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CANADIAN HISTORICAL BOOKS

Posted in Canadian Historical (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by William J Wheeler. By Fifth House Books. The regular list price is $19.95. Sells new for $12.38. There are some available for $6.80.
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No comments about Flying Under Fire.



Posted in Canadian Historical (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Gail Douglas. By Altitude Publishing. Sells new for $7.95. There are some available for $15.29.
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No comments about Étienne Brulé (Amazing Stories).



Run

Posted in Canadian Historical (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Eric Walters. By Penguin Global. The regular list price is $8.50. Sells new for $0.92. There are some available for $0.01.
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No comments about Run.



Posted in Canadian Historical (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Margaret Bell. By University of Nebraska Press. The regular list price is $30.00. Sells new for $22.00. There are some available for $2.74.
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1 comments about When Montana and I Were Young: A Frontier Childhood (Women in the West).
  1. This is a remarkable book. It is a primary account of a child's life growing up in Montana and Canada in the early part of the twentieth century. Margaret (Peggy) Bell's life spanned some 94 years, from 1888-1982, and her story is as exciting and troubling as any account one is likely to read, fiction or non-fiction. That the book is edited by Mary Clearman Blew makes it not only highly readable but lends it undeniable credibility.

    Bell's account of growing up on the high plains of Montana and Canada is a rare, first person account of life on the frontier with it's numerous hardships, grinding poverty, and ultimate struggle to retain her mind and spirit that will break your heart and make you shout for joy...sometimes within a few paragraphs or pages. In a straight forward, honest, almost stoic manner she describes the many life lessons she learned and discusses a subject that is rarely seen in print in the literature of the period: the abuse, sexual and otherwise, she experienced at the hands of her uncle and stepfather. This is an amazing book that chronicles the life experiences of a resilient woman in a man's world that lived to understand who she was, where she came from, and what it all meant. That she could tell such a story without self pity or sentimental, touchy-feely themes is remarkable. Brutally frank, honest and ultimately uplifting.



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Posted in Canadian Historical (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by John Colapinto. By Audioworks. The regular list price is $24.00. Sells new for $9.04. There are some available for $1.31.
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5 comments about As Nature Made Him: The Boy Who Was Raised as a Girl.
  1. Horrifying story of a little baby boy, who suffered, firstly, during a circumcision accident and then every day of his life as he is forced to live as a girl.
    The description of his treatment and the treatment of his brother at the hands of the supervising doctor is beyond horrific. To show small children pornography and to make them simular sex with each other just curdled my mind. And the total lack of listening to the patient is truely unbelievable that it was permitted for so long.
    The book is well written and a realy page turner. Your heart goes out to the boy and his family and you can't help but looking at the photos in the middle. Don't be afraid that the book may be too dry, it is written with the lay person in mind. Sympathetic to David and the choices his parents made in 1967.
    A must read and extremely thought provoking.


  2. Anyone who looked through a serious book on sex and gender in the 1970s was bound to come across the landmark John/Joan case. It seemed to indicate that children's sense of their sex (i.e., whether they were boys or girls) was soft and malleable. Counterintuitive and Marxian as that sounds now, it was presented as enlightened, forward-looking thinking.

    By the time John Colapinto published his expose of the John/Joan case in Rolling Stone in 1997, the jig was already up. Intersex advocates were loudly complaining that they had been mutiliated and tinkered with. The weight of evidence now suggested that for most people, one's mental sex was as fixed at birth as one's physical form.

    This book expanded on the original article by naming the actual principals in the tale and describing John/Joan's long and grueling experience of being a Johns Hopkins guinea pig: the transcontinental trips to the doctor once or twice a year, the psychological bullying, the constant reminder that you are some sort of freak.

    The article and the book are both heavily biased against John Money, the eminent New Zealander who supervised the experiment, and suspiciously eager to believe any scurrilous tales that his colleagues might offer (e.g., that Money had sexual relations with some of his students; the implication is that this sort of behavior is transgressive to an extreme, seldom encountered among academics and sex researchers!). To which I say--well, whether John Money was good or evil, he accomplished his main objective, which was to push back the frontiers of ignorance about sexual identity. We can now feel fairly confident in saying that you cannot just change someone's sex, willy-nilly, and force the mind to go along. More pertinently, if a child who appears to be female insists that she/he is really a boy, that child should not be regarded as delusional.

    Overall, the basic narrative of the Reimer family is not credible, and this is the basic weakness of the book. After all those trips to Baltimore, and the crushing awareness that "she" was some sort of sexual freak, Brenda/David Reimer certainly had some inkling of the truth long before she was 13. At the very least, Brenda and her twin brother must have had many intimate chats while they were growing up; surely there were some wild but accurate guesses in there. And it is inconceivable that the Reimer parents would never have alluded to Brenda's "accident." They probably discussed openly it all the time when the twins were two or three, the same way grown-ups often undress in front of their toddlers, regarding them as no more impressionable or sentient than the kitty-cat.

