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  • av Gilbert Keith Chesterton
    171,-

  • av Guelph Public Library
    332,-

  • av Kathleen James
    163,-

  • av Jeremy Luke Hill
    201,-

  • av James Clarke
    180,-

    JAMES CLARKE has authored many volumes of poetry that explore his role as a judge, as a father, as a husband, and as a man of conscience in the world. These books have earned him a reputation for insight into the nature of human judgment and mercy, forgiveness and responsibility.In WINTER WITH FLOWERS, Clarke turns to more intimate and revealing poems, taking up issues of aging and death, of family and relationship, of doubt and faith, writing himself as a legacy to those who are and were closest to him.

  • av Michael Kleiza
    332,-

  • av Vocamus Writers Community
    151,-

  • av Anne Sutherland Brooks
    170,-

    Anne Sutherland Brooks has long been one of Canada's lost poets. Though her work was at one time internationally recognized with the likes of fellow Canadians William Henry Drummond, Bliss Carmen, and John McCrae, she has now largely been forgotten. This volume offers readers a selection of the work that made her a poet of note in her day, with the hope that it will introduce her to a new generation of readers and re-establish her place in Canadian literature.

  • av Vocamus Writers Community
    154,-

  • av Guelph Public Library
    168,-

  • av Friends of Vocamus Press
    157,-

    RHAPSODY is an annual collection of poetry presented by Friends of Vocamus Press, a non-profit community organization that supports literary culture in Guelph, Ontario. The anthology is a celebration of Guelph, Ontario writing that includes both authors who are well established in their craft and those who are published here for the first time, reflecting the writers and writing that formed the literary communities of Guelph during the year 2016 / 2017.

  • av Ann Clayton
    212,-

    SPEAKING OF WRITING is a collection of interviews conducted by Ann Clayton with Canadian novelists, including Janice Kulyk Keefer, Alice Boissonneau, Joy Kogawa, Aritha van Herk, Stephen Henighan, Jane Urquhart, and Barbara Gowdy.

  • - English South African Fiction Under Apartheid
    av Ann Clayton
    252,-

    POSTCOLONIAL PERSPECTIVES explores South African fiction written under apartheid, including works by Peter Abrahams, Nadine Gordimer, Alex La Guma, Lauretta Ngcobo, Alan Paton, Sol Plaatje, Olive Schreiner, Sydney Sepamla, Mongane Wally Serote, and Pauline Smith. It is written by ANN CLAYTON, the author of several works of literary criticism, including Olive Schreiner: A Casebook (McGraw-Hill), Women and Writing in South Africa: A Critical Anthology (Heinemann), Olive Schreiner (Twayne), and Speaking of Writing: Conversations with Canadian Novelists (Vocamus Community Publications).

  • av Phil (Sheffield Hallam University) Andrews
    161,-

    Thousands of Guelph Mercury readers looked on with shock and regret when the 149-year-old newspaper produced its final edition on January 29, 2016.The development ended a journalistic tradition that was as old as Canada and one that had produced national and provincial honours for its coverage.Now Phil Andrews, former Managing Editor at the Guelph Mercury, has gathered short fiction from nineteen journalists who worked in the Mercury newsroom over the years, to celebrate the paper's legacy.Former readers of the newspaper and fans of vivid, original fiction should delight in this volume of stories from the journalists who served the Guelph community over the Mercury's long history.

  • av Candace De Taeye
    150,-

    Candace de Taeye's debut full-length collection of poetry, Small Planes and the Dead Fathers of Lovers, explores with wit and sincerity ideas of family, relationship, and home. Beginning with poems of movement and travel, the book develops diverse and wide-ranging meditations on what it means to be at home in a place, to grow into it, and then also eventually to leave it. The poetry itself makes full use of the physical page, occupying each corner and making itself comfortable there, visually paralleling the process of being at home that it describes. The imagery moves by pairing seemingly disconnected ideas, strangers to one another, and then coaxing their more subtle connections into visibility, mirroring the way that the collection represents human relationships.The result is a book that provokes reflection on our uncertain contemporary experience of home and relationship in ways that readers will find both emotionally and intellectually compelling.

  • av Friends of Vocamus Press
    113,-

    The RHAPSODY anthology is an annual collection of poetry and very short prose by writers who live in and around the city of Guelph, Ontario. It is a celebration of local writing that includes both authors who are well established in their craft and those who are published here for the first time, reflecting the variety of writers and writing that formed the literary communities of Guelph during 2015 / 2016.

