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All things consoled: a daughter's memoir
Par Elizabeth Hay. 2018
Jean and Gordon Hay were a formidable pair. She was an artist and superlatively frugal; he was a proud and…
well-mannered schoolteacher with a temper that could be explosive. Elizabeth, their oldest daughter, was said to be a difficult and selfish child. Elizabeth always suspected she would end up caring for her parents in their final years, a way of making up for the sins of her childhood, proving herself to be a good daughter after all. But as her parents, who had been ferociously independent people, became increasingly dependent on her, their lives changed utterly and so did hers. Philip Roth once said, "Old age is a massacre." This book takes you inside the massacre. Bestseller. Winner of the 2018 Hilary Weston Writers' Trust Prize for Nonfiction. 2018.The reason you walk: a memoir
Par Wab Kinew. 2015
When his father was given a diagnosis of terminal cancer, Winnipeg broadcaster and musician Wab Kinew decided to spend a…
year reconnecting with the accomplished but distant aboriginal man who’d raised him. “The Reason You Walk” spans that 2012 year, chronicling painful moments in the past and celebrating renewed hopes and dreams for the future. As Kinew revisits his own childhood in Winnipeg and on a reserve in Northern Ontario, he learns more about his father's traumatic childhood at residential school. Bestseller. Winner of the 2016 McNally Robinson Book of the Year Award. 2015.Regard persan
Par Sara Yalda. 2007
Sara retourne en Iran, qu'elle a quitté depuis vingt-sept ans. Le monde cosmopolite de son enfance a disparu. Elle découvre…
une société schizophrène qui vacille de l'apparent au caché, du dehors hostile au dedans où l'on brave tous les interdits. Plus elle côtoie ses compatriotes et plus ils lui paraissent insaisissables. Sous les voiles, les femmes se fardent, critiquent, résistent. La dissimulation est devenue leur seconde nature. Comment peut-on être Persan ? se demande Sara. Étrangère chez elle, Sara déchiffre l'Iran, royaume de l'ambiguïté, en même temps qu'elle explore son passé ressuscité. Un père qu'elle espérait avoir oublié, un frère dont elle reconnaît à peine le visage, la maison de son enfance transformée en école de la République islamique... Récit des origines autant que vagabondage dans l'Iran d'Ahmadinejad, de Téhéran à Ispahan, ce premier livre à la fois mélancolique et drôle est une naissance. À soi. -- 4e de couv.En Afghanistan ((Latitudes). #Vol. 6134936)
Par Rory Stewart, Esther Ménévis. 2009
"Traverser l'Afghanistan à pied, d'Hérat à Kaboul, selon l'itinéraire emprunté cinq siècles plus tôt par le premier empereur moghol de…
l'Inde. On ne connaîtra sans doute jamais les raisons profondes qui ont poussé Rory Stewart, jeune diplomate, spécialiste du Proche et Moyen-Orient au Foreign Office, à accomplir un tel exploit. Mais une chose est sûre : le récit de son périple, qui connaît un formidable succès tant en Grande-Bretagne qu'aux États-Unis, est une véritable leçon de voyage et d'écriture qui l'inscrit parmi les plus grands auteurs du genre, de Bruce Chatwin à Nicolas Bouvier. Tour à tour poignant et contemplatif, ce livre nous entraîne au coeur d'un pays meurtri et écartelé entre nations hostiles, factions en guerre et idéologies rivales, coupé du monde par vingt-quatre ans de guerre. Au hasard de chemins incertains, de villages fantômes parfois rayés de la carte, on y croise talibans et Occidentaux, héros et voyous. Avec la précision d'un photographe, Stewart enregistre chaque détail et le restitue de son style simple et détaché [...]". -- 4e de couv. Titre uniforme: Places in between.Chronique monégasque et autres textes ((Folio ; 4689. Senso). #Vol. 34946)
Par Philippe Claudel. 2008
"En dix ans, sans rien remiser de ses exigences, Philippe Claudel s'est imposé comme un romancier suivi et couronné. L'histoire,…
la grande ou l'individuelle, pénètre son oeuvre. Voyageur, il regarde ici quatre saisons de sa terre lorraine, parcourt des villes : Monaco, New York ou Munich". -- 4e de couv.This wound is a world: poems
Par Billy-Ray Belcourt. 2017
The poet issues a call to turn to love and sex to understand how Indigenous peoples shoulder sadness and pain…
like theirs without giving up on the future. His poems and essays upset genre and play with form, scavenging for a decolonial kind of heaven where "everyone is at least a little gay." Winner of the 2018 Griffin Poetry Prize for Canadian poetry. 2017. Uniform title: Poems.The last train: a Holocaust story
Par Rona Arato. 2013
