Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker utgitt av Dundurn Group Ltd

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  • av Giles Blunt
    245,-

    At a sanatorium in the Adirondacks, a young tutor falls in love with a mysterious woman suffering from tuberculosis who survived the Lusitania disaster.Recently jilted by his fiancée, Paul Gascoyne takes a job as a tutor to the patients at the Trudeau Sanatorium in upstate New York. There, in the icebound beauty of the Adirondack Mountains, he finds himself drawn to Sarah Ballard, a beautiful but enigmatic young woman, traumatized by her past aboard the ill-fated Lusitania. To rouse her out of her gloom, Paul encourages her to write a memoir.As Paul reads her words, it gradually becomes clear that Sarah's memories are a tangle of truth and fiction that he can't begin to unravel. And yet he cannot overcome his attraction to her. When a terrible relapse leaves her worried that she has little time left, Sarah begs Paul to be the one person in the world who will truly know her.

  • av Dalton McGuinty
    234,-

    McGuinty holds up a torch, lighting the way for politicians struggling to be a "good one."Politics can seem like a rough, seagoing voyage. Storm-tossed politicians may lose sight of their guiding stars. They can lose their way. They can lose themselves. They can end up doing things and saying things that betray their fundamental responsibility to give their very best to those they represent. This book is a compass for politicians and any others seeking to lead with integrity. Dalton McGuinty's purpose is to help leaders in a challenging environment stay true to themselves and those they are privileged to serve. An experienced political leader with over two decades spent in the political arena, McGuinty has masterfully assembled a collection of quotations dating back centuries and accompanied these with his own measured advice.

  • av Scott Stirrett
    245,-

    Embrace the chaos and transform career challenges into opportunities. In a world where the only certainty is change, The Uncertainty Advantage offers young professionals the tools to turn chaos into a career superpower. This indispensable guide illuminates the path to thriving in unpredictable times, equipping readers with the skills to cultivate antifragility, adaptability, and an entrepreneurial mindset. Discover how to embrace challenges, foster broad and deep professional relationships, and nurture self-compassion in an era of rapid technological advances and global upheaval. Whether launching a new venture or navigating your first job, this book provides practical strategies and insights to help you harness uncertainty and build a resilient, dynamic career. Prepare to transform fear into freedom and insecurity into inspiration, setting the foundation for lifelong success and fulfillment in our thrilling yet daunting modern world.

  • av Lorin J. Elias
    202,-

    How brain injuries can result in highly specific, surprising, and revealing changes in behaviour that teach us how the mind works.The brain is the most complicated object in the known universe. After spending millennia trying to understand our ever-changing world, the brain is now turning its capacities for reasoning, remembering, and understanding inward, as it tries to understand itself.The biggest breakthroughs in neuroscience have come mostly by accident. These accidents didn't happen in research labs, but they resulted in infections from uncommon diseases or happened on railway jobs sites, in showers, on bicycles, or in cars and buses.When an individual suffers brain damage as the result of an accident, the negative effects can be profound, life-altering, and life-long, but the insights offered by the effects of these injuries have been revolutionary for neuroscientists. We have learned a tremendous amount about the brain from individuals with acquired brain injuries. These are some of their stories.

  • av Dennis E. Bolen
    245,-

    A teenage boy's tough ride across an unforgiving country.In the year 1967, fifteen-year-old Robin Wallenco steals an antique pick-up truck and heads west from south Saskatchewan, driving on farmland and obscure roads to avoid police. Like Odysseus trying to return to his home, he encounters one mysterious situation after another: men on the run from police and their pasts, hippies trying to create a utopia, farmers switching their crop to marijuana, a raging fire in the Rockies. What he passes through is a microcosm of a massively changing society -- a rural culture that, though eroding, hangs on to values of kindness and endurance, and one in which Robin must act far older than his years.When Robin's purpose is revealed, this story becomes at once heartbreaking and heartwarming, an indirect look at childhood trauma through the eyes of a wildly brave yet non-comprehending victim, a man-boy who is both heroic and vulnerable.A RARE MACHINES BOOK

  • av Adnan Khan
    223,-

    Small-time crook Hamid's search for his missing girlfriend pulls him into the orbit of a charismatic social-media imam.Tax fraud, telemarketing tricks, government scams. If you're tired of receiving these phone calls, imagine the guys making them.Hamid Shaikh is a small-time crook in the big city, hoping that one of his cons will lead to riches. When he's not working the phones hustling bogus duct-cleaning services, he dreams of a move that will finally announce his arrival.When his girlfriend Natalie Mendoza vanishes, he finds himself pulled into the world of former Guantanamo Bay detainee turned social-media imam Abdul Mohammed. As Hamid dives deeper into Abdul's nebulous and luxurious world, he finds a confusing mix of religious fervour and cynical self-advancement, and must decide just how far into darkness he wants to go to get Natalie back.A book of scams religious, political and economic, The Hypebeast is an utterly contemporary look at North American urban striving amid international geopolitical upheaval.

