Creative nonfiction

  • Safe House Explorations in Creative Nonfiction

    Creator

    Allfrey, Ellah Wakatama

    Abstract

    Illuminating African narratives for readers both inside and outside the continent. A Nigerian immigrant to Senegal explores the increasing influence of China across the region, a Kenyan student activist writes of exile in Kampala, a Liberian scientist shares her diary of the Ebola crisis, a Nigerian journalist travels to the north to meet a community at risk, a Kenyan author travels to Senegal to interview a gay rights activist, and a South African writer recounts a tale of family discord and murder in a remote seaside town.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • Storyteller Guitar

    Creator

    Larson, Doug

    Abstract

    Every object around us contains the history of all the people and places that brought it here. But rarely is that history explored. In this book, instead of breaking an object apart to reveal those stories, they are told by building the object a guitar named Storyteller from scratch. The text and illustrations reveal the rich lives of the people, places, and projects that breathed life into it. The stories range from people who were pioneers in landscape restoration to those involved with automobile manufacturing.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • Mean Streets Confessions of a Nighttime Taxi Driver

    Creator

    McSherry, Peter

    Abstract

    Short-listed for the 2003 Edna Staebler Award for Creative Non-Fiction A world exists on the nighttime streets that the average person cannot envision. Taxi driver Peter McSherry recounts tales of his thirty years of experience driving cabs at night on the hard-bitten streets of Canada’s largest city. Drunks, punks, con artists, hookers, pimps, drug addicts, drug pushers, thugs, nymphomaniacs, snakes, politicians, celebrities . . . he’s experienced them all. McSherry serves up his stories with forthrightness, humour, and the occasional dash of cynicism.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • Waltzing the Tango A Late Boomer Dances to the Wrong Tune

    Creator

    Bauer, Gabrielle

    Abstract

    Short-listed for the 2002 Edna Staebler Award for Creative Non-Fiction So you grow up as a member of the baby boom. You’re well-brought up, well-educated, and your parents have great expectations. And, yet, somehow, you just don’t feel you belong. Along the way, you find the right wrong boyfriends: the poet-husband, and bane of your mother’s existence, the married Japanese doctor.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • A Letter from Frank An Unlikely Second World War Friendship

    Creator

    Colombo, Stephen J.

    Abstract

    On the last day of the Second World War, Frank and Russ fought each other. In the days after, they became friends. This is the remarkable tale of a long-forgotten letter. It was written from Germany in the aftermath of the Second World War to a Canadian in a peaceful Southern Ontario town. Both had been soldiers and had met on a German battlefield. The letter lay unseen for years and was found by the Canadian’s son long after the old soldier’s death.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • The Lost Canoe

    Creator

    Coady, Lawrence W.

    Abstract

    A contemporary account of tracking a historical explorer across Labrador. In the mode of Leonidas Hubbard and William Cabot, Hesketh Prichard set out with a group of adventurers in the early 1900s, determined to cross Labrador. Disregarding local advice, his expedition headed up a box canyon and climbed five-hundred-metre cliffs all with a canoe in tow- a gruesome portage. The canoe was later abandoned. The Lost Canoe is the account of the contemporary search for Prichard's lost canoe.

    Publisher (Source)

    Halifax

    Nimbus

    Not specified
  • Evolution The View from the Cottage

    Creator

    Rogel, Jean-Pierre

    Spencer, Nigel

    Abstract

    With all the attention to creationism in the news these days, Jean-Pierre Rogel decided it was time to show how Darwin's concept of natural selection can be seen in everyday situations — from a summer cottage near a lake — with examples taken from familiar species such as loons, salmon and bears. Moving through modern science, he shows how new discoveries have enabled us to understand life more deeply than in Darwin's time. He focuses in particular on the emerging field of evolutionary developmental biology, called “evo-devo” for short.

    Publisher (Source)

    Vancouver

    Ronsdale Press

    Not specified
  • Finding John Rae

    Creator

    Hamilton, Alice Jane

    Abstract

    This creative nonfiction biography of the celebrated Arctic explorer Dr. John Rae begins in 1854 when, on a mapping expedition to the Boothia Peninsula, Rae discovers the missing link in the Northwest Passage. On the same trip, a chance encounter with an Inuit hunter leads him to uncover the tragic fate that befell the officers and crew of the long-missing Franklin Expedition when, starving on the ice, they resorted to cannibalism.

    Publisher (Source)

    Vancouver

    Ronsdale Press

    Not specified
  • The swerve : how the world became modern

    Creator

    Greenblatt, Stephen

    Abstract

    Greenblatt transports listeners to the dawn of the Renaissance and chronicles the life of an intrepid book lover who rescued the Roman philosophical text On the Nature of Things from certain oblivion.

    Audience
    Adult**
    Publisher (Source)

    Prince Frederick, MD

    [Prince Frederick, Md.]

    Recorded Books

    [Distributed by] OneClick Digital

    Not specified