Summer 2021 NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR

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CONTINUE READING
Summer 2021 NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR
IN THE
     NEWFOUNDLAND
       AND LABRADOR
         COLLECTION
Summer 2021

Click on the book cover or title to go directly to our online catalogue.
       Click on eBook or audiobook to go directly to our eLibrary.
Summer 2021 NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR
NON-FICTION
Anstey: a Newfoundland story                                                                               by Archie C. Anstey

              An unforgettable story about an orphan boy and his family living in a small sleepy town in Newfoundland from
              the turn of the last century to present day. Life was not always easy in these outports. Whether it was the
              damp, freezing-cold weather known most of the year, or a larger-than-life iceberg bearing down on you and
              your schooner in the middle of the night, this story of an Anstey family in Newfoundland has something for
              everyone. These are stories of adventure, community, survival, and kindness set in a sometimes cruel and
              unforgiving environment, chronicling the lives and communities they built to not only protect them from the
              elements but ensure their own continued survival.

              Tellwell Talent, 2020

Atlantic Seafood: recipes from Chef Michael Howell                                                          by Michael Howell

               Drawing from over 20 years of experience as a professional chef in Chicago, Staten Island, Boston, and the
               Bahamas, Nova Scotia native and chef Michael Howell brings delicious twists to Atlantic seafood in this new
               cookbook. The book is organized by seafood type, so finding the right recipe is a breeze, and it also means
               home chefs will be able to select meals based on what’s available in their area. An additional section on sus-
               tainable and ethical food choices helps readers make the right choices when it comes to buying Atlantic fish
               and shellfish. A must-have for any seafood enthusiast!

               Nimbus Publishing, 2021

An Atlantic Trilogy: tales of survival and tragedy                                                            by Gordon Snow

              You can observe the life of Thomas, a teenager and part of a fishing family enterprise on Harbour Grace
              Island, Newfoundland and Labrador, in 1922. He has no choice but to accept the rigours of his family's fishing
              operation and must learn to deal with tragedy and isolation. Share his personal account of this adventurous
              island existence. Then spend time with Salmo on his life's adventure as he takes you from the river of his birth
              in Newfoundland out to the Atlantic Ocean and then home again to complete his life cycle. Experience the
              trials and tribulations he faces during this migratory ordeal. Visit a small town in Newfoundland where
              probably the largest herd of pilot whales ever to beach themselves were discovered one fatal morning.
              Witness the chaotic scene as the whales tumbled about on the beach . . . and the human effort employed to
              try and return them to the sea.
              iUniverse, 2015

Autoethnography and Feminist Theory at the Water’s Edge: unsettled islands
                                                                                by Sonja Boon, Leslie Butler and Daze Jeffries

               This book takes an intimate, collaborative, interdisciplinary autoethnographic approach that both emphasizes
               the authors' entangled relationships with the more-than-human, and understands the land and sea-scapes of
               Newfoundland as integral to their thinking, theorizing, and writing. The authors draw on feminist, trans, queer,
               critical race, Indigenous, decolonial, and posthuman theories in order to examine the relationships between
               origins, memories, place, identities, bodies, pasts, and futures. The chapters address a range of concerns,
               among them love, memory, weather, bodies, vulnerability, fog, myth, ice, desire, hauntings, and home.

               Palgrave MacMillan, 2018                                                             Also available as an eBook.

                      Click on the book cover or title to go directly to our online catalogue.
                                Click on eBook or audiobook to go directly to our eLibrary.
Summer 2021 NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR
NON-FICTION
The Big Reset: the report of the Premier’s Economic Recovery Team
                                                                   by The Newfoundland Economic Recovery Commission

             A transformational plan for Newfoundland and Labrador that attempts to tie all aspects of the economy and
             society together to meet some of the biggest challenges and opportunities ever faced by the province.

