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Debut picture book. Celebrates family togetherness and sharing.
Rollicking, rhyming picture book about musicmaking and community from celebrated duo Kate Inglis and Josee Bisallion.
Photographic exploration of Nova ScotiaΓÇÖs diverse coastlines from celebrated photographer with A for Adventure.
Lesley CreweΓÇÖs newest novel brings readers from WWI England to 1960s Nova Scotia, following a spoon-stealing memoirist who inherits the family farmΓÇöand the family.
From award-winning poet Lynn Davies comes her first collection for children.
40+ healthy recipes
Esther longs to build her own spaceship and travel through the galaxy, developing a reputation for having a head in the clouds among her generally supportive family. A STEM-promoting picture book featuring paper-cut collages.
Legends, questions and theories abound about Oak Island, Nova Scotia, and tales of buried treasure there. For more than two centuries, the island has been studied, searched, probed and cursed all the while failing to give up its secrets.Joy Steele's ground-breaking book, The Oak Island Mystery, Solved (CBU Press 2015), was born of her own curiosity about "Oak Island gold," and her application of historical research to the mystery caused quite a stir among treasure hunters, historians, archaeologists and folks just plain interested in what was and is going on there. Her version of events and her take on the now mythical treasure attracted the attention of a great many Island-watchers, drawing the interest of some and the ire of others.Among the people "interested" are many who in the past studied, explored and written about Oak Island. One of those people is professional geologist Gordon Fader, whose expertise has been sought out over the years by numerous explorers, treasure hunters, consultants and researchers whose names appear frequently throughout Joy's enquiries and books, and many others.In her first book, Joy made the very convincing argument that Oak Island's true treasure is its multi-layered history-its role in 18th-century world affairs. Not only have the bold and sometimes foolhardy physical efforts of the treasure hunters over the past two-and-a-half centuries likely been in vain, but have almost certainly destroyed much of the evidence of what actually took place there.Over the past couple of years, Joy Steele and Gordon Fader have been working together to solidify Joy's theories on the tantalizing evidence of human activity on Oak Island. In the process, their collaboration has not only strengthened Joy's earlier revelatory conclusions that there was manufacturing activity on the Island in the early 1700s but, remarkably, uncovered still more evidence unexplored until now.
Featuring snippets of Elizabeth Bishop''s poetry and Quentin Blake-inspired artwork
I lost my talkThe talk you took awayWhen I was a little girlAt Shubenacadie school.One of Rita Joe's most influential poems, "I Lost My Talk" tells the revered Mi'kmaw Elder's childhood story of losing her language while a resident of the residential school in Shubenacadie, Nova Scotia. An often quoted piece in this era of truth and reconciliation, Joe's powerful words explore and celebrate the survival of Mi'kmaw culture and language despite its attempted eradication.A companion book to the simultaneously published I'm Finding My Talk by Rebecca Thomas, I Lost My Talk is a necessary reminder of a dark chapter in Canada's history, a powerful reading experience, and an effective teaching tool for young readers of all cultures and backgrounds. Includes a biography of Rita Joe and striking colour illustrations by Mi'kmaw artist Pauline Young.
Tina is finally old enough to join a real hockey team, but soon discovers that the local side is boys only. Tina risks ridicule and takes her fight for a place on the team to the Human Rights Commission, gaining a temporary position on the team, with the struggle only beginning at this development. Based on an inspiring true story.
Tinker Gordon doesn't want anything to change. He thinks that if he holds on tightly enough, his family, his tiny Cape Breton Island community, his very world will stay exactly the way it has always been. But explosions large and small-a world away, in the Middle East, in the land of opportunity in western Canada, and in his own home in Falkirk Cove-threaten to turn everything Tinker has ever known upside down.Set variously in the heart of rural Cape Breton, on the war-torn streets of Aleppo and in a Turkish refugee camp, in the new wild west frontier of the Alberta oil patch, and in a tiny apartment in downtown Toronto, Tinker's family, friends, and neighbours new and old must find a way to make it home.In her adult fiction debut, Alison DeLory ponders a question as relevant in Atlantic Canada as anywhere in the world: where and how do we belong, and what does it take to make it home?
The Silver Birch and Hackmatack Award-winning children's picture book about children's rights, If You Could Wear My Sneakers, is now available for a new generation of young readers. A series of humorous poems, paired with timeless illustrations, interprets 15 of the 54 articles of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.
A timeless bedtime book. Captures that perfect moment when a child is tucked up in bed, spellbound by the voice of an older sibling or an adult sharing a special book'' (Books in Canada). Lyrical text, lit up by soft and gentle illustrations.
A heartfelt new picture book from bestselling children''s author Eric Walters. A poignant story exploring grief and coming to terms with loss.
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