Broken Man on a Halifax Pier

Broken Man on a Halifax Pier
Title Broken Man on a Halifax Pier PDF eBook
Author Lesley Choyce
Publisher Dundurn
Total Pages 328
Release 2019-10-12
Genre Fiction
ISBN 1459745256

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Broken Man on a Halifax Pier is a tale of one man’s shipwrecked life and an unlikely crew of rescuers hoping to save not only him but also themselves.

The Grey Zone

The Grey Zone
Title The Grey Zone PDF eBook
Author Don Easton
Publisher Dundurn
Total Pages 440
Release 2019-10-12
Genre Fiction
ISBN 1459745310

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Jack Taggart teams up with Constable Alicia Munday to investigate a kidnapping case.

No Better Home?

No Better Home?
Title No Better Home? PDF eBook
Author David Koffman
Publisher University of Toronto Press
Total Pages 323
Release 2021-01-31
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1487531117

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This book begins with an audacious question: Has there ever been a better home for Jews than Canada? By certain measures, Canada might be the most socially welcoming, economically secure, and religiously tolerant country for Jews in the diaspora, past or present. No Better Home? takes this question seriously, while also exploring the many contested meanings of the idea of "home." Contributors to the volume include leading scholars of Canadian Jewish life as well as eminent Jewish scholars writing about Canada for the first time. The essays compare Canadian Jewish life with the quality of life experienced by Jews in other countries, examine Jewish and non-Jewish interactions in Canada, analyse specific historical moments and literary texts, reflect deeply personal histories, and widen the conversation about the quality and timbre of the Canadian Jewish experience. No Better Home? foregrounds Canadian Jewish life and ponders all that the Canadian experience has to teach about Jewish modernity.

Essays in the History of Canadian Law: In honour of R.C.B. Risk

Essays in the History of Canadian Law: In honour of R.C.B. Risk
Title Essays in the History of Canadian Law: In honour of R.C.B. Risk PDF eBook
Author Philip Girard
Publisher University of Toronto Press
Total Pages 620
Release 1981-01-01
Genre Law
ISBN 9780802047298

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The collected essays in this volume represent the highlights of legal historical scholarship in Canada today. All of the essays refer back in some form to Risk's own work in the field.

Essays in the History of Canadian Law

Essays in the History of Canadian Law
Title Essays in the History of Canadian Law PDF eBook
Author George Blain Baker
Publisher University of Toronto Press
Total Pages 620
Release 1999-12-15
Genre Law
ISBN 1442657804

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This volume in the Osgoode Society's distinguished series on the history of Canadian law is a tribute to Professor R.C.B. Risk, one of the pioneers of Canadian legal history and for many years regarded as its foremost authority. The fifteen original essays are by notable scholars, some of whom were students of Professor Risk, and represent some of the best and most original work in the area of Canadian legal history. They cover a number of important topics that range from the form of the criminal trial in the eighteenth century, to debates over the meaning of property in the nineteenth, and to lawyer/poet Tom MacInnes's views on the law of aboriginal title in the twentieth century.

The Book of Kells

The Book of Kells
Title The Book of Kells PDF eBook
Author R. A. MacAvoy
Publisher Open Road Media
Total Pages 435
Release 2014-04-01
Genre Fiction
ISBN 1497602858

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A contemporary couple journeys back in time to ancient Ireland in this delightful fantasy by the author of Tea with the Black Dragon. John Thornburn is an artist, mild-mannered and nonviolent. To make ends meet, he teaches some courses in Celtic design. And although his background is half Micmac Indian, he lives in Ireland for two reasons: his far more confrontational and warrior-like girlfriend, Derval O’Keane, and his fascination with the beautiful illuminated manuscript known as the Book of Kells. But he’s about to take a journey to a far more distant place, one that he could not have imagined. Along with Derval, John will find himself in an ancient Celtic realm, where a Viking attack begs to be avenged and a fantastic—and sometimes terrifying—adventure awaits . . . From a master of magical fantasy, the author of the Damiano Trilogy and a winner of the John W. Campbell Award, this is a tale of warriors, love, danger, and Irish history that will cast a spell on anyone who dreams of discovering treasures in long-lost worlds.

The King's Salt

The King's Salt
Title The King's Salt PDF eBook
Author David More
Publisher Trafford Publishing
Total Pages 325
Release 2018-01-29
Genre Fiction
ISBN 1490787038

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Its 1778, and the American Revolutionary War is three years old. In this fourth book of the award-winning Smithyman Saga, Sir Thomas Smithyman and his friends still consider themselves honor-bound to remain loyal. They continue their bitter civil war against former friends, neighbours and family for four more years, trying to regain their homes and land in what has become New York State. But Thomas and friends, his wife Nancy and their children, along with his stepmother, the fierce Mohawk Princess Laura Silverbirch and her war chief brother, Matthew, lose everything to the triumphant Patriots. Now refugees, they must fight betrayal by a thankless government, despair, hunger and isolation to reconstruct their lives and create a new place for themselves and their children in the northern wilderness.