    The death of both twins a few years ago (one by overdose, the other by suicide) suggests that the family dynamics were far more messed up than we knew. I got the idea (from the book) that the twins were seriously lacking in ambition, social skills, and other incentives to get on in life. This is disturbing for me to contemplate, since it makes me wonder if the John/Joan experiment might have had a different outcome in a happier, less dysfunctional family. Would Brenda have adapted better, perhaps as a tomboy? Would she have decided to remain a girl if she'd been happier socially, with more friends and an intellectually stimulating envrionment? Perhaps not. But the sad dynamics of the Reimer family are an annoying variable, making me sometimes wonder whether the John/Joan case teaches us anything useful.


  3. This was an interesting book in that it told the story of the tragic childhood of David Reimer in addition to summarizing the background of John Money's theoretical underpinnings of his belief in early childhood reconstructive surgery. The fact that Reimer's childhood was being described as a total success by John Money when in fact the reality of the situation was the exact opposite is pretty shocking. Amazing how unethical this guy was. Your archetypal mad scientist.


  4. David took his own life in 2004 at the age of 38. His twin brother died a couple of years before (maybe) also of a suicide. The story of David did not end well, as much as we hoped it would.


  5. Wow!!! What a read, my friend Phil was raised as a girl for the first 25 years of his life and even after so many therpists, years of counselling & several operations to re-correct "himself" he still feels more comfortable keeping his long hair and still deliberates whether he can ever make that leap and have his breast implants removed. I am so glad I have found this book, now Phil my friend I truly have an insight into what life has dealt you. I only wish I could give this book 6 stars.


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Posted in Canadian Historical (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Anne Dublin. By Second Story Press. The regular list price is $14.95. Sells new for $6.64. There are some available for $1.42.
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2 comments about June Callwood: A Life of Action.
  1. "Each person is like a stone in a pond...Individual actions, good or bad, send out tiny ripples that change the surface of the public pond. People, by choice, can spread warm understanding or cold indifference."--June Callwood

    June Callwood, a Canadian journalist and activist, has led a very active life. Having written articles about everything from celebrities to censorship, and over thirty books dealing with topics like Canadian history and the battle against AIDS, Ms. Callwood has definitely kept busy.

    JUNE CALLWOOD: A LIFE OF ACTION is a comprehensive biography of the woman who helped establish over fifty different organizations, such as Digger House for homeless youth and Casey House for people with AIDS. She's also a Companion of the Order of Canada, which is the highest honor that can be bestowed upon a Canadian citizen, and has a park and street named after her.

    Filled with dozens of photographs, a timeline of her life, and selected honors she's received, this is a great book for anyone looking for information specifically on Ms. Callwood, or for those interested in Canadian activists.

    Reviewed by: Jennifer Wardrip, aka "The Genius"


  2. Teacher, librarian, and award-winning author Anne Dublin presents June Callwood: A Life of Action, a biography for young adults about the remarkable life of June Callwood, one of Canada's greatest journalists and activists. Callwood grew up poor during the Great Depression, in farm communities and small towns of Southern Ontario, yet through compassion, hard work and sheer grit she made a difference in thousands of lives around her. She founded more than 50 activist groups, including Jessie's, a center that gives housing and support for teen parents; Nellie's, a shelter that protects abused women and children from violence; and Casey House, the world's first special-care hospice for people with AIDS. Her journalism career included an interview with a young Elvis Presley, and for a time she even hosted her own television show. Black-and-white photographs illustrate this inspirational tale of an exemplary life, highly recommended for school libraries.


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Posted in Canadian Historical (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Mary Byers and Margaret McBurney. By University of Toronto Press. The regular list price is $24.95. Sells new for $5.82. There are some available for $3.98.
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No comments about Atlantic Hearth: Early Homes and Families of Nova Scotia.



Posted in Canadian Historical (Monday, October 13, 2008)

By Canadian Plains Research Center. Sells new for $19.95. There are some available for $50.09.
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No comments about Saskatchewan First Nations: Lives Past and Present (Trade Books based in Scholorship(TBS)).



Posted in Canadian Historical (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Kurt Grant. By Vanwell Publishing. The regular list price is $27.95. Sells new for $36.43. There are some available for $36.46.
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No comments about ALL TIGERS, NO DONKEYS: A Citizen Soldier in Croatia, 1994-1995.



Posted in Canadian Historical (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Chris Czajkowski. By Harbour Pub Co. The regular list price is $36.95. Sells new for $28.08.
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No comments about A Mountain Year: Nature Diary of a Wilderness Dweller.



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Flying Under Fire
Étienne Brulé (Amazing Stories)
Run
When Montana and I Were Young: A Frontier Childhood (Women in the West)
As Nature Made Him: The Boy Who Was Raised as a Girl
June Callwood: A Life of Action
Atlantic Hearth: Early Homes and Families of Nova Scotia
Saskatchewan First Nations: Lives Past and Present (Trade Books based in Scholorship(TBS))
ALL TIGERS, NO DONKEYS: A Citizen Soldier in Croatia, 1994-1995
A Mountain Year: Nature Diary of a Wilderness Dweller

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Last updated: Mon Oct 13 07:16:52 EDT 2008