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"Writing with uncanny skill, Louise de Kiriline Lawrence leads us gently into the world of birds. Her perception, intuition and experience give her insights that she here freely shares with us all. "I knew this remarkable lady for years, and had previously read her Mar, but on re-reading it, I was struck with the sensitive, magical way she reveals the behaviour of Yellow-bellied Sapsuckers. "At her doorstep, at almost everyone's doorstep, there is a wondrous, beautiful world, if we will only be patient and observant. In Mar, Mrs. Lawrence shows us the way. "Naturalists, birders, aspiring ornithologists, scientists, all should take time to read Mar." - Robert W. Nero, Author of The Great Gray Owl and Redwings "Mar is a glimpse into the natural life of a woodpecker -- a yellow-bellied sapsucker -- in two nesting seasons, as it interacts with its mate and other forest creatures. "The narrative, deceptively simple, consolidates a lifetime of careful observation and imaginative research. It should appeal to all birdwatchers, novice or expert." - Maureen Johnson, The Ottawa Citizen
A sequel to Once Upon a Time Long, Long Ago. Eevo and Sim embark on a difficult journey to the Great River, encountering dangers and making discoveries along the way.
How did we get to be US? Who are WE? This story, set some 50,000 years ago when an almost explosive change in people's behaviour occurred, addresses these questions.
These poems, grouped into seasonal activities or observations, celebrate the rural world of 1940s farming.
A history of explorations of the Arctic in Canada, beginning with Otto Sverdrups 18981902 Norwegian expedition.
Black Creek Pioneer Village is a recreation of a typical crossroads community found in southern Ontario during the 1800s.
Depuis que le programme de comm moration historique fut inaugur par le gouvernement de l'Ontario en 1956, plus de 1 000 plaques ont t rig es d'un bout l'autre de la province.
Samuel Edward Weir Q.C. (1898-1981), a man both loved and reviled with scorn, was born in London, Ontario. Descended from pioneer stock, with roots in both Ireland and Germany, Samuel Weir possessed incisive wit, exceptional intelligence and a passionate zest for any subject that caught his eye. Over a period of sixty years he built an extraordinary collection of approximately one thousand works of outstanding art and sculpture.This extensively researched biography of a talented yet quixotic lawyer who contributed much to Canada's heritage begins in the early 19th century and covers well over a hundred years of our nation's growth, until his death at his home, River Brink, in Queenston, Ontario.Today, River Brink is the gallery in which The Weir Collection is exhibited and housed.
A poem celebrating Algonquin Provincial Park on the occasion of its centennial, with outstanding historic illustrations.
A sequel to The Place in the Forest, this book conjures up the sounds, the smells, and the very feel of water-based life over every season.
A Windsor native, Hesman spent over 50 years in Ontarios Near North, and for over 35 years operated Little River Lodge in Golden Valley.
A chance encounter led Catherine Slaney to investigate her family genealogy and revealed her great-grandfather, Dr. A.R. Abbott, Canada's first African-Canadian doctor.
Peter Jailall continues his search for home in his third volume of poetry, exploring the open, dangerous landscape of a post-September 11th world.
In this account of an 800-mile canoe trip - which begins at Reindeer Lake on the Manitoba/Saskatchewan border, continues into Nunavut past the treeline, and ends on Hudson Bay - Peter Kazaks conveys the experience of being in the north by describing the daily details that bring the trip to life.
Birds of Ontario contains an identification and description of all species, with 344 outstanding colour plates.
Teased by her older brother, bullied by popular girls at school, and plagued by an unsightly pimple on her nose, 12-year-old Claire Murphy finds a mysterious book of spells that may soon solve her problems.
A comprehensive look at the little-known residents of a well-known corner of rural Ontario, complete with descriptions and illustrations.
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