             Newfoundland Economic Recovery Commission, 2021

Boating, Fishing and Hunting in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, 1965-66                            by Llewelyn Pritchard

             A unique collection of 49 historical photographs with original captions about boating, fishing and hunting in
             Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada 1965 – 66. Taken by John Penny, an 18 year old Voluntary Service
             Overseas (VSO) teacher from the UK who lived and worked in the local community school from 1965-66. The
             photographs make an important contribution to the cultural, educational and natural history of the period and
             beautifully depict the rich tapestry of life in and around Nain at the time. Each photo album focuses on
             different aspects of the community’s way of life.

             Self-published, 2010

The Church of England Orphanage in Newfoundland: 1855-1969                                                 by Geoff Peddle

               In 2020, the Church of England Orphanage in Newfoundland marks the 165th anniversary of its founding.
               From its beginning in 1855 as the Newfoundland Church of England Asylum for Widows and Orphans,
               following a devastating outbreak of cholera in St. John's, until its ending in 1969, approximately 2000
               children were cared for by the institution. And not just children; until 1908 widows were also included. And
               even when the orphanage closed, the Anglican Church continued the good work it had done with children
               and their families by investing the assets into The Anglican Charitable Foundation for Children (ACFC). In
               the years since, the ACFC has helped more than 39,000 children and young people and distributed over $8
               million.
               Self-published, 2020

Dildo, Newfoundland                                                                                       by K. Bruce Lane

                  This book offers a photographic tour of the charming, vibrant town located in Trinity Bay, about eighty
                  kilometres west of St. John’s. Dildo’s unusual name has brought it a certain amount of notoriety. In
                  August 2019, the American late-night talk show Jimmy Kimmel Live! focused on Dildo over a number of
                  episodes. As part of the activity, which brought the small rural community immediate international fame,
                  host Jimmy Kimmel was made honorary mayor of Dildo. Kimmel declared Hollywood as Dildo’s sister
                  city.
                  Flanker Press, 2021

                    Click on the book cover or title to go directly to our online catalogue.
                             Click on eBook or audiobook to go directly to our eLibrary.
Summer 2021 NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR
NON-FICTION
East Coast Keto 2: more tips & lessons to help simplify your ketogenic lifestyle
                                                                                                by Bobbie Pike with Geoff Pike
                  Just when you thought it was impossible to find ketogenic meals that the whole family can enjoy, Bobbi
                  Pike and her husband, Geoff, return with another generous serving of low-carb keto dishes that will have
                  even the most finicky eater in the family asking for seconds. With over 100 new keto recipes, East Coast
                  Keto 2 will teach you how to enjoy all the foods you love—ketofied! From show-stopping appetizers and
                  entrees to delicious fat bombs and mouth watering desserts, Bobbi and Geoff help you simplify your
                  keto lifestyle the East Coast way. With tips, lessons, quick facts, and traditional meals made healthy,
                  East Coast Keto 2 offers all the flavours you love with zero guilt.
                  Breakwater Books, 2021

Growlers vs. Everybody: the remarkable story of Newfoundland’s first professional hockey championship
                                                                                                                by Chris Ballard
                    This beautiful book captures every moment of the Newfoundland Growlers’ historic inaugural season and
                    Kelly Cup championship, complete with full-colour photos from Team Photographers Jeff Parsons and
                    Joe Chase, behind-the-scenes stories, never-before-seen images, statistics, and more.
                    From the inception of the team and the creation of the brand to the Kelly Cup Finals and ensuing
                    celebrations, Growlers vs Everybody gives you an inside-the-ropes look at the highs and the lows of one
                    of the most incredible inaugural seasons in professional sports history, and the impact it had on the prov-
                    ince of Newfoundland and Labrador and its people.
                    Newfoundland Growlers, 2020

I Am Funny Like That: a funny look at life                                                                   by Helen C. Escott

                Join bestselling award-winning author Helen C. Escott as she takes us through the humour, wit, and
                strangeness that is life on this planet. If you've ever thrown out your back taking off Spanx, planned your
                husband's murder in your head, or screamed through a Brazilian, this book is for you.

