Canadian nonfiction

  • The Metamorphosis The Apprenticeship of Harry Houdini

    Creator

    MacNab, Bruce

    Abstract

    Winner, Best Atlantic Published Book AwardShortlisted, Canadian Regional Design AwardsIn May of 1896, a young magician from New York City joined the cast of the Marco Magic Company and embarked on a summer-long tour of eastern Canada, including New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. It was during this excursion that Handcuff Harry AKA Harry Houdini first showcased the talent that transformed him from a small-time conjurer, who performed for pennies in dime museums, into the world’s most celebrated escape artist.

    Publisher (Source)

    Fredericton

    Goose Lane Editions

    Not specified
  • Almost a Great Escape A Found Story

    Creator

    Trafford, Tyler

    Abstract

    Winner, W.O. Mitchell Award, Wilfrid Eggleston Award for Non-Fiction, and Alberta Reader’s Choice AwardFollowing his mother’s death in 2004, Tyler Trafford discovers an album of old letters and creased photographs that reveal a mother he never knew, a man he’s never heard of, and a love affair doomed by class and circumstance. The letters are from Jens Müller, a Norwegian pilot who trained in Canada during the early days of World War II, one of only three prisoners who would make it home after The Great Escape.

    Publisher (Source)

    Fredericton

    Goose Lane Editions

    Not specified
  • Bennett The Rebel Who Challenged and Changed a Nation

    Creator

    Boyko, John

    Abstract

    In the late 1920s, Canada's economy was showing all the signs of a full-fledged depression. Life savings were evaporating, unemployment was up, and exports were dramatically down. Riding on the popularity of his promise to "blast" Canada's way into world markets — and thus stop the economy's downward spiral — Richard Bedford Bennett defeated William Lyon Mackenzie King at the polls on July 28, 1930, and assumed the leadership of the country.

    Publisher (Source)

    Fredericton

    Goose Lane Editions

    Not specified
  • Humans 3.0 The Upgrading of the Species

    Creator

    Nowak, Peter

    Abstract

    Life for early humans wasn't easy. They may have been able to walk on two feet and create tools 4 million years ago, but they couldn't remember or communicate. Fortunately, people got smarter, and things got better. They remembered on-the-spot solutions and shared the valuable information of their experiences. Clubs became swords, caves became huts, and fires became ovens. Collectively these new tools became technology. As the 21st century unfolds, the pace of innovation is accelerating exponentially. Breakthroughs from robotics to genetics appear almost on a daily basis.

    Publisher (Source)

    Fredericton

    Goose Lane Editions

    Not specified
  • Walls Travels Along the Barricades

    Creator

    Di Cintio, Marcello

    Abstract

    Winner, Shaughnessy Cohen Prize for Political Writing, Wilfrid Eggleston Award for Non-Fiction, and W.O. Mitchell Book PrizeShortlisted, Dolman Travel Book AwardLonglisted, Alberta Readers’ Choice Award, BC National Award for Canadian Non-Fiction, and Charles Taylor Prize for Literary Non-FictionIn this ambitious blend of travel and reportage, Marcello Di Cintio travels to the world’s most disputed edges to meet the people who live alongside the razor wire and answer the question: What does it mean to live against the walls?

    Publisher (Source)

    Fredericton

    Goose Lane Editions

    Not specified
  • The Bastard of Fort Stikine The Hudson's Bay Company and the Murder of John McLoughlin Jr.

    Creator

    Komar, Debra

    Abstract

    Winner, Canadian Authors Award for Canadian History, Jeanne Clarke Memorial Local History Award, and Prince Edward Island Book Award for Non-FictionIs it possible to reach back in time and solve an unsolved murder, more than 170 years after it was committed? Just after midnight on April 21, 1842, John McLoughlin, Jr. — the chief trader for the Hudson's Bay Company at Fort Stikine, in the northwest corner of the territory that would later become British Columbia — was shot to death by his own men.

    Publisher (Source)

    Fredericton

    Goose Lane Editions

    Not specified
  • Sir John's Table The Culinary Life and Times of Canada's First Prime Minister

    Creator

    Mechefske, Lindy

    Abstract

    Winner, Taste Canada Gold Medal for Culinary NarrativeCommemorating the two-hundredth anniversary of Sir John A. Macdonald's birth, Sir John's Table is a refreshing look at Canada's first prime minister. Sir John's Table traverses the colourful life of Macdonald, from his passage as a young Scottish boy in the steerage compartment aboard the Earl of Buckinghamshire to his new home in Kingston, Upper Canada.

    Publisher (Source)

    Fredericton

    Goose Lane Editions

    Not specified
  • Master and Madman The Surprising Rise and Disastrous Fall of the Hon Anthony Lockwood RN

    Creator

    Thomas, Peter

    Tracy, Nicholas

    Abstract

    Shortlisted, Democracy 250 Atlantic Book Award for Historical WritingDespite the coming social reforms undertaken at home, the world of the Georgian British Empire was nothing if not class-conscious and leery of outsiders. But Anthony Lockwood, with no known certain record of his parentage and whose first appearance in history is his signing onto the USS Iphigenia in Jamaica in 1795, certainly broke through this mould.

    Publisher (Source)

    Fredericton

    Goose Lane Editions

    Not specified
  • Of Earthly and River Things An Angler's Memoir

    Creator

    Curtis, Wayne

    Abstract

    “One could do worse than to grow up on a river.” In his new collection of essays, Wayne Curtis voyages back through the tributaries of his past, throwing a pastoral net over the backwaters of his childhood to ensnare the sepia-tinged moments of love, loss, and life lessons he gleaned through his rise to maturity on the waterways of New Brunswick. As Proust recalled his past through the delicate taste of a madeleine, so, too, Curtis ruminates on growing up on the Miramichi, albeit through the more uniquely Canadian flavour of the home-cooked doughnut.

    Publisher (Source)

    Fredericton

    Goose Lane Editions

    Not specified
  • Black River Road An Unthinkable Crime, an Unlikely Suspect, and the Question of Character

    Creator

    Komar, Debra

    Abstract

    Shortlisted, Arthur Ellis Best Non-Fiction Crime Book AwardIn 1869, in the woods just outside of the bustling port city of Saint John, a group of teenaged berry pickers discovered several badly decomposed bodies. The authorities suspected foul play, but the identities of the victims were as mysterious as that of the perpetrator. From the twists and turns of a coroner's inquest, an unlikely suspect emerged to stand trial for murder: John Munroe, a renowned architect, well-heeled family man, and pillar of the community.

    Publisher (Source)

    [S.l.]

    Goose Lane Editions

    Not specified