Canadian nonfiction

  • A world we have lost : Saskatchewan before 1905

    Creator

    Waiser, Bill

    Abstract

    Sometime during the summer of 1690, in east-central Saskatchewan, Englishmen Henry Kelsey and his Indian escorts walked out of the boreal forest and into a new world -- the northern great plains of western Canada. It was a landscape never encountered before by another European.

    Audience
    Adult**
    Publisher (Source)

    Markham, Ontario, Fifth House

    Non spécifié
  • The Natashas : the new global sex trade

    Creator

    Malarek, Victor

    Abstract

    The buying and selling of human beings for the worldwide sex industry is organized crime’s fastest-growing business with up to two million people globally—mostly women and children—being trafficked into the sex trade every year. 

    Audience
    Adult**
    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Viking Canada

    Non spécifié
  • A brush full of colour : the world of Ted Harrison

    Creator

    Ruurs, Margriet

    Gibson, Katherine

    Abstract

    A Brush Full of Colour is the story of a boy whose passion for learning would save him from a life in the coalmines. The books by the American writer Jack London and Canadian poet Robert Service fired his imagination with scenes of the wilderness and the Klondike Gold Rush. He trained as an artist, and a stint in the British Intelligence Service allowed him to travel. But Ted never stopped dreaming of the North, and when he saw an advertisement for teachers in Northern Alberta, he jumped at the chance to emigrate to Canada, where the biggest adventure of his life would begin.

    Audience
    Juvenile**
    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto, Ontario, Canada

    Pajama Press Inc.

    Non spécifié
  • How come I'm dead?

    Creator

    McDonald, Glen

    Abstract

    Covers the highlights of 26 years in the career of Judge Glen McDonald, who was the colorful and often controversial Vancouver Coroner from 1954 to 1980 and supervisory coroner for the province of British Columbia from 1969 to 1980.

    Audience
    Adult**
    Publisher (Source)

    Surrey, B.C.

    Hancock House

    Non spécifié
  • Invisible north : the search for answers on a troubled reserve

    Creator

    Shimo-Barry, Alex

    Abstract

    When freelance journalist Alexandra Shimo arrives in Kashechewan, a fly-in, northern Ontario reserve, to investigate rumours of a fabricated water crisis and document its deplorable living conditions, she finds herself drawn into the troubles of the reserve. Unable to cope with the desperate conditions, she begins to fall apart.

    Audience
    Adult**
    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Non spécifié
  • The Muslimah who fell to earth : personal stories by Canadian Muslim women

    Abstract

    These are twenty-two personal stories, told by women from practically all backgrounds and persuasions--devout and not-so devout, professionals and housewives, westernized and traditional, wearing jeans, hijab, or niqab, and originally from Africa to North America to Pakistan to the Middle East--revealing in their own ways what it means to them to be a Muslim woman (a "Muslimah"). What we get is a complex of stories, all united by two simple ideas--faith and nationality (Canadian).

    Audience
    Adult**
    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto, Ontario

    Mawenzi House

    Non spécifié
  • The night we stole the mountie's car

    Creator

    Braithwaite, Max.

    Abstract

    Max Braithwaite has the unique capacity to be both tender and caustic – both nostalgic and uncompromisingly honest. He is also one of Canada’s few original humorists. All these qualities are present in his latest bittersweet recollections of life on the Prairies during the early Thirties. It was a time of depression and drought; but for Max, a young schoolteacher, it was also a time for courtship and marriage, for those hilarious episodes in Wannego, Saskatchewan, which did much to belie the grimness of the era.

    Audience
    Adult**
    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto, Ont.

    McClelland & Stewart

    Non spécifié
  • Montcalm and Wolfe : two men who forever changed the course of Canadian history

    Creator

    Carrier, Roch

    Abstract

    "The story of Wolfe and Montcalm and the Plains of Abraham. In September 1759, a small band of British troops led by James Wolfe scaled the tall cliff overlooking a farmer's field owned by Abraham Martin and overpowered the French garrison that protected the area, allowing the bulk of the British army to ascend the cliff behind and attack the French who, led by Louis-Joseph Montcalm, were largely unaware of Wolfe's tactics. The battle that ensued on what would become known as the Plains of Abraham would forever shape the geography and politics of Canada.

    Audience
    Adult**
    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto : HarperCollins Canada, 2014

    Non spécifié
  • The idea of Canada : letters to a nation

    Creator

    Johnston, David

    Abstract

    From our present Governor General, a series of 50 (of several thousand) carefully chosen letters he has written to people he has admired and befriended over his seventy-plus years, that sets out Mr. Johnston's frank, informed, and novel thoughts about Canada.

    Audience
    Adult**
    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto : Signal, an imprint of McClelland & Stewart, 2016

    Non spécifié