                Engen Books, 2021

Leftover Stew                                                                                                 by Donald Hodder

                Dr. Donald Hodder was born and raised in a small out-port of fewer than 400 people on the south coast of
                Newfoundland. He was destined to become a carpenter, a teacher, a preacher and, for forty-five years, a fam-
                ily physician. He was privileged to attend Dalhousie University Medical School in Halifax, Nova Scotia and
                graduated in 1969. He has been married to Joan Inkpen of Burin, Newfoundland, for fifty-eight years and they
                have two adult children and three grandchildren. His first book, Follow Your Bliss, was published in 2017 and
                profits have been donated to local charities. Profits from this book will also go to local charities.

                Self-published, 2012

The Mosses of Bonavista Bay and Beyond: from Dorset to the ends of the earth                           by Malcolm William Moss

                     Traces the origins of the Moss Family in Newfoundland and Labrador and their dispersion all over North
                     America.

                     Self-published, 2014, 2020

                       Click on the book cover or title to go directly to our online catalogue.
                                Click on eBook or audiobook to go directly to our eLibrary.
Summer 2021 NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR
NON-FICTION
A Newfoundland Garden: growing fabulous flowers, fruit, and vegetables in a maritime climate
                                                                                                             by Todd Boland
                Gardening in Newfoundland comes with a distinct set of challenges, including erratic weather, variable sea-
                sons, and unique geology and soil conditions. But with the right knowledge and careful plant selection,
                beautiful and bountiful gardens are not only possible, but within just about everyone’s reach.
                In A Newfoundland Garden, author Todd Boland draws on four decades of hands-on gardening experi-
                ence as well as his work at Memorial University’s Botanical Gardens to deliver a beginner-friendly guide to
                designing, planting, and caring for your garden. Learn to select the best perennials for your area, choose the
                perfect tree, plan your backyard vegetable garden, successfully grow fruits and berries, and much more.
                Dedicated to all the determined gardeners in this province, A Newfoundland Garden is a comprehensive
                and practical guide to set you up for gardening success.
                Boulder Books, 2021

People’s Recovery: a discussion paper
             The People's Recovery is a collaborative effort among organizations and individuals supporting the values and
             principles as outlined at peoplesrecoverynl.ca. They believe in charting a course for social, fiscal, and
             economic recovery in Newfoundland and Labrador, and a longer-term future, that is equitable, democratic,
             transparent, and fair. They believe that a strong economy starts with a fair and inclusive society and that
             solutions to the challenges we face should come from communities.

              2021

Port-Hope Simpson Diaries 1969-70, Volume 2                                                            by Llewelyn Pritchard

              The original diaries of Ernie Pritchard - written as a way of helping him adapt to his new surroundings when
              he was 18 years of age on Voluntary Service Overseas from 1969 to 1970 in Port Hope Simpson. Includes
              newspaper articles, photographs, maps and illustrations. Find out what it was like, in his own words, to spend
              Christmas 1969 and beyond in the small isolated community on the Labrador coast of Canada.

              Self-published. 2010                                                                Also available as an eBook.

La présence française à Terre-Neuve-et-Labrador: d’hier à demain = The French Presence in Newfoundland
and Labrador: past, present and future     collected and co-edited by Scott Jamieson, Anne Pelta and Anne Tharaeu
               This collection presents some of the papers given during the international conference "The French Presence
               in Newfoundland and Labrador: Past, Present, and Future." This multi-disciplinary event was organized in an
               attempt to assess the state of knowledge in the field of French Newfoundland Studies.

               Includes some papers in French.