The harrowing true story about young brothers Paul and Oscar Arato and their mother, Lenke, surviving the Nazi occupation of…
Hungary during the final years of World War II. Grades 4-7. Winner of the 2015 Red Maple Non-Fiction Award. 2013.Think baseball, basketball, and hockey are the only options in the world of sports? Think again! This book uncovers the…
"other" sports, from the local and hidden to the strange, bizarre, and downright crazy. Playing football with over 200 people per team? (Just imagine the pile-up!) Chasing a giant wheel of cheese down an English hillside? Wrestling with your toes? This book contains all the funny facts about these sports — and many more! Grades 3-6. Winner of the 2014-15 Hackmatack Award for non-fiction. 2013.Alexander von Humboldt (1769-1859) is the great lost scientist: more things are named after him than anyone else. There are…
towns, rivers, mountain ranges, the ocean current that runs along the South American coast, there's a penguin, a giant squid, even the Mare Humboldtianum on the moon. Taking us on a fantastic voyage in his footsteps, Andrea Wulf shows why his life and ideas remain so important today. Winner of Royal Society Science Book Prize 2016, James Wright Award for Nature Writing 2016, and Costa Biography Award 2015. Bestseller. 2015.Birds, art, life: a year of observation
Par Kyo Maclear. 2017
When it comes to birds, Kyo Maclear isn't seeking the exotic. Rather she discovers joy in the seasonal birds that…
find their way into view in city parks and harbors, along eaves and on wires. In a world that values big and fast, Maclear looks to the small, the steady, the slow accumulations of knowledge, and the lulls that leave room for contemplation. Celebrates the particular madness of chasing after birds in the urban environment and explores what happens when the core lessons of birding are applied to other aspects of art and life. Moving with ease between the granular and the grand, peering into the inner landscape as much as the outer one, this is a deeply personal year-long inquiry into big themes: love, waiting, regrets, endings. Winner of the 2018 Trillium Book Award. Bestseller. 2017.The waking comes late
Par Steven Heighton. 2016
A collection of laments and celebrations that reflect on our struggle to believe in the future of a world that…
continues to disappoint us. The poet challenges the boundaries of sleep and even death in these meditations on what lies just beneath the surface of contemporary life. These are poems that trouble over the idea of failure even as they continually recommit to the present moment. Winner of the 2016 Governor General’s Award for Poetry. 2016. Uniform title: Poems.Brown: what being brown in the world today means (to everyone)
Par Kamal Al-Solaylee. 2016
Brown is not white. Brown is not black. Brown is an experience, a state of mind. Historically speaking, issues of…
race and skin colour have been interpreted along black and white lines, leaving out millions of people whose stories of migration and racial experiences have shaped our modern world. The book takes a global look at the many social, political, economic and personal implications of being a brown-skinned person in the world now. Brown people have emerged as the source of global cheap labour (Hispanics or South Asians) while also coming under scrutiny and suspicion for their culture and faith (Arabs and Muslims). Packed with personal narratives and on-the-street reporting conducted over two years in ten countries from four continents. Winner of the 2016 Shaughnessy Cohen Prize for Political Writing. 2016.Stalin's daughter: the extraordinary and tumultuous life of Svetlana Alliluyeva
Par Rosemary Sullivan. 2015
Born in the early years of the Soviet Union, Svetlana Stalin spent her youth inside the walls of the Kremlin.…
Communist Party privilege protected her from the mass starvation and purges that haunted Russia, but she did not escape tragedy--the loss of everyone she loved, including her mother, two brothers, aunts and uncles, and a lover twice her age, deliberately exiled to Siberia by her father. As she gradually learned about the extent of her father's brutality after his death, in 1967 Svetlana shocked the world by defecting to the United States. But she could not escape her father's legacy; her life in America was fractured; she moved frequently, married disastrously, shunned other Russian exiles, and ultimately died in poverty in Spring Green, Wisconsin. Winner of the 2015 Hilary Weston Writers' Trust Prize for Nonfiction, the 2016 British Columbia National Award for Canadian Non-Fiction, and the 2016 RBC Taylor Prize. Bestseller. 2015.The Massey murder: a maid, her master and the trial that shocked a country
