Canada Books
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A great book about an epic 6000 mile paddle with kids!Review Date: 1998-09-06
Canoe camping reality adventureReview Date: 2001-04-01

Used price: $28.00

Family Names of the Island of NewfoundlandReview Date: 2007-11-06
Names are listed in Alphabetical order, no index necessary
There are 4 editions available but the 1988 corrected Edition is the best
Invaluable to the casual researcher of NF family history.Review Date: 1998-10-11
The core of his research comes from the Official List of Electors 1955 chosen because it was the most comprehensive list of names and the communites to which they were linked before the massive resettlement programs of the 1960's. The sources of his information are vast as he quotes from scholarly works from England, Wales, Ireland, Scotland, France and the Channel Islands as well as the many censuses taken in Newfoundland since 1675 in his attempt to get at the origin of the name.
Family Names of the Island of Newfoundland attempts to trace each name to a geographical origin in England, France, Ireland, etc. as well as trace its linguistic origin. This will provide the reader of this text with answers to such questions as; What does the name mean? Where is the name found in Newfoundland? When was the first recorded incidence of it in a particular region? Of course, this information is invaluable to any researcher of family history.
The real value to the student of genealogy, is that as Seary lists the early instances of each name in various places in Newfoundland, he provides us with all kinds of tidbits of information about the person - how they were killed, where they worked, their father, etc. And as expected from a scholar such as Seary, all of this information is referenced back to an original source document!

Used price: $12.57

Canadians must remember the lessons of KoreaReview Date: 2004-08-08
What living amid such combat was likeReview Date: 2003-01-06

The FUNNIEST book ever written!!!Review Date: 1997-08-02
Extremely authentic and funnyReview Date: 1997-03-06

Used price: $5.00
Collectible price: $21.00

Explore a New WorldReview Date: 2006-11-05
learning at the maxReview Date: 2000-09-12

Used price: $18.89

Canada has no idea how lucky it isReview Date: 2008-02-05
Christie did a great job with this book, and clearly she wrote it her own way. My only real citicism is that I would have liked her to spend a bit more time of the achievements and field operations, and a little bit less on deaths, but I understand why she went the route that she did.
The New Canadian ArmyReview Date: 2007-11-05
This remarkable book is a revelation of what it may mean to be part of a true Band of Brothers - a world where the most senior general lends a master corporal his own wedding ring so that he can ask his girl to marry him - a world where the entire platoon comes to the home of a fallen comrade and spends a week in the community celebrating his life - a world where a 40 plus year old widow enlists so that she can continue to be part of the family - a world where Colonels weep for their men.
The book also causes the reader to think more deeply about war and soldiers. It is politically correct to feel that all war and everything about it is bad. But we discover, that for all its terror and for all the losses, for a soldier war is what he lives for. It is when he also discovers whether he is any good at his life's work. We discover how good our soldiers are. Surprisingly, for we always think the less of ourselves, in Afghanistan, we are considered the heavy weights who punch well above our weight.
We discover that while war exhausts a person more than any other activity, it also makes him more alive.
We discover that PTSD is much more prevalent in peacekeeping than in the kind of situation that we find in Afghanistan. In peacekeeping the kit was awful and the impotence high - imagine simply witnessing atrocity? But in Afghanistan our soldiers can take the initiative and they are very well equipped and have rules of engagement that make sense.
We discover a new kind of woman soldier - who are at home in this strange world, as is of course the "Blatch", and who are no longer seen as odd.
We discover how the families of our soldiers have been integrated into the mission and we see how the worst of all news is given and how the families are supported when what they all fear the most occurs.
This is not the civil service in green that was the sadness of our forces for many years. Implicit throughout the book is that someone really knows that he is doing. I think that someone might be called Rick Hillier.
We discover how great our local field leadership is too which also says something more about General Hillier -
Brig- Genl Dave Fraser to LTC Ian Hope, in radio orders given at 11.30pm on July 17 "You need to recapture Nawa and Garmser by 1600 hours.
Hope to Fraser: "Roger that. Recapture Nawa and Garmser by 1600 hours."
Fraser: "Any questions?"
Hope: "Just one: Where are Nawa and Garmser?'
Not only do we routinely pull off tough missions, but the Cols take all the risks that their men do - they lead by example. They also tend to do the really terrible things like personally extract the burnt and mutilated bodies of their dead so that the buddies in the platoon would not have to remember their friend like that. There is all this bull in the public service about "Servant Leadership". Here you see it for real at all levels from the LTC down to the Master Corporal.
We discover the central frustration of the mission. That we have to go back again and again and take the same ground because the ANP, the police, cannot hold it - we learn how complex this work is.
But most of all, we learn how fortunate we are to have those wonderful people wearing our uniform.
It is a mystery to me how, in a nation, so cut off from the reality of war, that we can once again have the kind of army that we had in 1917. A pathfinder Army.
A small army that can think and adapt. A small army that is lead by men and women of an integrity and skill that put our business and public organizations to shame. A small army largely made up from men and women from small town Canada who have that can do attitude that used to be the hallmark of Canadians.
Who else could tell this story but "Blatch"? A woman who acknowledges that she knows of only two soldiers who swear more than she. A woman who shares the hardships, the joys, the terrors, the losses and the fun. A woman who loves her boys and who is loved back.
She writes with such a love and a passion - I could not put the book down except when my eyes were so full of tears that I could no longer see.
It is exciting, it's very funny, it's very sad. But in the end it is heroic. Not in a little boy's view of heroic but in the most mythic sense of people who live for each other in undertaking a very hard task.
At the end of the book, "Blatch" goes back to see everyone to see how they are.
"Eight months later, Hope (LTC Ian Hope) answers my email form an airport lounge somewhere. I wrote back to tell him of one of the stories - bawdy and funny, loving and sad, always brutally honest - I'd heard from the troops.
You must miss them so xxxxxx much," I said. " I can hardly bear to write about them sometimes. I find them so beautiful."
"You understand what I miss," he wrote back. "I am Odysseus."
This is a wonderful book about wonderful people written by a wonderful person - who has by the way a wonderful dog but that is another story.
Used price: $1.67

