Canada Books
Related Subjects: Alberta British Columbia New Brunswick Nova Scotia Prince Edward Island Quebec Saskatchewan Ontario Newfoundland and Labrador
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Used price: $2.59

Lot's of helpful info, butReview Date: 2008-02-07
A simple, easy-reference guideReview Date: 2002-09-07
RoadtestedReview Date: 2003-02-22
Terrific choiceReview Date: 2002-09-16
One goal of mine has been to stay in B&B's the whole time (I picture lots of intimate Atlantic oceanside places), and there is a good focus on these accommodations. Another increasing trend in the LP series has been to supplement with web addresses for more information. The author looks like they have gone to great lengths to provide an extraordinary number of links for accommodations, activities, visitor info and often, restaurants. Coverage of maps (including city) and suggested itineraries are two of my favorite aspects of Lonely Planet, and this guide has great ones. This book also doubles as a history primer for the area. Two easy-read examples within that I enjoyed included background on the New Brunswick-to-PEI bridge & the history of why Halifax gives a Christmas tree to Boston each year.
Overall, there is more information contained within than I could use while visiting the area. It's simply the best choice for visiting the Maritimes.
One last note, Lonely Planet also released a full guide on Quebec as well.
MaritimesReview Date: 2002-09-16
Collectible price: $85.00

Fine book about the greatest female Hockey player ever.Review Date: 2007-04-27
Hockey Coach in Quebec, Q.C. and later
went on to play in games, or exhibitions
in three men's leagues. She also was a
sports pioneer who played roller hockey
as well. She represented Canada splendidly
in several Olympics and this is her story.
Get it while you can and check out her
great site. Much about her at mykaussie
dotcom as well. You go, girl!
Over too soon!Review Date: 2003-05-19
Great book !Review Date: 1999-07-18
This book was extremely entertaining and insightful.Review Date: 1998-10-14
Recommended for any female goalies!Review Date: 1999-03-24


the most readable atlas in the worldReview Date: 2007-02-08
it is concise, detailed, and easy to useReview Date: 1999-08-10
Awesome. Buy it.Review Date: 1999-06-06
A Road Atlas from the Map Experts!Review Date: 1999-12-31
Best I've SeenReview Date: 1999-08-10
The major highways and state roads are much clearer on these maps than in the RM, and the national parks are exponentially more visible.
It is a pleasure to use this atlas. Can't wait til the 2000 version comes out in September.

Used price: $10.59

My Favorite AtlasReview Date: 2007-02-02
The Perfect Road Atlas for Serious Travelers!Review Date: 2006-07-19
Superior workReview Date: 2006-03-13
great road atlas!Review Date: 2005-03-17
Buy it used -- it's a great atlasReview Date: 2002-02-23
It's a very study volume. Mine has started to pull away from the binding a bit, but that's to be expected when I throw it around the car all the time. The plastic-like cover is spill-resistant and extremely durable. No pages have ripped or become unbound. I am very rough on it, and I'm impressed that it's survived as well as it has.
The maps are readable and accurate. There's not much more exciting than that to say about a road map. They cover all of North America, though Mexico receives no detailed coverage, nor does northern Canada (where there are few roads anyway).
Aside from the maps, the atlas includes descriptions of every region of North America (Mexico is treated as one region, and Canada as two). These are really interesting, and they get the wanderlust flowing. There are also descriptions and pictures of all the major US national parks, a handy mileage chart that includes lots of cities, city/population indexes organized by state, and a comprehensive and balanced list of scenic drives around the country.


Fantastic!!Fantastic!!Fantastic!!Review Date: 2001-09-18
Grouped by Family(beginning with Pines and ending with the Ashes) the stories are king here. Just pick your favorite tree and sit back and enjoy. The history of the White Pine, for example, seems almost mythic in its sheer height and size back in colonial days. It very well helped build near most of colonial America, too!
From White Pine to White Oak to Redbud to Sycamore, this is a fascinating and informative read. There is an index of both scientific and common names, plus a glossary and a section called Keys to Species and Genera (which is much easier to decode with a Peterson's Guide at hand).
Also recommended, Petrerson's Field Guide to Eastern Trees(ISBN: 0395904552) and National Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Trees(ISBN: 0394507606) for IDing and Trees in my Forest(ISBN: 0060929421) and the Man Who Planted Trees(ISBN: 1570625387) for more great stories.
Roots: A Biography of TreesReview Date: 2006-06-19
Wonderful stuff. In addition to all this the book is chockablock with anecdotes of specific trees and their histories, and how our forefathers and the American Indian viewed the various types of trees. Tree lover or not, you'll enjoy this book.
A great book for tree loversReview Date: 2002-02-12
Clearly the best overall book on trees...Review Date: 2002-07-03
The essential referenceReview Date: 2000-06-17
It also is an essential book for anyone interested in the history of the USA. Fittingly the book starts off with a description of white pine and the birth of what is now the USA. In short anyone who claims to care for trees or to be interested in how the USA came to be and who is not familiar with the contents of this book is in serious danger of appearing to be a charlatan.
[Quality of the reprint could be better; actually this book deserves to be in hardcover. However, the quality of the reprint could also be a lot worse, or -horrible thought!- the book might go out of print altogether]