               Faculty of Arts Publications, Memorial University of Newfoundland, 2018

                     Click on the book cover or title to go directly to our online catalogue.
                              Click on eBook or audiobook to go directly to our eLibrary.
Summer 2021 NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR
NON-FICTION
A Rising Tide: A cookbook of recipes & stories from Canada’s Atlantic                      by DL Acken and Emily Lycopolus

                 A Rising Tide is a delicious love letter to the culinary renaissance of Canada's Atlantic Coast written by DL
                 Acken and Emily Lycopolus -- both of whom grew up eating classic Atlantic Canadian dishes and spent
                 months in the region exploring its burgeoning food scene. Whether you are discovering the East Coast's
                 countryside, seaside towns, or bustling cities, there is a thriving food scene, united by a revived culinary
                 identity that celebrates the region's terroir, and marries heritage with innovation. Enjoy more than 100
                 inventive recipes, many by beloved local chefs, and travel to meet the fishermen, producers, foragers, and
                 restaurateurs who have come to define the region's incredible cuisine. Celebrate local ingredients for each
                 meal of the day no matter where you are thanks to the book's ingredient substitutions guide. Featuring
                 seasonal menus as well as gorgeous landscape and food photography throughout, A Rising Tide is a sou-
                 venir and a delicious roadmap to enjoy all of Atlantic Canada's wonders.
                 Appetite by Random House, 2021                                                   Also available as an eBook.

Rough justice: policing, crime, and the origins of the Newfoundland Constabulary. 1729-1871
                                                                                                             by Keith Mercer
             Rough Justice is a history of policing and crime in early Newfoundland. It focuses on the period between the
             appointment of the first constables on the island in 1729 to the establishment of the Newfoundland
             Constabulary in 1871, now known as the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary. This makes the
             Constabulary the oldest continuous police service in Canada. This book concentrates on regular constables
             and their lived experiences in the court system and in the community. These law officers, who were largely
             ignored by politicians at the time and by historians in recent decades, were critical to making that justice
             system work. This social and legal study brings their stories to life for the first time. Case studies provide
             fascinating glimpses into the dangers of law enforcement across the island, not just in St. John's and
             Conception Bay, but also in rural districts such as Trinity and Placentia. First and foremost, these men, mostly
             untrained amateurs, were officers of the court, but they also played important roles in some of the most nota-
             ble historical events and social crises over the course of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. With a fore-
             word by Edward Roberts, former lieutenant-governor of Newfoundland and Labrador.

             Flanker Press, 2021                                                                  Also available as an eBook.

Second Helping: Newfoundland, Labrador, Nunavut and travels beyond… a memoir                          by John P. Christopher

              The author's travels take us back to Newfoundland, Labrador and Nunavut after an absence of almost fifty
              years, where he critically surveys the decaying remains of European influences of Moravian missionaries in
              that area during their two hundred–year stay. The remnants of the hundred-year-long period of Basques
              whaling in southern Labrador are explored, as are the few remnants of the Norse settlement at L'Anse aux
              meadows in Northern Newfoundland 1000 CE. Why was it abandoned after a stay of only a decade? How is
              global warming affecting the lives of Inuit and wildlife in Nunavut today? What is happening in the world's
              oceans and to its inhabitants?

              Trafford, 2017                                                                      Also available as an eBook.

Shrubs and Vines for Atlantic Canada: choose the best plants for your location                               by Todd Boland

                Shrubs and vines make up the skeleton of a garden, providing structure, defining spaces, and contributing
                to privacy or windbreaks. Some are chosen for flamboyant floral displays, others for colourful leaves. But
                they can be tricky to grow and maintain in this region’s climate and soil conditions.
                Written specifically for Atlantic Canada, this guide gives you the tools and information you need to select,
                place, and care for the shrubs and climbers best suited to your garden.
                Include hundreds of the author’s own full-colour photographs to inspire and inform.

