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In the second Rick Robichaud adventure, Rick finds himself in the eye of a storm of events that plays out in Digby County, Nova Scotia; in board rooms in Russia and situation rooms at NATO; and in piracy on the high seas.
A man washes up on a shore he does not recognize. He does not know who he is and, worse, when he is. But it becomes clear that a force has brought him here for a purpose. He has a role in a conflict going back hundreds of years.Book Eight in Vernon Oickle's Crows series keeps turning up surprises. Expect the unexpected...
Two Sams, based on historical documents and oral history, traces the journey of an African-American family from slavery in Rhode Island and Virginia, through the American Revolution, and on to the hardships of life as Black Loyalists in colonial Nova Scotia. Sam the father tells the story from the family's time in slavery, escape to freedom, and participation on the British side in the American War of Independence. After the war, when the family has moved to the British colony of Nova Scotia, Sam the son takes up the tale, when the Black Loyalists have to try to survive with little food, poor housing, few tools, and persistent white racism.
A painstaking and unflinching catalogue of settlers in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and PEI who enslaved humans, some even after the practice became illegal.The reader will find here the names of many of the most prominent families of Atlantic Canada. Illustrated with images of 'runaway slave' advertisements, letters from the powerful to each other about their dealings in the powerless, and extracts from court hearings when the enslaved tried to bring their owners to account.
In the first Marc LeBlanc mystery, a sudden death pulls Marc out of his comfortable life in Grand Pre and into a quest involving unexpected allies, unwelcome visitors, mysterious references in documents and on tombstones, and a hunt from one end of Nova Scotia to the other.
What could best-selling author Brenda J. Thompson possibly find to write about in a small settlement at the top of the South Mountain in Nova Scotia?How about catastrophic collisions, obsessive love, hardscrabble struggles to survive, skinny-dipper showdowns, the worst fishing trip ever, unlikely visitors, desperate refugees, an ill-considered promise that changes two lives, and monsters in the woods?
Bruce Partridge leads you over hill and dale, through forest, bog, barrenland, and gypsum tangle, to discover the hidden glories of the wildflowers of Nova Scotia. Includes over 250 full-colour images.
What if wishes you made turned out wrong, and you didn't even know it? What if one of those bad wishes is about to ruin your life? Well then, you better make an appointment with the Wish Doctor.
"The phone call from Art was the cut; the ticket, the scab; and the train ride, the healing."Maggie struggles to find herself, and her place in her family, in 1950s Cape Breton. She has to travel a long way--not just to Toronto and Boston, but within herself--to come to an understanding of her life, her father, and her hopes.
In December, 1917, Halifax, Nova Scotia suffered the largest human-made explosion before the atomic bomb when two ships, one loaded to the gunwales with munitions, collided in Halifax Harbour. Jeremy Akerman's novel sets the scene through the eyes of admirals and lovers, harbour pilots and telegraphers, those who fought to avert the disaster and those who had no idea what was about to happen to them.
The seventh book in Vernon Oickle's acclaimed Crows series!When the crows flock to Liverpool, Nova Scotia, murder and mayhem follow. It is has been this way for 200 years, and the Goodwin family has always been at the centre of the dark goings-on. Now things seem to be coming to a head, long-hidden secrets are emerging and former friends are meeting each other as deadly enemies.
Jean-Michel Blais, former chief of Halifax Regional Municipality police, member of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, and a veteran of emergency relief and humanitarian efforts after a devastating earthquake in Haiti, gives a master-class in leadership. Blais draws on his experiences in the RCMP, with the United Nations, and as a hockey referee to distill the characteristics a good leader needs to lead well, and how to use both good and bad experiences to develop them. Each chapter has a list of "calls from the blue line" to summarize the chapter's message and give the reader encouragement in how to move toward becoming a better leader.
In book 5 of the Paradise series, events in a client's past erupt dangerously into the present. On the home front, Paradise's daughter, Hope, faces both widening horizons and relationship challenges. Paradise, as always, must juggle hearts, minds, and clues to move everyone and everything toward good resolutions.
Alex Johnson has a task he would rather not perform. He is to carry his grandfather's ashes from Ontario to the old family homestead in Nova Scotia's Annapolis Valley, find the family cemetery, and place the ashes there. On his way, Alex acquires an unexpected sidekick, and when he reaches the Valley, there are complications he could never have anticipated. There are possible allies and certain rivals to navigate, and the chance for a more complete life than anything Alex had imagined before he set off on his journey. By turns hilarious, tense, and touching, Dan Johnson's Ashes is a fitting completion of the family saga begun in The Secret of the Spring.
In 1963, just before Christmas, two young men set off in their fishing boat in hopes of getting one more good haul of fish before the weather gets bad. They sail off into the stormy waters of St. Mary's Bay, off southwest Nova Scotia...and are never seen again. Ben Robicheau, who knew the men and experienced the search for them, combines the known facts with informed guesses and literary skill to weave a story of what happened on the stormy waters that night.
In his fifth month of 'delving' during his year-long sabbatical in 1999, newspaper publisher Tim Brown realizes something odd is going on that may impact him and his business. And it may relate to the much bigger, and possibly darker, 'Project Sweetland' that he and his team at the newspaper are looking into. Can he move forward in directions he had not anticipated, despite pugnacious opposition?
Arthur Bull has selected the best of his published poetry and has added new works to show his engagement with the world, great minds, and important causes over the past thirty years. He writes, "For some poets, making a selection like this is apparently a very difficult task, but that has not been the case for me: I simply chose the ones I like. This is a bit like having a favourite mutt that could never get a ribbon in a dog show, and probably means that some good poems have been left out because I never really warmed to them. I suppose it also means that the book itself is a kind of expressive poetic work, taken as a whole. Or that is my defence, anyway."
Bill Curry takes us on the ideal fishing expedition: all across Nova Scotia and further afield. This combination memoir, guidebook, and collection of tall stories is copiously illustrated with photos by the author, who became the first certified Professional Master Guide in Nova Scotia when the professional guide certification program was created.
They talked it over, took the training course, equipped the spare bedrooms, and thought they were all ready to be foster parents. The reality, in its joys and challenges, was far beyond what Kathleen and Wade had prepared themselves for. This funny, jolting, heartstring-tugging, inspiring account of life with foster kids and the social services system takes us into every corner of the fostering life.
Tom Aldridge, a rising politician in Nova Scotia, is used to juggling many tasks and bringing order out of chaos. He is as adept at steering government policy as he is at directing plays. But an unexpected opportunity comes into his life--and then a series of challenges. How much can he juggle?
Called home to Cape Breton by a family crisis, a Toronto policewoman finds herself drawn back into familiar complexities of local relationships, the possibility of romance, and a mystery or two. The story unfolds against the rich canvas of the people, land, and sea that make Cape Breton unique.
It all starts with an accident on an icy road in northern Nova Scotia. Then things get sort of strange. At turns comic, romantic, and wild, Nodding's People takes you into a complexity of fascinating and quirky people trying to navigate more than slippery roads.
What's the difference between a delver and a private detective? Tim Brown is about to try to find out, as a challenge lands on his desk. It's the reverse of a locked-room puzzle, since not just a room but a whole building seems to have disappeared.
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