Used price: $11.00
Collectible price: $37.95

A jolly, laughing lady,Review Date: 2001-09-26
The closing words are:
"To be able to share what I have learned with others is a privilege and a joy. Has not this journey been an enviable inheritance in itself?"
In
between those personal words, I got the chance to intimately share the life of Winnifred Eaton. Birchall opens the family
vaults, secrets and intimacies; shares her deductions and her thoughts about Winnifred with me as reader; and writes in a
zesty, tangy language that kept seducing me to read on and on.
The things I learned about the early filmindustry in Hollywood
and the look behind the screens, are as fascinating as all the facts about the working conditions for women in the first
half of the century in the USA
This biography by Birchall leads me to wonder and think about Winnifred as a human being
and also about the culture and times that Winnifred went through in her life and tackled straight on, in her own inimitable
style.
What more can a biography do?
Normally I am none too fond of biographies as genre. This one had me enthralled, qua content and style of writing.
A tour de force of self-inventionReview Date: 2001-10-26
Other reviewers have mentioned Eaton/Watanna's background. I will stress instead the absorbing interest of Winnifred's successive reinventions of herself in societies that had no ready place for her. Like a brilliant slackrope walker with an increasingly awkward load, Winnifred managed to shift her balance not only to survive, but pulled off one tour de force after another. Her performances as a Japanese-American novelist, as a screenwriter and as a rancher doyenne would win applause from Daniel Defoe.
Eaton/Watanna has become a focal interest of American scholars in recent years. As her granddaughter, Birchall had informaitonal advantages in writing on her. Her graceful, well-considered book shows how glad we should be for Birchall's advantages.
This Shared JoyReview Date: 2002-01-18
But Diana Birchall's sparkling biography changed my mind. Writing with unblinking honesty, Birchall describes the many lives that her chameleon grandmother lived, from journalist and novelist to story editor and screenwriter. Of most interest to me were the stories of her career as wife in two unconventional marriages and mother to four children. Birchall's graceful use of language is enhanced by her wit and intelligently ironic style. She concludes this delightful biography with the acknowledgment that sharing what she has learned about her grandmother has been a privilege and a joy. Surely it is no less a privilege and a joy for the reader.
Interesting historyReview Date: 2001-09-26
But now I've had a chance to learn about the woman who lurked behind that exotic nom de plume. I learn she was not Japanese at all, but half Chinese and half English. Yet her true story seems to be as fully exotic as any of the character's lives from her books.
Diana Birchall has done a wonderful job of bringing her fascinating grandmother to life. The book give a wonderful look at a most unusual woman, and what life was like for young women at the turn of the last century. At least what life was like when the young women were as self-confident and gutsy as the young Winnifred Eaton.
A jolly, laughing ladyReview Date: 2001-09-27
Inbetween these words Birchall indeed shares with the reader the life of Winnifred, in personal and intimate detail. Birchall also seduces the reader into not just reading, but thinking about the culture and times Winnifred faced in her own inimitable style, from her life in Canada as young girl down to the years of Hollywood.
Normally I am none too fond of biographies but this one enchanted me, by the content and by the style of Birchall's writing. Full of zest, lifely images and easy to read on and on. As non native reader I appreciated this very much; it was a joy and a privilege to share. Would that all biographies were such a good read!

