Canadian nonfiction

  • Hold the Oxo! A Teenage Soldier Writes Home

    Creator

    Brooker, Marion Fargey

    Abstract

    Short-listed for the 2014 Forest of Reading - White Pine Award for Non-Fiction Canada was young during the First World War, and with as many as 20,000 underage soldiers leaving their homes to join the war effort, the country’s army was, too. Jim, at 17, was one of them, and he penned countless letters home. But these weren’t the writings of an ordinary boy. They were the letters of a lad who left a small farming community for the city on July 15, 1915, a boy who volunteered to serve with the 79th Queen’s Own Cameron Highlanders.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • Heading for Home

    Creator

    Hanan, Zahava

    Abstract

    Zahava Hanan's struggle to save her ranch in Alberta from the threat of industrial pollution makes Heading for Home a modern tale on an epic scale. For twenty years she fought for her rights in Western Canada. Heading for Home gives a very warm account of her companions throughout those years from cowhands to lovable animals; from concerned neighbours to the formality of the company man, some of whom too, eventually became firm friends.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • Let's Go to The Grand! 100 Years of Entertainment at London's Grand Theatre

    Creator

    Johnston, Sheila M.F.

    Abstract

    "A fascinating history of a wonderful old theatre." - Hume Cronyn In September of 1901 London's New Grand Opera House flung open its doors. Boasting a beautiful interior design, and with the most modern stage equipment available, the theatre was large enough to accommodate over 1,700 patrons and the largest touring shows of the time. With impresario Ambrose J. Small at the helm, a new era in theatrical entertainment began.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • The North Runner

    Creator

    Lawrence, R.D.

    Finkelstein, Max

    Abstract

    The North Runner is a true and moving story of the building of trust between a man and an exceptional dog that was half wolf, half Alaskan Malamute, and the resulting mutual affection and respect between them.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • The Rouge River Valley An Urban Wilderness

    Creator

    Garratt, James E.

    Abstract

    The Rouge River Valley, eleven thousand acres of urban wilderness, is a unique, yet very fragile and transient natural phenomenon existing within the confines of a major North American city, Toronto. Fed by the Oak Ridges Moraine, the Rouge river system has, over generations of time, cut its identity into the land, shaping the habitat for a multitude of lifeforms, many of which are now either threatened or gone. Author James E.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • The Mazinaw Experience Bon Echo and Beyond

    Creator

    Campbell, John

    Abstract

    The Mazinaw, a place of striking natural beauty, is famous for Bon Echo Rock, a massive sheer cliff, dropping into one of Ontario's deepest lakes. The Mazinaw Experience traces the presence of human habitation on the shores of the Mazinaw from its earliest beginnings to the present, from the nomadic Aboriginal people who believed the cliff top to be a sacred place and the rugged lumbermen whose entrepreneurial zeal cleared out the mighty pine, to the settlers who struggled to create new lives for their families.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • The Place in the Forest

    Creator

    Lawrence, R.D.

    Abstract

    A number of years ago, R.D. Lawrence acquired a patch of Ontario wilderness, soon known as "The Place." Here Lawrence and his wife built a cabin and became immersed in studying the ways of the wild. "The Place" was home to a variety of wildlife, from black bears, wolves, beavers and raccoons through to hawks, snapping turtles and singing mice.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • Owen Sound The Port City

    Creator

    White, Paul

    Abstract

    The beginning of Owen Sound can be traced to the 1840 historical meeting, in a small forest clearing, between surveyor Charles Rankin and land agent John Telfer. Owen Sound: The Port City begins with the Native Peoples of the area and moves through pioneer settlement to the creation of a city in this more northerly area of central Ontario. The influence of Georgian Bay and the beginning of marine commerce, combined with the coming of the railway, led to rapid industrial growth.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • The Yonge Street Story, 1793-1860 An Account from Letters, Diaries and Newspapers

    Creator

    Berchem, F.R. (Hamish)

    Abstract

    This is the remarkable story of the trail that became the longest street in the world, as officially recognized by The Guinness Book of Records. Begun in 1794, Yonge Street was planned by the ambitious Lieutenant Governor John Graves Simcoe as a military route between Lake Ontario and Lake Huron. Anxious to bolster Upper Canada's defences against the new republic to the south, which he heartily loathed, Simcoe had his Queen's Rangers survey and develop the route from Toronto to present-day Holland Landing, and laid out lots for settlement.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • A Place to Walk A Naturalist's Journal of the Lake Ontario Waterfront Trail

    Creator

    Karstad, Aleta

    Abstract

    What do experienced field naturalists discover when they explore the heavily populated Lake Ontario shoreline as if they were surveying a wilderness for the first time? In this beautifully illustrated book, Aleta Karstad takes you on a journey of discovery along the route of the Lake Ontario Waterfront Trail. Listening for calling frogs in spring, turning stones, sampling shoreline drift, identifying plants and animals, Karstad and her husband, herpetologist Frederick W. Schueler, discover a wealth of natural life, sometimes in unexpected places.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Not specified