Par Charlotte Gray. 2013
In February 1915, a member of one of Canada’s wealthiest families was shot and killed on the front porch of…
his home in Toronto as he was returning from work. Carrie Davies, an 18-year-old domestic servant, quickly confessed. But who was the real victim here? Charles “Bert” Massey, scion of a famous and privileged family, or the frightened, perhaps mentally unstable Carrie, a penniless British immigrant? When the brilliant lawyer Hartley Dewart, QC, took on her case, his grudge against the powerful Masseys would fuel a sensational trial. Winner of the 2015 Arthur Ellis Best Non-fiction Crime Book Award. 2013.I am Hutterite: the fascinating true story of a young woman's journey to reclaim her heritage
Par Mary-Ann Kirkby. 2007
In 1969, Ann-Marie Dornn's parents did the unthinkable - they left a Hutterite colony in Manitoba to start a new…
life, and were thrust into a society they did not understand and which knew little about their culture. Desperate to be accepted, ten-year-old Ann-Marie denied her heritage to fit in. She chronicles her quest to reinvent herself as she comes to terms with the painful circumstances that led her family to leave community life. 2007.I've got a home in glory land: a lost tale of the underground railroad
Par Karolyn Smardz Frost. 2007
In 1985, archeologists in downtown Toronto discovered the remains of a house belonging to former slaves Thornton and Lucie Blackburn,…
who were key figures in the Underground Railroad. Fleeing Louisville, Ky., in 1831, shortly before Lucie was to be sold, the Blackburns settled in Detroit until they were recognized and arrested. Before they could be convicted and returned to slavery, the first racial uprising in Detroit - a crowd of friends and abolitionists who marched on the jail - gave them the opportunity to escape. Fleeing to Toronto, they founded the city's first taxi business while working with prominent abolitionists. Winner of the 2007 Governor General's Award for Non-fiction. 2007.Between the world and me
Par Ta-Nehisi Coates. 2015
Americans have built an empire on the idea of "race", a falsehood that damages us all but falls most heavily…
on the bodies of black women and men--bodies exploited through slavery and segregation, and, today, threatened, locked up, and murdered out of all proportion. What is it like to inhabit a black body and find a way to live within it? And how can we all honestly reckon with this fraught history and free ourselves from its burden? In a letter to his adolescent son, the author shares the story of his awakening to the truth about his place in the world through a series of revelatory experiences, from Howard University to Civil War battlefields, from the South Side of Chicago to Paris, from his childhood home to the living rooms of mothers whose children’s lives were taken as American plunder. Bestseller. Winner of the National Book Award. 2015.Charles and Emma: the Darwins' leap of faith
Par Deborah Heiligman. 2009
Portrays the private life of Charles Darwin (1809-1882), a public proponent of evolution. Discusses his marriage to devout Emma Wedgwood…
(1808-1896) and their lifelong debate over natural selection versus Christian creationism. Covers his work habits, bad health, and dedication to family. For junior and senior high and older readers. Printz Honor, National Book Award Finalist. 2009.Killers of the Flower Moon: the Osage murders and the birth of the FBI
Par David Grann. 2017
An examination of the 1920s murders of wealthy Osage Indian Nation members in Oklahoma. When the newly-formed FBI bungled the…
investigation, young Director Hoover turned to ex-Texas Ranger Tom White, who put together an undercover team, including one of the only American Indian agents in the Bureau. Bestseller. Winner of the Spur 2018 best western historical nonfiction award and winner of the 2018 Edgar Award for best fact crime book. 2017.This changes everything: capitalism vs. the climate
Par Naomi Klein. 2014
Forget everything you think you know about global warming. The really inconvenient truth is that it’s not about carbon -…
it’s about capitalism. The convenient truth is that we can seize this existential crisis to transform our failed system and build something radically better. Here Naomi Klein tackles the most profound threat humanity has ever faced: the war our economic model is waging against life on earth. Winner of the 2014 Hilary Weston Writers' Trust Prize for Nonfiction. c2014.