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The remarkable true story of the rise and fall of one of North America's most influential media moguls.When George McCullagh bought The Globe and The Mail and Empire and merged them into the Globe and Mail, the charismatic 31-year-old high school dropout had already made millions on the stock market. It was just the beginning of the meteoric rise of a man widely expected to one day be prime minister of Canada. But the charismatic McCullagh had a dark side. Dogged by the bipolar disorder that destroyed his political ambitions and eventually killed him, he was all but written out of history. It was a loss so significant that journalist Robert Fulford has called McCullaghs biography one of the great unwritten books in Canadian historyuntil now.In Big Men Fear Me, award-winning historian Mark Bourrie tells the remarkable story of McCullaghs inspirational rise and devastating fall, and with it sheds new light on the resurgence of populist politics, challenges to collective action, and attacks on the free press that characterize our own tumultuous era.
As apt to channel the confessionalism of Anne Sexton as the red-in-tooth-and-claw nature poetry of Ted Hughes, Patrick Warners voice ranges freely from the colloquial to the baroque. Over the past fifteen years, by harboring and honoring such fraught tensions. In Octopus we have him at his best.
A bawdy, backwoods, Victorian picaresque following the misadventures of a runaway groom, and the wicked punishments exacted by the bride who runs him aground.
Spanning Windsor's wild years from 1950 to 1980, From the Vault, Vol. 2 is a must-read for local history buffs.
Glorious vintage B&W photos from the greatest era of Detroit Red Wings hockey, 1942-1967. See Howe, Sawchuck, Lindsay, and more.
A poetic adventure story, fabulously illustrated, that teaches the true meaning of love and belonging.
A annual collection of the best Canadian short stories selected by legendary editor and champion of short fiction, John Metcalf.
How control of Canada’s iconic publisher, McClelland and Stewart, was transferred over to a foreign-owned corporation.
The annual collection of the best Canadian short fiction, selected by an accomplished and influential guest editor.
A must-read for anyone with a stake in contemporary Canadian literature, or with curiosity about poetry on the world stage.
Hugh Hood's classic novel of suspicion, jealousy, addiction and betrayal in 1960s Hollywood.
Raymond Carver meets Bret Easton Ellis in this fast-paced novel about vicarious pleasure, people-watching, and social disconnection.
In this compelling whodunnit, Elaine Dewar reads the science, follows the money, and connects the geopolitical interests to the spin.When the first TV newscast described a SARS-like flu affecting a distant Chinese metropolis, investigative journalist Elaine Dewar started asking questions: Was SARS-CoV-2 something that came from nature, as leading scientists insisted, or did it come from a lab, and what role might controversial experiments have played in its development? Why was Wuhan the pandemic's ground zero-and why, on the other side of the Atlantic, had two researchers been marched out of a lab in Winnipeg by the RCMP? Why were governments so slow to respond to the emerging pandemic, and why, now, is the government of China refusing to cooperate with the World Health Organization? And who, or what, is DRASTIC?Locked down in Toronto with the world at a standstill, Dewar pored over newspapers and magazines, preprints and peer-reviewed journals, email chains and blacked-out responses to access to information requests; she conducted Zoom interviews and called telephone numbers until someone answered as she hunted down the truth of the virus's origin. In this compelling whodunnit, she reads the science, follows the money, connects the geopolitical interests to the spin-and shows how leading science journals got it wrong, leaving it to interested citizens and junior scientists to pull out the truth.
FINALIST FOR THE 2020 NELSON BALL PRIZE"e;In a dark time,"e; wrote Theodore Roethke, "e;the eye begins to see"e;-and with Braille Rainbow, Mike Barnes reveals both darkness and the light that shines beyond it. Beginning with a suite of poems completed before and immediately following his admission to a psychiatric unit as a young man, Barnes's quiet lyricism and formal sensitivity capture those moments of perception that remind us how to see.Please note that the text of this book is not produced in braille.
How does one get from William Burrough's floor to binding books for Pope John XXIII? A must-read book dealer's memoir.
In this dark, gripping crime novel, a damaged hero "adjusts" the corruption he finds within the city's criminal underworld.
Siblings separated by time and place are eventually joined together in this stylistically innovative novel.
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