• Wolverine and Little Thunder
  • When the Owl Calls Your Name
  • Finding Forgiveness

    Finding Forgiveness

    Created by: Adrian Smith
    Publisher: Acorn Press

    Adrian Smith was raised in what seemed to be a very traditional, Roman Catholic upbringing. His father, Adrian Smith Sr, was very religious. He had studied to be a priest and left the seminary only 6 months before his ordination. After he left the seminary, Adrian Sr then worked for 30 years as a child psychologist for PEI’s Department of Education. He died at the age of 58 from a brain tumor. A week later after his death, Adrian Jr discovered that his father had been living a lie and that he was homosexual; he had kept it hidden his whole life.

    Adrian kept his father’s sexuality a secret until his mother died. At that time, he decided to make a conscious effort to face his and his father’s story. He ended up having travel away from PEI to get counselling to help him get over the lies of his past. He was finally making progress when allegations of sexual abuse against my father surfaced.

    The book details a son’s experience with coming to terms with the secrecy and betrayal. But it is also a story of redemption as after years of hard work Smith could finally find forgiveness.

    $21.95
  • Wild Honey

    Wild Honey

    Created by: Aaron Schneider
    Publisher: Breton Books

    Stark and sensual, funny and frightening by turns, these are poems you can read and read again, for enjoyment and for insight.

    $9.95
  • Grand-Pré: Coeur de L'Acadie

    Grand-Pré: Coeur de L’Acadie

    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Grand-Pré est un toponyme très évocateur, non seulement au Canada, mais partout dans le monde. Les événements qui se déroulent dans ce village acadien vers la fin de l’été et durant l’automne 1755 occupent une place importante dans l’histoire de l’Amérique du Nord.

    $16.95
  • Grand-Pré: Heart of Acadia

    Grand-Pré: Heart of Acadia

    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    A.J.B. (John) Johnson, a historian with Parks Canada, has published extensively, on French colonial Louisbourg in particular. W.P. (Wayne) Kerr, an interpretation specialist with Parks Canada, has over seen the development of numerous exhibits and projects in Atlantic Canada

    $24.95
  • Grand-Pré Landscape for the World

    Grand-Pré Landscape for the World

    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    In 2012 the Landscape of Grand Pré, which includes the entire Grand Pré Marsh and portions of North Grand Pré, Hortonville, Grand Pré, and Lower Wolfville, was declared Nova Scotia’s third UNESCO World Heritage Site. This newest addition to the Stories of our Past series details the area’s physical and cultural evolution in an accessible, highly visual format.

    Grand Pré explores the interrelationship of the peoples and landscape of Grand Pré, from the legacies of the dykelands to the record-breaking tides of the Minas Basin. With a focus on the resilient first peoples of Grand Pré—the Mi’kmaq and the Acadians—the book explores the implications of the Grand Dérangement, including the arrival of New England Planters, the twentieth-century Acadian Renaissance, and the creation of the “Land of Evangeline.” Includes informative sidebars and 50 colour photos.

    $15.95
  • 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
  • Thomas: A Secret Life

    Thomas: A Secret Life

    Created by: A. J. B. Johnston

    Set in early-18th-century France, Thomas: A Secret Life is the imagined life of Thomas Pichon. We first meet Thomas as a twelve-year old in the small town of Vire, Normandy. Precociously sensuous by nature, Thomas is inclined to poetry and religious/erotic imaginings. A series of adolescent adventures provide striking background to his character. Rejecting parental insistence that he become a priest, Thomas steals away to Paris in the middle of the night. There, nearly broke, Thomas works as a lowly office clerk, joins the ranks of aspiring French writers and makes extra money serving as a part-time spy for the police of Paris. But his careers advance too slowly for his liking, and he finds himself taking regular comfort and release in prostitutes’ stalls. A rendezvous with a high-class courtesan brings a new possibility and Thomas plots a future in which he can have his cake and eat it too. Writer, lover, spy: Life is nowhere near as good or as easy as Thomas Pichon imagined it would be.

    $19.95
  • The Maze A Thomas Pichon Novel

    The Maze A Thomas Pichon Novel

    Created by: A. J. B. Johnston

    Like the streets of his 18th-century Paris home, Thomas Pichon’s life is full of twists and turns. Despite winning his wife’s forgiveness for an extramarital affair, Thomas and his lover, Hélène, are caught a second time, and decide that it’s time for new beginnings – in London. As a writer, Thomas tries to make literary sense of the chaos of the life and language of a city teeming with excitement and danger. Hélène finds her own way out of the maze.

    $19.95
  • Crossings: A Thomas Pichon Novel

    Crossings: A Thomas Pichon Novel

    Created by: A. J. B. Johnston

    Thomas Pichon seems forever at a crossroads, often choosing the path of least resistance, or at least the one most tempting. In this, the third Thomas Pichon novel, his life remains more complicated than he wishes. He encounters highwaymen on a country road, succumbs to a tempting tryst in the spa town of Bath, squanders a new love back in London and begins to long for the higher social station he once enjoyed.

