Pauline Johnson: Selected Poetry and Prose

Posted in Books, Media Archive, Poetry, Women on 2013-09-05 20:07Z by Steven

Pauline Johnson: Selected Poetry and Prose

Dundurn Press
June 2013
240 pages
5.5 in x 8.5 in
Paperback ISBN: 978-1-45970-426-8
eBook ISBN: 978-1-45970-428-2

Pauline Johnson (1861-1913)

Compiled and Introduced by:

Michael Gnarowski

Pauline Johnson was an unusual and unique presence on the literary scene during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Part Mohawk and part European, she was a compelling female voice in the midst of an almost entirely male writing community. Having discovered her talent for public recitation of poetry, Johnson relied on her ancestry and gender to establish an international reputation for her stage performances, during which she appeared in European and native costume. These poems were later collected under the title of Flint and Feather (1912) and form the source of the selections appearing in this volume.

Later, suffering from ill health, Pauline Johnson retired from the stage and devoted herself to the writing of prose, collected in Legends of Vancouver, The Moccasin Maker (1913), and The Shagganappi (1913), gleanings from which form part of this collection.

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James Douglas: Father of British Columbia

Posted in Biography, Books, Canada, History, Monographs on 2013-03-13 06:07Z by Steven

James Douglas: Father of British Columbia

Dundurn Press
October 2009
240 pages
5.5 in x 8.5 in
Paperback ISBN: 978-1-55488-409-4
eBook ISBN: 978-1-77070-564-7

Julia H. Ferguson

James Douglas’s story is one of high adventure in pre-Confederation Canada. It weaves through the heart of Canadian and Pacific Northwest history when British Columbia was a wild land, Vancouver didn’t exist, and Victoria was a muddy village. Part black and illegitimate, Douglas was born in British Guiana (now Guyana) in 1803 to a Scottish plantation owner and a mixed-race woman. After schooling in Scotland, the fifteen-year-old Douglas sailed to Canada in 1819 to join the fur trade. With roads non-existent, he travelled thousands of miles each year, using the rivers and lakes as his highways. He paddled canoes, drove dogsleds, and snowshoed to his destinations. Douglas became a hard-nosed fur trader, married a part-Cree wife, and nearly provoked a war between Britain and the United States over the San Juan Islands on the West Coast. When he was in his prime, he established Victoria and secured the western region of British North America from the Russian Empire and the expansionist Americans. Eventually, Douglas became the controversial governor of the Colonies of Vancouver Island and British Columbia and oversaw the frenzied Fraser and Cariboo gold rushes.

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