                Boulder Books, 2021

                     Click on the book cover or title to go directly to our online catalogue.
                               Click on eBook or audiobook to go directly to our eLibrary.
Summer 2021 NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR
NON-FICTION
Skyway: the true story of Tampa Bay’s Signature Bridge and the man who brought it down                         by Bill DeYoung

              On the morning of May 9, 1980, during sudden violent weather, a 600-foot freighter struck a support pier of
              the fifteen-mile Sunshine Skyway Bridge. The main span splintered and collapsed 150 feet into Tampa Bay.
              Seven cars and a Greyhound bus fell over the broken edge and into the churning water below. Thirty-five
              people died, including two vacationing Newfoundland couples: Reg and Phyllis Hudson, and Wills (Bill) and
              Myrtle Brown. Skyway tells the entire story of this horrific event.

              University Press of Florida, 2013, 2016

Stained Glass Windows of the Basilica-Cathedral of St. John the Baptist, St. Johns, Newfoundland:
an illustrated guide                                                                 by John Edward Fitzgerald

              This book is an illustrated guide to the beautiful stained glass windows that can be found throughout the
              Basilica. It provides details about each window as well as full-colour images. There is also a section that
              provides some of the history of the Basilica. With photographs by Robert Young.

              Terra Nova Publishing, 2018

Teacher, Hunter, Fisher, Musician: a 101 years in the life of Clarence Riggs                                       by Phil Riggs

              Clarence Riggs lived a wonderful and colourful 101 years. It was filled with lots of exciting adventures that
              saw him mentally alert and mobile right up until he passed away. Come along on his journey as we learn
              about the joys and sorrows he experienced throughout his life and learn of the people who were affected by
              him. From his earliest days, when he lost his father at the age of three when the crew of the Mina Swim was
              lost at sea, to his youthful days growing up on the Burin Peninsula, his long illustrious teaching career, raising
              a family and eventually his years of retirement- a retirement that left him with years to be active at all the
              pleasures in life he could enjoy.

              Self-published

POETRY
And Yet                                                                                                         by John Steffler

              A former Poet Laureate of Canada and finalist for the Griffin Poetry Prize returns with a wide-ranging new col-
              lection of poems. Described as "one of our finest lyric poets" and "part keen-eyed naturalist, part exuberant
              philosopher," John Steffler returns with a new collection of graceful, resonant poems.

              McClelland &Stewart, 2020

                      Click on the book cover or title to go directly to our online catalogue.
                               Click on eBook or audiobook to go directly to our eLibrary.
Summer 2021 NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR
POETRY
An Ode to Newfoundland: poems                                                                                 by Lynn DeTurk

              “De Turk’s poetry shivers with sound, is as tactile as lichens on granite, peppery on the tip of the tongue,
              transparent as the water, vivid and evocative. This is a squall of love for everything Newfoundland.”- Lisa
              Moore

              Cave Moon Press, 2019

A Place Like No Other                                                                                          by Adrian Payne

               As a young boy growing up, I was surrounded by nature. The ocean was at my door step to the West and the
               Long Range Mountains were to the East. It was a beautiful place to live and grow up and it inspired me
               greatly from a very young age. It had so much to offer our young minds and idle hands. As a young boy, I was
               never bored. I would spend long summer days combing the beaches and exploring the woodlands. I helped
               my grandparents make hay. I remember picking wild berries and smothering them with fresh cream from my
               grandmothers milk house. Now that I am older and retired, I often reflect on my life as a fisherman, outfitter
               and guide. My whole life, I was always in tune with nature since I made my living from the ocean and the land.
               Everything we own, our house, food, vehicles, everything we set our eyes on comes from Mother Earth;
               without her we would have nothing. We extract her minerals, oil, timber and fish and leave behind what’s left
               over, which has a deadly effect on Mother Nature. We are seeing such things as devastating fires, holes in
               the ozone layer, rise in sea levels due to melting glaciers and tons of plastic in our oceans. We do not treat
               this Earth kindly! How much more can Mother Earth and Nature give us before it can give no more? When
               we’ve extracted every mineral, every litre of oil, cut down every tree, taken every fish from the ocean and
               earth has nothing left to give, then we will be next to go and the earth will become another Moon Scape. That
               being said, we must choose our actions wisely and our deeds carefully. If not, we will surely hear the ticking of
               the clock and the silent sound of Nature.
               Self-published, 2020