    Returning to Paris, his working life initially stalls, but a new lover offers help. He is given the best position he has ever had, one that requires him to go overseas. The crossing is a voyage neither he nor anyone else aboard will forget.

    $19.95
  • Louisbourg Phoenix Fortress

    Louisbourg Phoenix Fortress

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

    A wonderful photographic look at the fortress accompanied by text that illuminates its history.

    $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
  • Louisbourg: 18th Century Town

    Louisbourg: 18th Century Town

    Created by: A. J. B. Johnston
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Louisbourg: An 18th-Century Town is an in-depth look at what was once a well-known settlement in the New World. As a seaport, Louisbourg possessed one of the busiest harbours in North America. As a fortress, it generated hope in French hearts and fear in British ones. As a community, it was home to thousands of men, women, and children: fishermen and soldiers, merchants and artisans, servants and seamstresses. Voltaire called the colony “the key” to French possessions in North America. Benjamin Franklin described it as a “tough nut to crack.” In the end, British prime minister William Pitt insisted that it be destroyed. Pitt got his wish, yet 200 years later, 18th-century Louisbourg rose again, this time as one of the world’s great outdoor museums.

    This well-crafted book, written by historians of the Fortress of Louisbourg National Historic Site and teachers of the Cape Breton District School Board, is an entertaining and informative portrait of this 18th-century town. Its well-illustrated pages provide young readers with material on everything from astronomy and gardening to fashions and siege warfare. It offers a rare opportunity to savour what life was really like in a French military town on Cape Breton Island two centuries ago.

    $16.95
  • Louisbourg

    Louisbourg

    Created by: A.J.B. Johnston
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Now a national historic site, the fortified military settlement of Louisbourg was once a colonial jewel desired by both the French and English monarchies, traded with yet feared by the Anglo-Americans, and highly regarded by the Mi’kmaq. Home to Canada’s first lighthouse, Louisbourg became the capital of Île-Royale (Cape Breton Island) in 1720, and was an economically viable fishery, military stronghold, and strategic naval base for centuries.

    In the newest addition to the Stories of our Past series, Louisbourg: Past, Present, and Future, historian A. J. B. Johnston explores the complex past of the Nova Scotian landmark in an accessible and animated format. Featuring over 50 images, including maps, archaeological excavations, and artistic renderings, Louisbourg illustrates a significant period in Nova Scotia history.

    $17.95
  • 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
  • Kings of Friday Night The Lincolns

    Kings of Friday Night The Lincolns

    Created by: A. J. B. Johnston
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Over a span of ten years, The Lincolns played rock ‘n’ roll, R & B, and soul, not just in their hometown of Truro but at dances and on campuses across Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. They changed the lives of small-town kids clamouring for a beat that would move their feet, their hips, and their hearts. Through interviews, stories, and photos, The Lincolns will stir fond memories for the band’s countless fans.

    $19.95
  • Charting the Darkness

    Charting the Darkness

    Created by: A.C. Geisel

    American-born fighter pilot and Vietnam veteran, Nick Sullivan, is a broken man. Abandoned for dead by his family while he rotted in a Viet Cong prison camp, Sullivan finds solace in alcohol and flashbacks to war and prison.

    The death of a nearly forgotten uncle takes Sullivan to Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, where he had spent many adolescent summers with his family and all that such a privilege entailed – beaches, fishing and first loves. His uncle’s bequest takes Nick by surprise and, in the process of refurbishing a salvaged sailboat, he too is salvaged.

    $19.95
  • Historic Bathurst

    Historic Bathurst

    Created by: A J McCarthy
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    Historic Bathurst offers an intimate look at life as it once was in this northern New Brunswick town. Summoning up its early days with an abundance of archival images, this book presents Bathurst’s past as home of salmon runs, a bountiful lumbering business, and as an important trading post along the remote Bay of Chaleur and documents the changes brought by the early twentieth century. Authur A.J. McCarthy has depicted, in images and words, the history of Bathurst’s people, the great rivers of the region, its streetscapes, bridges, and buildings, as well as its industries such as mining, the pulp mills, and the railway.With over one hundred images, this book is a one-of-a-kind keepsake, bringing back the people, history, and spirit of Bathurst.

    $21.95
  • Scottish Lights

    Scottish Lights

    Created by: A A MacKenzie
    Publisher: Breton Books

    A wonderful collection of essays by the best-selling author of The Harvest Train and The Irish in Cape Breton. A popular public speaker, A. A. (Tony) MacKenzie brings that same brisk, informed voice to Scottish Lights, casting new light on the Celtic heritage of Cape Breton and Eastern Nova Scotia. He takes us to pioneer settlements and to the heart of Gaelic tradition, to the battles and passions of heroes and bards and scoundrels, both the well-known and those nearly forgotten.

