One damned river before another
The pro-industrial bias of B.C. governments is traceable back to the damning of the Campbell River’s origins, outlined in People,… FULL STORY
The pro-industrial bias of B.C. governments is traceable back to the damning of the Campbell River’s origins, outlined in People,… FULL STORY
Former Tsimshian students recall attending Anglican and Methodist schools at Spaksuut (Port Essington) and Terrace in Helen Raptis’ collaboratively written… FULL STORY
Each bird encountered offers subtle teachings, not just on nature, but on the relationships between humans and the natural world,… FULL STORY
A group of women including Molly Murphy and Sheera Cipilinski have decided to make their own homes using mud—one of… FULL STORY
“Our largest environmental problem remains the general natural history illiteracy of a large majority of British Columbians,” says reviewer Loys… FULL STORY
In Dirty Windshields, Smugglers’ frontman Grant Lawrence delightfully chronicles Ambition, Good Times and Pre-Adult Denial through sixteen years of touring… FULL STORY
Aaron Williams’ Chasing Smoke: A Wildfire Memoir (Harbour $22.95) describes 16-hour, high-adrenaline days in apocalyptic fiery landscapes. Chasing Smoke. A… FULL STORY
An unprecedented array of full-colour photographs of some of western Canada’s most striking glaciers and icefield elicits awe. Our Vanishing… FULL STORY
So begins John Gellard’s review of veteran outdoorsman Rob Wood’s memoir, At Home in Nature: A Life of Unknown Mountains… FULL STORY
Jeannie Kamins has written and published a VFMF history with a memoir by Gary Cristall who says, “I guess I… FULL STORY
None can match the fervour of adoration felt in B.C. for Robbie Burns–as Fred Braches recalls after his discovery of… FULL STORY
Written nine years after Carr died, published in 1954, it describes an idealized friendship with twenty vignettes. Emily Carr As… FULL STORY
“New York has William Burroughs, Los Angeles has Charles Bukowski and Vancouver has Al Neil,” — local author John Armstrong… FULL STORY
David Chariandy’s acclaimed second novel, Brother, concerns two siblings growing up in Scarborough in the 1980s. The $50,000 Rogers Writers’… FULL STORY
By the time Canada’s Sherlock Holmes retired in 1949, he had outlasted thirteen police chiefs and sixteen mayors. Blood, Sweat,… FULL STORY
“Why is there not more vocal outrage over such bellicose behaviour from deviants like Donald Trump?” asks Howard Stewart. By… FULL STORY
Jan Peterson’s new biography untangles the fascinating relationship between the humanitarian Mark Bate and his friend and arch-rival, the coal… FULL STORY
A new history of ILWU Local 502 celebrates how unionists have “successfully navigated the restructuring forces of globalization.” Reviewer Sean… FULL STORY
Biodiversity markets remain small. Destructive development continues apace. So we must image new partnerships. REVIEW: Enterprising Nature: Economics, Markets, and… FULL STORY
Jonathan Peyton’s Unbuilt Environments examines five, major industrial initiatives, proposed or enacted in Northwest B.C. REVIEW BY WADE DAVIS. REVIEW… FULL STORY