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Author: Trevor Hughes

Back to school cookin’

“These two authors have produced a charming, colourful book that is easy to read and understand for kids of all ages. Children will ‘soon advance from quick after-school snacks and summer picnics to breakfasts in bed and full-course family dinners.'” Valerie Green reviews Let’s Eat: Recipes for Kids Who Cook by DL Acken and Aurelia Louvet (Victoria: Touchwood Editions, 2023) $40 / 97817711514132

Protecting unique island ecosystems

“Harrington devotes a separate chapter to each of the fifteen largest islands, namely Gabriola, Thetis, Salt Spring, North and South Pender, Saturna, Mayne, Galiano, Hornby, Denman, Quadra, Cortes, Savary, Bowen, Gambier, and Lasqueti, in that order.” Jack Little reviews Voices for the Islands: Thirty Years of Nature Conservation on the Salish Sea
by Sheila Harrington (Victoria: Heritage House, 2024) $34.95 / 9781772034929

Appreciating where we are

“There’s an entire library of books about the marvels of a province that so many put at the bottom of their vacation bucket lists, certainly too many to cite here. But a few recent titles in the not-so-often-reviewed list caught my eye.” Stephen Hume reviews On the Trail: 50 Years of Engaging with Nature by Langley Field Naturalists (Surrey: Hancock House, 2023) $19.95 / 9780888397591, Gumboot Guys: Nautical Adventures on British Columbia’s North Coast by Lou Allison and Jane Wilde, (Qualicum Beach: Caitlin Press, 2023) $26 / 9781773861180, Fried Eggs and Fish Scales: Tales from a Sointula Troller by Jon Taylor (Madeira Park, Harbour Publishing, 2024) $24.95 / 9781990776656 & Backpacking on Vancouver Island: The Essential Guide to the Best Multi-Day Trips and Day Hikes by Taryn Eyton (Vancouver: Greystone Books, 2024) $26.95 / 9781778400100

Growing in an urban space

“All of the recipes I tried were good. I was a bit hesitant about mixing rhubarb into banana bread, but hey! It was rhubarb season, so I thought I’d try it, and my taste-testers all liked it.” Rebecca Coleman reviews The Side Gardener: Recipes & Notes from My Garden, by Rosie Daykin (Toronto: Appetite by Random House, 2024) $45.00 / 9780525612179

“Just Say Yes” and other wisdom

“After reading McDonald’s memoir…I found him refreshingly spontaneous and unpredictable…I knew from an interview last year focused on his nonfiction book, The Future is Now: Solving the Climate Crisis with Today’s Technology, that he’s one of the most contagiously positive and enthusiastic people I’ve ever met…” Cathalynn Labonté-Smith interviews Bob McDonald, author of his memoir Just Say Yes (Madeira Park: Douglas & McIntyre, 2024) $34.95 / 9781771624206

Staring down white privilege

“Crossing the River is the author’s personal journey of atonement – coming to terms with her birthright of white privilege. The book gives voice to a different narrative of Canada’s history and offers personal insight into the meaning of reconciliation.” Sage Birchwater reviews Crossing the River: An Unsettling Memoir by Sandra Hayes-Gardiner (Calgary: BixBooks, 2023) $20 / 9781777296759

The leap to serenity

“So, he transplants himself to a new life, a new take on things. How many of us would like to do the same if we only had the courage?” Harvey De Roo reviews The Road to Appledore: or How I Went Back to the Land Without Ever Having Lived There in the First Place, by Tom Wayman (Madeira Park: Harbour Publishing, 2024) $26.95 / 9781990776632

Influential titles in graphic design

“I’m writing this in part to address the request from readers of my other typography texts to write about Bringhurst, or perhaps pursue a retrospective. Both of these requests are solid and probably long overdue, so in this I attempt to take a first look at this pursuit.” Thomas Girard reviews two earlier books by Robert Bringhurst of Quadra Island, bringing readers a discussion on these influential titles: The Elements of Typographic Style & The Solid Form of Language.