Required ReadingReview Date: 2006-10-26
Downright inspiring, touching and heartfeltReview Date: 2004-10-26

A must-read for junior accounting doctoral students!Review Date: 2005-01-16
Excellent introductory book for anyone who wants to do capital market research in the future!
Strongly recommend!
A Research BookReview Date: 2001-09-30

Used price: $63.19

The Charlton Price Guide to First World War Infantry BadgesReview Date: 2003-11-11
well researched with excellent photographsReview Date: 1999-04-23

Used price: $86.98
Collectible price: $19.95

Desperately Seeking SistersReview Date: 2006-06-14
Harriet is irresistibly drawn to find them. Her need to complete the picture of her family is virtually obsessive. Yet it is truly appropriate. For most people in the end, it turns out to be family that is the most important and the most long lasting of friends and companions. Perhaps this is the primary lesson of Smith's book.
In particular, this young to young adult book is specially focused on character development. While Smith always pays attention to character, here for children, he is especially careful. Each of the missing sisters has a distinct character, in fact character is often the method by which Harriet finds the ones that are missing. As an interesting twist, Smith makes two of Harriet's sisters, detectives who run a "Ladies Detective Agency" reminiscent of Smith's other series on that topic. Imagine the wondrous detective stories Smith will weave for us when he puts Harriet together with her Aunts the detectives.
The book is recommended for all readers from age 5 to 105. It is fun, it is interesting and it is well written.
Best Chapter Book my Kids have ReadReview Date: 2007-01-09
Like my daughters, I love every book in the Harriet Bean series. ("The Five Lost Aunts of Harriet Bean" is first in the series, followed by "Harriet Bean and the League of Cheats" and then "The Cowgirl Aunt of Harriet Bean.") In my own list of favorite chapter books, this series is tied for # 1 (along with the "Sarah Plain and Tall" series). It reminds me a bit of the Junie B. Jones series because it is hilarious, but it is better written. It's also more engaging than Junie B. because it's a mystery, and kids are compelled to keep reading not only because of the humor but also because they are driven to find out how the mystery is solved.
I strongly disagree with the reviewer from the "School Library Journal," who says the Harriet Bean books are contrived. This review misses the point of the genre. The point is not to have a realistic plot but rather to engage children with humor, charming characters, and suspense.
I also appreciate the strong female protagonists in this series. My favorite scene is when Harriet learns about her aunt Veronica, who is a strong-woman in a circus. Veronica was originally told that, as a female, she couldn't enter a strong-man contest, but she enters in disguise and beats all the boys and men. This is one of the most hilarious, gratifying, and empowering scenes I've encountered in a children's book.
I can't recommend this series strongly enough. It will engage good readers (the writing is very well-crafted), and it will inspire reluctant readers to keep reading, just as the Harry Potter series does. I wish Alexander McCall Smith would write more books in this series!
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