Used price: $12.47

Brave revelationReview Date: 2004-04-24
A MESSAGE FROM THE AUTHORReview Date: 2003-12-30
I am writing a message here to provide an email address to those of you who wish to get in touch with me!
It is rita_nayar@hotmail.com
Please do write as I would love to get your thoughts, comments, feedback or simply an acknowledgement of my book.
Rita's JourneyReview Date: 2003-12-14
exotic locations, her horrific first few months of marriage, her attempt
to escape, her immigration to Canada, her constant quest to placate her
violent and unstable husband, her carrer success, her wonderful children
and the most unimaginable tragedy anyone can ever experience.
Her story has a universal appeal which crosses cultural and economic
boundaries. My admiration for her has
no bounds, because she has
survived and is willing to share her story to celebrate her son and to
reach out
to women.
Suffering and RedemptionReview Date: 2003-12-04
This is a memoir. If you are living through, or have lived through, family violence, or simply know someone in that situation, then this book may be very helpful. It grew out of Rita's own need to come to terms with these horrific events in her life. She has since also become active in providing support and counseling to others who are suffering or have suffered domestic abuse.
Be warned: the violence that the author and her family endured is graphically described. But it is not gratuitous violence. The violence was real, personal and even fatal for some members of Rita's family. That it occurred in a middle class family in a middle class neighborhood in a major North American city provides a hint of the pain that may be only one friend or family away from each of us.
Survival and SacrificeReview Date: 2004-01-23
It is both an awful story of an oppressive and controlling man and awesome story of a woman's struggle for emotional and spiritual freedom for herself and her children. And it is the story of an Indian woman's struggle to reconcile her own identity within traditional Indian culture and with family expectations about her role in marriage and in life.
Read this book if you want to be astounded...and then inspired!


Autobiographical essaysReview Date: 2008-06-25
From where his title OTHER COLORS derives is a guess, but the answer is hinted at in the beginning, and has to do with the panorama of his creativity. His words in these fragments are as colors to paintings, an offshoot of his early affinity for oil painting and architectural design. At twenty-two, he turned to literature, and in these fragments one can quote what literature must mean to him. On p. 155, literature is "a deep logic governing the world [...that] we can only appreciate through great literature." Again, "writing -- if you're happy with it -- undoes all sorrows."
Other Colors? Think RainbowReview Date: 2008-01-27
Other ColorsReview Date: 2007-12-14
and Nobelist-Orhan Pamuk. He was born in 1952 in Istanbul.
The family worked in railroad construction. The presentation
has a number of interesting stories which provide a window
into life in Istanbul.
As an American, this interests me because
I have never visited Istanbul. There is a moving story
about a visit to the seashore with Ruya, as well as
a home with a lonely man. The book has a very detailed
description of an earthquake during August of 1999.
The ground shook in Sedef near Buyukada and nearly 30,000
people perished. The author describes memorable scenes
on the Istanbul Ferry in places like the Golden Horn,
Bosphorus Sea and Marmara. A strength of the work is
that the author makes the scenery come alive like a
multi-dimensional movie.
The work combines a biography with short stories.
Toward the end, the author describes how a building's
hominess issues from the dreams and aspirations of
the occupants. I enjoyed the presentation due to the
variety of stories and themes enunciated.
The style of writing is simple and conversational.
This work should be on a high school or college
required reading list due to the unique multi-cultural
perspective.
A Resurrection of the OrdinaryReview Date: 2007-11-01
I had the extraordinary good fortune to see and hear Orhan Pamuk speak at Dartmouth College about his life, his writing, his family and his books, on the first anniversary of his Noble Prize for Literature. Orhan Pamuk elicited total attention as he brought us from his education as an architect to a realization that his life was in writing. His life was not complete without books, paper and pen, and he spoke emotionally about his writing life. "It keeps me sane", he said. There you have it. In this day and age of stress and strain, as he said "I feel as if I have two souls, sort of schizophrenic". I understand this completely after reading his book 'Other Colors'. Like his country, Turkey, he is caught between two continents Asia and Europe. He sits at his desk looking out towards the Bosphorus Sea and writes about the land and the people he loves.
After Pamuk won the Nobel he was badgered by the press for new stories. He was used to writing slowly, a couple hundred pages a year, but now he needed to have 4 pages in two hours every week. These stories in 'Many Colors' are the accumulation of that time. He was also asked over and over why all his books had the titles of colors, 'The White Castle', 'The Black Book', and 'My Name Is Red'- thus, to satisfy his urge to put one over on the media, he titled this book, 'Many Colors'. This book contains so many fascinating stories. One of my favorites is that of the Ferries of the Bosphorous. When Pamuk was a boy, his father and his friends all chose one ferry that they could identify as theirs. As the ferries would come down the sea towards Istanbul, they could make out their ferry by one characteristic, usually the shape and size of the smokestack. They could then place their ferry, and it seemed their world was a little smaller. Those large ferries are gone now replaced by motorized, faster versions. And, Pamuk speaks lovingly of his daughter, Ruya. One year she did not like school and would spend hours giving her father reasons why she should not attend. He wrote down these daily messages verbatim, and into a story we can all relate to, we have been there. Pamuk tells us about his favorite authors. Dostoevsky, Nabokov, Camus, Bernhard and each author has a place in his heart. He reads them every day and it is because of them he became a writer. He relates his personal experience in an earthquake that took the lives of many of his countrymen. His books are his life, and he writes about book covers, his library, his to be read lists, the Freedom of the writer. Pamuk's guide to the Mediterranean, to the European bank, and the Views from the Capital of the World, New York City. His Interview by Paris Match is a must read, as is his PEN Arthur Miller Speech. And, of course his arrest for his speaking out about the Armenian tragedy. So much to read and to discover about this man.
"In "Other Colors," his first big assemblage of nonfiction, Pamuk gives us several of his many selves inta centrifugal gathering of memory-pieces, sketches, interviews and unexpected flights. The result is a gallery of Pamuks: here is the author of the haunted, half-lit inquiry into melancholy and neglect, "Istanbul: Memories and the City," with further glimpses of the "forest of secret stairways" that is his home; here is the man who so loves books that he wrote a whole novel." Pico Iyer
Orhan Pamuk is a fascinating man who is a writer of the extraordinary. He has taken the extraordinary of life and turned it into a 'resurrection of the ordinary',Marilynne Robinson's novel "Housekeeping" by way of Pico Iyer's"
so that we can better understand the day to day existence of his world. It is easy to fall under Pamuk's spell when he is talking about his writing and his country. I found this book so illuminating. Pamuk has a wonderful sense of humor and irony. He gives photographers 5 minutes to take pictures at the beginning of his lecture, he finds the flashes interfere with his concentration. At the end of his lecture when the question and answer period started, Pamuk would take a flash picture of each questioner. A roar of approval from the audience! Bravo, Pamuk!
Heartily Recommended. prisrob 11-01-07
Opening the Writerly ShellReview Date: 2007-12-03
Orhan Pamuk is brilliantly able to bring that bit of order and deliberation to the fore writing handsomely from his interior. He describes his writing life with great insight and candor while discussing deliciously, authors he admires. I especially enjoyed the essays in the book about Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, and Nabokov among others).
Having set aside a rainy, grey Sunday to read "Other Colors," I felt a lovely, lonely empathy for the passages on book-mania. In one essay he describes dead-on, the odd reassurances that a book elicits, not merely as an escape mechanism but also as physical totem.
For those who read Orhan Pamuk, this essay collection is food for a book lover's soul. One story in the book is an evocation of his childhood memories of life with his abandoned mother. It stands out poignantly among the essays as he admits elsewhere in the book that she no longer speaks to him.
How curiously private yet opague is this important, gifted author. Hats off, Mr.Pamuk. As one of your "implied readers" I await anything your pen may put to paper.