    $16.95
  • The Neighbours are Watching

    The Neighbours are Watching

    Created by: A A MacKenzie
    Publisher: Breton Books

    Tony MacKenzie is a beloved historian, teacher and storyteller. He has written three bestselling books, The Irish in Cape Breton, The Harvest Train, and Scottish Lights. The Neighbours are Watching is Tony’s first foray into what might be called “fiction”- but readers will recognize the stories as undoubtedly “true.”

    $16.95
  • 9781895415643-1.jpg

    Harvest Train

    Created by: A A MacKenzie
    Publisher: Breton Books

    One of Canada’s great adventure stories, when young men went west to work on the booming grain farms of the Prairies. Here are some of the stories and tales

    $18.95
  • Acadie Then and Now: A People's History

    Acadie Then and Now: A People’s History

    Acadie Then and Now: A People’s History in its French edition won the international literary award, 2015 Prix France-Acadie Prize. The book is an international collection of articles from 55 authors, which chronicles the historical and contemporary realities of the Acadian people worldwide. This book includes 65 articles on the Acadians living today in the Canadian provinces of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, Newfoundland and Quebec, in the American states of Louisiana, Texas and Maine, and in the French regions of Poitou, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, and St-Pierre et Miquelon. It takes an international perspective and provides the readers with new insights on the past, present, and future of Acadian descendants from all the Acadies of the world.

    $30.00
  • Electric City Second Edition The Stehelins of New France

    Electric City Second Edition The Stehelins of New France

    This new edition tells the true story of the Stehelins, a prestigious family from Normandy, France, who came to Nova Scotia in the early twentieth century to carve out a new life in the wilderness. The family’s achievements were legendary–they built their own railway and installed their own electricity to the incredulity of all those around. Their amazing tale of creating an “electric city” in the wilds of Nova Scotia is the stuff of romance, challenge, and intrigue. Includes updates and a new chapter.

    $22.95
  • Peggy's Cove - Mist & Rocks

    Peggy’s Cove – Mist & Rocks

    Photographer: Ron Webber

    Acclaimed photo landscape artist Ron Webber has interpreted exciting and interesting locations across Canada. And it was an unexpected pleasure when he came under the spell of Peggys Cove, a place close to his home. He was enchanted first by the land, then by the village, and finally by the diffused coastal lighting that brings them together in a painterly way. Over severalmonths, and with no preconceived direction, Webber followed the well trodden path of visitors before him. The resulting photographs, combined with archival images, capture the true spirit of Peggys Cove, both past and present.

    $19.95
  • Creating Good Food

    Creating Good Food

    Artist: George Bernard
    Editor: Wanda Bernard

    African Nova Scotians are well known in their families and communities for creating good food. In addition, they have always been able to make delicious meals for large families. Making the link between food and health, the Association of Black Social Workers has worked with seniors to convert some of their cherished traditional recipes to more healthy versions. We were inspired by the seniors’ willingness to try new twists on their old favourite recipes.

    $19.95
  • Magic In Her Hands The Art of Marie Webb

    Magic In Her Hands The Art of Marie Webb

    Magic in Her Hands: The Art of Marie Webb brings to the public’s attention the practice of Marie Webb, a young Nova Scotian with Down syndrome, who is making a reputation for herself as an artist in our community. A third-generation artist, Webb is the daughter of artist and educators Renée Forrestall and Nick Webb, and the granddaughter of artist Tom and Natalie Forrestall. Her unique vision will be sure to engage many audiences.

    $35.00
  • From Land and Sea

    From Land and Sea

    Editor: Dee Appleby
    Publisher: Nimbus Publishing

    A near-island bathed in salty sea air and brushed by steady winds, Nova Scotia is often shadowed by dark clouds one moment and lit by a brilliant sun the next. This ever-changing and remarkably diverse landscape makes the province an inspiration for artists.

    From Land and Sea: Nova Scotia’s Contemporary Landscape Artists profiles 70 artists and their works, representing a wide range of styles. Dozay Christmas and Alan Syliboy draw from Mi’kmaw legends, June Deveau and Denise Comeau depict Acadian landscapes, and realists such as Tom Forrestall, Leonard Paul, and Alice Reed immerse us in a rare moment frozen in time.

    With a foreword from Ray Cronin, director and CEO of the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, From Land and Sea is not only an indispensable guide to the artists themselves, but a stunning portrait of a remarkable province.

    $35.00
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  • Unforgettable Tuscany and Florence

    Unforgettable Tuscany and Florence

    Photographer: George Fischer
    Publisher: George Fischer

    Step into central Italy’s region of Tuscany and its capital city of Florence with George Fischer –one of Canada’s most celebrated and prolific landscape photographers.

    Through his artistry, George has captured life and an area steeped in history and culture. He immortalizes Tuscany’s stunning landscapes, rich artistic legacy and delightful people, finding beauty and inspiration around every corner. He takes you to places where you can absorb hundreds of years of history and culture –or simply bask in the vibrant colours and varying moods.

    Whether your tastes run to elegant or rustic, classic or modern, you’ll savour the journey.

    $29.95