  • av Kasia Van Schaik
    213,-

    A lyrical meditation on the enduring obstacles women artists and writers face in a world still unaccustomed to recognizing female genius.Voted the "Next Picasso" in her rural high school's yearbook, South-African Canadian author Kasia Van Schaik considers what it means for a young woman to take up a mantle usually reserved for white heterosexual male genius. Drawing on a diverse web of literary and cultural sources and artistic icons, from Michelangelo to Ana Mendieta, Gauguin to Gertrude Stein, and Alice Walker to Alice Munro, Women Among Monuments asks what, beyond a room of one's own, are the necessary conditions for female genius? Where does the inner flint of artistic permission come from? What is the oxygen that keeps it burning? Through her lyrical biographies of female solitude, constraint, and perseverance, Kasia Van Schaik blazes a path for more inclusive artmaking practices, communities, and monuments.A RARE MACHINES BOOK

  •  
    234,-

    An anthology of speculative short fiction imagining the possibilities of our food insecure future.Our lives, our culture, our community all start with and revolve around what we eat, and how we eat it. Sharing meals with family and friends has been a hallmark of human society from our earliest beginnings. But we are entering an era of unprecedented change. Climate, technology, the global spread of crop diseases, droughts, and the loss of pollinators threaten to change not only how much food we eat, but what we eat and how we eat it.Devouring Tomorrow explores this strange new menu through the eyes and palates of some of Canada's most exciting authors. See a world with no bees left to pollinate our crops. Encounter lab-grown meat so advanced that it becomes alive. Visit a land where diseases wipe out a common fruit and the society of a nation changes around its loss. This is not the world of the distant future, this is tomorrow.Featuring stories from: Sifton Tracey Anipare - Carleigh Baker - Gary Barwin - Eddy Boudel Tan - Dina Del Bucchia - Catherine Bush - Jowita Bydlowska - Terri Favro - Ji Hong Sayo - Elan Mastai - Lisa de Nikolits - Mark Sampson - Jacqueline Valencia - Anuja Varghese - AGA Wilmot

  • av Clarissa Trinidad Gonzalez
    186,-

    The secrets of the house are the secrets of the heart.It begins with an act of betrayal.What follows is a wave of malas that destroys the tenuous bonds of Celestina Errantes's family. For years, she longs to escape her unhappy home, until an unexpected gift from her wealthy Lolo offers a chance at escape. A long-forsaken and haunted property in Manila's bohemian district, close to where the "low-flying doves" ply their trade. It is no place for a proper young lady, but the house makes Celestina feel at home.Celestina tears into life as a wild child and loses herself in the pleasures of the night. Many life lessons later, she grows up. She captivates an aristocratic restaurateur who promises a new life, in a home without ghosts. Then a voice from the past brings sinister whispers, threatening to drive them apart forever. Can Celestina confront the evil in her house and pull love out of the fire?A RARE MACHINES BOOK

  • av Larry Gaudet
    223,-

    The creator of an immersive eco-game discovers his teen son has joined a terrorist group on a mission to destroy all digital culture and entertainment. And both the creator and his son are on the digital hit list of an elusive assassin.

  • av Domenic Diamante
    233,-

    The Mosaic Myth shows how Canada's 1971 adoption of the cultural mosaic model was doomed by false assumptions. Author Domenic Diamante explains Canada's immigration history and analyzes key questions that informed the country's multiculturalism policy.

  • av A. Gregory Frankson
    213,-

    A memoir of creative non-fiction comprised of twenty-six letters written in poetic prose, Alphabet Soup dives deeply into the scalding heat of memory through a thematic approach that recalls and reframes love, death, joy, sorrow, victory, and devastation, then serves it piping hot in tantalizing doses to sate voracious literary appetites.

  • av Palmiro Campagna
    259,-

  • av Jeremy Appel
    249,-

    Through his thirty years in politics, Jason Kenney successfully shifted Canada's political discourse to the right. To do so, he cultivated a burgeoning right-wing populist movement, of which he ultimately lost control, leading to his downfall.

  • av Gonzalo Riedel
    223,-

    Gonzalo and Erica have one child and another on the way when they discover Erica has terminal cancer. Gonzalo's memoir explores reconciling hope with tragedy and doing your best when you're a widowed single father of two sons under two.