  • av James Clarke
    162,-

    JAMES CLARKE has authored many volumes of poetry that explore his role as a judge, as a father, as a husband, and as a man of conscience in the world. These books have earned him a reputation for insight into the nature of human judgment and mercy, forgiveness and responsibility.THE QUALITY OF MERCY is the second of Clarke's more intimate and revealing collections, following WINTER WITH FLOWERS, that responds to questions of family and spirituality and legacy. Its poetry is deft and mature, sensitive and rich, the gift of a father to his family.

  • av Guelph Public Library
    143,-

    ETCH 2016 is a collection of stories written for the Guelph Public Library's 2016 Teen Writing Contest. There's a story about a man who looks over the edge of the world, about a woman who is bound to a man who does not love her, and about a girl who keeps a book of titles for everyone she meets. There's a story here for everyone, so have a look and discover the one that's waiting for you.

  • av Andrea Perry
    172,-

    Andrea PerryÕs RISE is poetry that maintains a fierce and unflinching hope in the midst of the worldÕs fracture and dislocation. It looks fixedly at social, political, and environmental violence, but never falters in its insistence that other ways of being are possible, that moments of true relation and wholeness might be found, even if only in unexpected ways. It moves frequently by drawing connections between apparently disjointed images and opposed ideas, provoking a surprising sense of unity among what appears to be scattered and disparate elements. In this way it speaks intimately to the complexities of living with both conscience and hope in the world today.

  • av Mary Leslie
    212,-

    THE CROMABOO MAIL CARRIER is the story of a young working class man and a middle-aged gentlewoman making their separate ways in the world of small town Ontario in the mid-1800s. One of the earliest novels by a Canadian female author, the book explores a unique culture where rough settler habits are rubbing up against the expectations of a growing "proper society." Leslie writes with humour and wit, creating characters who are engaging and accessible even after a century and more.

  • av Guelph Public Library
    174,-

    ETCH 2017 is a collection of stories written for the Guelph Public Library's 2017 Teen Writing Contest. There's a story about a girl meeting her dead father's old friend, a story about two soldiers arguing over fruit, and a story about a couple realising they can invent their own fairy tale ending. There's a story here for everyone, so have a look and discover the one that's waiting for you.

  • av Marion Reidel
    154,-

  • av Ann Clayton
    157,-

    MIGRATION is poetry written between two nations - the nation of South Africa, where Ann Clayton was born and developed into a widely published writer, and the nation of Canada, where she now lives and writes.

  • av David J Knight
    153,-

    When John Galt published The Apostate; Or, Atlantis Destroyed in 1814, its portrayal of First Nations peoples was in many ways a real challenge to the colonial assumptions of the day. His 1833 prose version of the story, The New Atlantis, even furthered these challenges, and the two works were not well received by the public when they appeared. Both are presented here in a new edition that also includes Susanna Moodie's contemporary 1814 poem, "The Captive", which makes similarly challenging social commentary on the evils of slavery and the plight of refugees. As early examples of Canadian activist writing, these works are overdue for reevaluation in a world still struggling with many of the injustices that they address.

  • av Our Lady of Lourdes
    145,-

    THE LOURDES ANTHOLOGY is a collection of writing and art from Our Lady of Lourdes High School in Guelph, Ontario, Canada.

  • av Vincent Gilbert
    162 - 391,-

  • av Bieke Stengos
    161,-

    BIEKE STENGOS was born in Flanders, Belgium. She emigrated to Canada in her twenties, and now lives in Guelph, Ontario.TRANSMIGRATOR is her first bundle of poetry.

  • av Friends of Vocamus Press
    140,-

    THE RHAPSODY ANTHOLOGY is an annual collection of poetry and very short prose by writers who live in and around the city of Guelph, Ontario. It is a celebration of local writing that includes both authors who are well established in their craft and those who are published here for the first time, reflecting the variety of writers and writing that formed the literary communities of Guelph during 2014 / 2015.

  • av Michael Kleiza
    140,-

    A Poet on the Moon offers a poetry of broad experience, as diverse in form as it is in theme. It moves between reflection, humour, nostalgia and irony, to express the vast breadth of human experience - love, war, family, aging, loss - in profound new ways.

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