newest book is sure to find a home on the shelves of mindful gardeners across the country, and beyond. Proceeds benefit the Highway of Heroes. Includes original illustrations.

    $25.95
  • The Blind Mechanic

    The Blind Mechanic

    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Eric Davidson was a beautiful, fair-haired toddler when the Halifax Explosion struck, killing almost 2,000 people and seriously injuring thousands of others. Eric lost both eyes—a tragedy that his mother never fully recovered from. Eric, however, was positive and energetic. He also developed a fascination with cars and how they worked, and he later decided, against all likelihood, to become a mechanic. Assisted by his brothers who read to him from manuals, he worked hard, passed examinations, and carved out a decades-long career. Once the subject of a National Film Board documentary, Eric Davidson was, until his death, a much-admired figure in Halifax.

    This book does not gloss over the challenges faced by Eric and by his parents. Written by his daughter Marilyn, it gives new insights into the story of the 1917 Halifax Explosion and contains never-before-seen documents and photographs.

    $25.95
  • End of the Line The Dominion Atlantic Railway - A Trip Back in Time

    End of the Line The Dominion Atlantic Railway – A Trip Back in Time

    Created by: Mike Parker
    Publisher: Pottersfield Press

    There was a time when railways criss-crossed Nova Scotia, carrying passengers and delivering mail, moving freight and produce, hauling timber, coal, gypsum, and iron ore. But those days have passed thanks in large measure to the advent of the automobile, improved highways, long-haul trucking, and the vagaries of market demands and resource extraction. The number of railways operating today in the province can be tallied on one hand, with fingers left over.

    Vestiges of Nova Scotia’s railway heritage are disappearing. Tracks are now Rails to Trails; trestle bridges have deteriorated to decrepitude; and train stations, once the arterial pulse for so many communities, have, for the most part, disappeared. Most poignant, perhaps, is the silencing of that magical, haunting train whistle.

    Mike Parker’s latest book End of the Line follows a similar track as three of his earlier best-selling books about ghost towns and deserted island settlements. Presented in Mike’s popular storytelling style, and drawing upon more than 430 images, many of them in colour, End of the Line opens another window to the past, taking the reader for a nostalgic trip back in time on the abandoned Dominion Atlantic Railway along the once-famous Land of Evangeline route from Yarmouth to Halifax through the heart of the Annapolis Valley.

    Twenty-five years have passed since the demise of the Dominion Atlantic Railway (1894-1994), which closed just one month and five days short of its one hundredth birthday. There have been many railways but none more storied than the D.A.R., considered to be “one of the more important pages out of Nova Scotia history.”

    $25.95
  • Haven in the Heart of Halifax An Illustrated History of the Public Gardens

    Haven in the Heart of Halifax An Illustrated History of the Public Gardens

    Created by: Peter Twohig
    Publisher: Pottersfield Press

    The Public Gardens is one of the finest examples of a Victorian garden anywhere in the world. Nestled in the heart of the city, this important public space has a fascinating history. When you enter the Public Gardens, it feels for a moment as if you have stepped back in time. Everything seems to slow down when you push open one of the iron gates and set foot on the winding gravel paths that meander throughout plantings of astonishing variety. It is seemingly timeless but, of course, it has changed a great deal over almost one hundred years.

    Nestled in the heart of the city, the Public Gardens’ origins date from the 1830s. Inside its gates are a staggering variety of beautiful flowers, shrubs, and trees and the most memorable historic structures. The aesthetic of the Public Gardens was the vision of Richard Power, the Gardens’ original superintendent.

    Over time, the Gardens took its current form, through the addition of familiar features such as the bandstand, cast iron gates, fountain, and bridges. The structures and monuments in the garden themselves are filled with significance. Citizens and visitors alike have found a quiet oasis of calm in the middle of the downtown core. It is a place where memories have been made, as generation after generation have taken in the seven hectares of beauty. When you enter the Public Gardens, it feels as if you are stepping out of a hectic city and back in time. But the Public Gardens has survived through the careful stewardship of a cross section of the community.

    This lavishly illustrated book is the first comprehensive history of this remarkable place.

    $25.95
  • Oak Island Mystery: Solved The Final Chapter

    Oak Island Mystery: Solved The Final Chapter

    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    For more than two centuries, Oak Island, Nova Scotia, has been studied, searched, probed and cursed all the while failing to give up its secrets. Joy Steele’s ground-breaking historical research into the island’s true history is no less intriguing. In this second edition, Ms. Steele is joined by professional geologist Gordon Fader to not only solidify her theory, but to expand on it, including a thorough explanation of the area’s geology.

    $25.95
  • Titanic True Stories of Her Passengers, Crew, and Legacy

    Titanic True Stories of Her Passengers, Crew, and Legacy

    Created by: Nicola Pierce
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    This book tells the lives of the passengers on the Titanic‘s ill-fated voyage, and shines a spotlight on the vessel’s lost treasures, its celebrated send-off from Belfast, its animal passengers, the iconic music and movies inspired by the story, and the many, many tales of heroism and bravery that arose from this tragedy. Richly illustrated with archival photographs and newspaper clippings, as well as a comprehensive index, timeline, and suggested further reading, this all-ages book presents an accessible, fascinating history of the world’s most famous ship. Includes over 50 black and white photos.

    $25.95
  • Nova Scotia: Shaped by the Sea A Living History

    Nova Scotia: Shaped by the Sea A Living History

    Created by: Lesley Choyce
    Publisher: Pottersfield Press

    “It is a good tale, well told, which opens the door to the wanderings of the imagination.” —The Globe and Mail

    The history of Nova Scotia is an amazing story of a land and a people shaped by the waves, the tides, the wind, and the wonder of the North Atlantic. Choyce weaves the legacy of this unique coastal province, piecing together the stories written in the rocks, the wrecks, and the record books of human glory and error. In this newly revised sweeping true-life adventure, he provides a thoughtful down-to-earth journey through history that is both refreshing and revealing.

    Here, well into the twenty-first century, he looks back at the full story of Nova Scotia from the geological history to the civilization of the Mi’kmaq, the arrival of the Europeans, and beyond to the stormy history of English and French. Choyce takes a critical look at the wars that helped shape the province, the scoundrels and the heroes who lived here down through the centuries, and the seas and storms that swept through the land of the Bluenosers. The original edition of Nova Scotia: Shaped by the Sea was published to acclaim by Penguin Books in 1996. This new edition brings the story up to date and looks at the changes in politics, economy, and global climate that will challenge Nova Scotians in the years ahead.

    “Lesley Choyce’s writing captures the ebb and flow of Nova Scotia seafaring, from its Golden Age of Sail to the disasters and crimes at sea.” —The Halifax Chronicle Herald

    $25.95