Used price: $18.98

Beautiful, Fascinating and InformativeReview Date: 2008-07-31
Best book on North American bookReview Date: 2008-03-03
Great bookReview Date: 2008-02-08
Owls of the US and CanadaReview Date: 2008-01-08
I highly recommend this book to anyone with an interest in either nature photography or birds, but especially if you like both.
Chase Hunter
Owls of the US and CanadaReview Date: 2007-12-24
The photography is in a league of its own. Lynch is a well-known wildlife photographer, and these photos show just why. The artistry and a technical excellence are breathtaking. For instance, the whiskered screech-owl on p. 16 is composed the way a painter would compose, but the photo still brings out the individual feathers, the half-closed eyes, the long beak hidden behind the whiskers. These birds are so closely observed they show more than I can see with my binoculars in a woodland walk. And add to this the field knowledge: owls are not sparrows or seagulls that one can see anywhere. To capture them on film, the photographer must spend hours in a blind, and travel to places far off the interstate. This book is one that will stay in the mind after it has been read.


Canoe technique - from the bestReview Date: 1999-07-12
Marvelous book, but could have better productionReview Date: 2005-06-24
I would really liked to have rated this 5-stars. However, the production could have been much improved. The b/w pictures accompanying the text are often poorly reproduced, with insufficient greyscale to allow them to be clearly interpretted. Additionally, a bit more editting might have spotted some inconsistent terms as well as other undefined terms. But all in all, this is one of my favorite canoe books. It certainly should have a place on the shelf of every serious paddler.
A wonderful first step on the pathReview Date: 2003-07-30
If you want to become a canoeist, not only do I recommend this book, I recommend finding and getting the video of the same title.
best of the how-to booksReview Date: 1997-10-22
Excelent book on the basics and love of canoeing.Review Date: 1999-04-13
Related Subjects: Alberta British Columbia New Brunswick Nova Scotia Prince Edward Island Quebec Saskatchewan Ontario Newfoundland and Labrador
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This passage reassured me when I read it in the Foreword: "Many of our authors work undercover; others aren't so secretive. None of them accept freebies for positive write-ups."