  • av Jon Peirce
    249,-

    Shorter work hours are likely to lead to a happier, healthier, and more productive work force, as well as to reduced stress on the health-care system, since overwork is a key cause of mental and physical illness. Work Less proposes various ways for organizations to achieve shorter hours and offers policy options for use by governments.

  • av Russell Smith
    218,-

    An anthology of erotica by Canadian writers. The writers' names are listed on the cover, but the pieces are not individually attributed. The pieces vary from graphic to surreal. A snapshot of Canadian literary sex in 2024.

  • av Brenda Chapman
    194,-

  • av Paul McLaughlin
    234,-

    Ordinary citizens fought City Hall to have a suicide barrier erected around North America's second most "popular" suicide magnet, the Bloor Viaduct over Toronto's Don Valley.

  • av Brenda Chapman
    196,-

  • av Johanne Durocher
    223,-

    Canadian Nathalie Morin's four children cannot leave Saudi Arabia without exit visas signed by Nathalie's abusive husband. Her mother chronicles her decades-long struggle to bring her daughter and four grandchildren home to safety in Montreal.

  • av Mary Sanders
    224,-

    Olympic gymnast Mary Sanders shares her journey of grief, financial struggles, battles with coaches, rivalries, and injuries, but also her reinventions, as a Cirque du Soleil acrobat, as an entertainment executive, and as a mother.

  • av Mike Commito
    294,-

    For every day of the year, there is Toronto Maple Leafs history to be celebrated or mourned. And with every turn of the page, Mike Commito brings you moments that are sure to remind you why you can't stop loving the Leafs. From the green Toronto St. Patricks to Auston Matthews scoring 60 goals in 2022, Leafs 365 has it all.

  • av Aley Waterman
    224,-

    "In the year following her mother's death, Sophie navigates a complicated love triangle between a new flame and a past partner. It's the west end of Toronto, the apartments are small, and everybody is twenty-seven and making some kind of art. In the wake of her mother's death, Sophie pays rent by making stained glass mosaics for rich people and plays house with her childhood friend and sometimes-lover, the beautiful boy Alex. Both are from Newfoundland but move easily in this world of crowded patios and DIY movie shoots. When Sophie meets the glamorous poet Maggie, who is the downtown product of a hundred cool queer bars, she falls into a bewildered infatuation, but secrets emerge that threaten to crumble the foundation of her relationship with Alex and Maggie both. Moving from bohemian Toronto to an arts colony in a castle in France and then back to Newfoundland, Mudflowers examines the impact of family that one is born into and family one chooses, exploring new and unconventional intimacies."--

  • av Cecil Rosner
    245,-

    Shrinking newsrooms and an explosion in the ranks of spin doctors mean journalists are routinely being duped. Reporters often act as megaphones when they repeat a misleading press release or deceptive poll. Veteran investigative journalist Cecil Rosner exposes the problem and shows how we can do something about it.

  • av Jim Bartley
    234,-

    All that's left of the Bliss clan is seventeen-year-old Cam, his older cousin Wes, and little Dorie, now that Gran passed and Gramps lies dead in the cold cellar. After Children's Aid pays a visit to their secluded farm, the unlikely trio head north, a dead body wrapped in the trunk.

  • av Nathan Whitlock
    192,-

    In a single day, Cat finds out that she is pregnant, that a lump in her breast is the worst thing it could be, and that her husband has done something unforgivably creepy. The culture of striving has caught up to her family - and Cat doesn't handle it the way a middle-class mom is supposed to.

  • av Babak Lakghomi
    175,-

    A journalist travels to the South on a mysterious mission to report on recent strikes in an offshore oil rig. Defending himself against unknown enemies, he spirals into a hallucinatory and haunting landscape. A mystical novel about totalitarianism, surveillance, alienation, and guilt that questions the nature of truth and forces that control us.

  • av Mark Maloney
    378,-

    A history of the city through the lives of its leaders. From its origins as a dusty colonial outpost of just 9,600 residents to a metropolis of three million, this is the first-ever look at all 65 Toronto mayors: the good, the bad, the colourful, the leaders, the rogues, the scoundrels, and the reformers who have made Toronto what it is today.

  • av D A Miller
    250,-

    Black Enterprize chronicles the entrepreneurship of remarkable Black men and women. Icons such as Marcus Garvey, Madam C.J. Walker, Aliko Dangote, Robert F. Smith, and many more take centre stage to showcase the historic achievements of Black people from Britain, America, Africa, Canada, and the Caribbean.

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