Dealing with life-altering injury

“The emphasis on our human ‘neuroplasticity’ or the ability of the nervous system to alter its functions and responses following injury, ends up giving the most accurate approach to why the pain occurs, while offering hope for possible re-configurings of its pertinacity, if not resolutions.” Catherine Owen reviews The Pain Project: A Couple’s Story of Confronting Chronic Pain, by Kara Stanley with Simon Paradis (Vancouver: Greystone Books, 2024) $26.95 / 9781771648400

Sailing into paradise

“Howard White, the founder of Harbour Publishing and author of Raincoast Chronicles, is well qualified to write this updated edition of his popular guide to B.C.’s Sunshine Coast. He has lived there since childhood in the 1950s and has travelled to every nook and cranny of the jagged coastline, visiting all the unique communities along the way.” Ron Verzuh reviews The Sunshine Coast: From Gibsons to Powell River (Third Edition)
by Howard White, photography by Dean van’t Schip (Madeira Park: Harbour Publishing, 2024) $36.95 (hard cover) / 9781990776809

Rising above self-help noise

“Yet, in these pages I found myself a growing kinship to the author as I read through this multifaceted journey. Payne truly recognizes the human struggles we all share and coaxes a voice of support from within yourself to be heard.” Jeffrey Stychin reviews Be A Dime: Unleash Your Inherent Energy and Live Life More Joyfully by Jill Payne (Vancouver: Figure 1 Publishing, 2024) $22.95 / 9781773272146

The Prize

“Light moves through the exposed
struts of the shattered Dome…”
Gary Geddes presents a selection of his poems to note Hiroshima Day, August 6, 2024

Finding community through quilting

“…one does not need to be a quilter or even care much about fabric arts in order to welcome Miller’s book for its glimpse into a time and a way of life which changed our society and offered a new sort of freedom which we have not yet lost.” Phyllis Reeve reviews Knots and Stitches: Community Quilts Across the Harbour by Kristin Miller (Qualicum Beach: Caitlin Press, 2023) $26 / 9781773861203

‘A multi-generational family saga’

“The book takes us through various phases in China’s modern history, from the Anglo-Chinese wars of the 1840s and the Boxer Rebellion, through both world wars, the Japanese conquest and occupation of China, and the advent of Communism.” Tom Koppel reviews Searching for Billie: A journalist’s quest to understand his mother’s past leads him to discover a vanished China by Ian Gill (Hong Kong: Blacksmith Books, 2024) $25.85 / 9789887554660

Understanding major infectious disease events

“Now, we have an easy-to-read and -digest book that goes to great lengths to explain medical basics and put this pandemic in perspective relative to past (and inevitably, future) diseases.” Tom Koppel reviews The Hidden Zoo Inside You: An illustrated guide to pesky organisms and pandemics
by Allen Jones, M.D. (Vancouver: Granville Island Publishing, 2024) $39.95 / 9781989467664

Living with Oil?

“As I pull off the road and down the drive toward my home on Sumas Mountain, where I will take a walk in the woods, there is one thinker’s phrase that nags as I come to terms with the reality of this doublethink, doublespeak, society. Thoreau’s prophetic statement in an 1860 letter to Harrison Blake, is all too relevant– ‘What is the use of a house if you haven’t got a tolerable planet to put it on?’ Author and essayist Natalie Virginia Lang writes the timely essay “Living with Oil?”

Scorched memories

“The book suggests that future efforts should prioritize rebuilding Lytton with a strong focus on sustainability and resilience. This involves implementing policies that address the root causes of vulnerability, such as historical injustices and environmental degradation.” Amy Tucker reviews Lytton: Climate Change, Colonialism and Life Before the Fire by Peter Edwards and Kevin Loring (Toronto: Random House Canada, 2024) $36 / 9781039006157

Prioritizing global health

“Once people see the inequities in the world, it is hard to unsee them – Dr. Mayhew’s descriptions bring a humanity and familiarity in a way to a very different culture.” Dr. Laura Sauvé reviews Hand on My Heart: A Canadian Doctor’s Awakening in Afghanistan by Maureen Mayhew (Qualicum Beach: Caitlin Press, 2023) $26 / 9781773861029

So…what now?

“Butler’s story is riveting and very powerful as she describes being different from everyone else while trying to find her true self.” Valerie Green reviews Apocalypse Child: Surviving Doomsday and the Search for Identity at the End of the World by Carly Butler (Qualicum Beach: Caitlin Press, 2024) $24.95 / 9781773861326

Of Nature, and human nature

“As our current news media make painfully clear, claims and counter claims over national boundaries often lead to devastating violence. It is a prompt to reflection, therefore, to consider the border disputes in the past, distant world of this book.” Theo Dombrowski reviews Arctic Patrol: Canada’s Fight for Arctic Sovereignty by Eric Jamieson (Qualicum Beach: Caitlin Press, 2024) $28.00 / 9781773861333

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