Silver Linings: selected stories and poems                                                              by Isabel M. Blackmore

               Writing from an early age, Isabel Blackmore was a commentator for CBC Radio in Gander for 10 years and
               was a co-founder of Scribblers, ink., an early support group for Gander writers. Her work has been recognized
               by the Writers’ Alliance of Newfoundland and Labrador and the Writers’ Federation of Nova Scotia.

               Self-published, 2020

This is How it Is                                                                                    by Sharon King-Campbell

               Illuminating, poised, and wholly original, the poems of Sharon King-Campbell's This Is How It Is range
               across the planet from New Zealand to Thailand to Newfoundland, gathering along the way voices both histor-
               ical and mythological in a compelling display of dramatic empathy and poetic imagination. Subverting history
               and fable while always returning to vividly depicted images of our landscapes within the specter of environ-
               mental crisis, King-Campbell spans the far corners of the earth and the previously silent voices of our collec-
               tive pasts to arrive here at our contemporary moment with poems of formal dexterity, as prescient as they are
               captivating.

               Breakwater Books, 2021                                                               Also available as an eBook.

                      Click on the book cover or title to go directly to our online catalogue.
                               Click on eBook or audiobook to go directly to our eLibrary.
Summer 2021 NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR
FICTION
Alone on the Trail                                                                                           by Emily Hepditch

              Four best friends. One wrong turn. One shack hidden in the mountains. To celebrate their graduation from
              university, Sadie, Julie, Morgan, and Jonah decide to spend a week backcountry hiking in western
              Newfoundland, tackling a remote route through the Long Range Mountains. Zealous, rambunctious, and
              overconfident, the group embarks on their self-proclaimed adventure of a lifetime in Gros Morne National
              Park. But alone on a trail with nowhere to hide, secrets begin to ooze through the cracks of their bond. The
              farther into the forest the group moves, the more they drift apart, until their friendship becomes as difficult to
              navigate as the look-alike trees. And when they stumble upon an illegal hunting shack, the companions sud-
              denly find themselves in possession of dangerous knowledge. Injured, separated, and being hunted by expert
              poachers, the friends must find a way to get back home before they succumb to the dangers of the trail—and
              the dangers posed by one another.
              Flanker Press, 2021                                                                    Also available as an eBook.

Anastasia’s Journey                                                                                     by Mary (Hann) Galuga

              In 1930, Anastasia was sent from her home in Princeton to Isle aux Morts, Newfoundland to care for her ailing
              grandmother. She resisted at first but was finally shamed into answering the call for the sake of family pride
              and duty. While in Isle aux Morts, seventeen year old Anastasia had many adventures including saving
              countless lives and falling in love. This is her story.

              Self-published, 2021

The Broken Spire                                                                                                by John Dobbin

              Tales of the flying castle have driven the fates of humans for generations -- those who quest it, and those who
              seek to protect it as their home. Bijan, a treasure hunter and adventurer, is compelled to find the castle of
              legend and prove its reality... so much so that he allows himself to be taken in by mysterious employers and
              their unconventional guide. What is their true purpose with the castle in the clouds? Leandra, princess of the
              flying castle, finds herself caught in the political games of life in the castle. She is told that she must wed a
              man she despises in order to preserve her people and their culture, but she knows the lies of men and how
              they use them to get their way. Can she uncover the truth? Edric, an apprentice mage, prepares for the next
              stage of his training. He is to come of age as one of the magical guardians of the castle. He knows he should
              be happy -- proud even -- but there is something sinister on the edges of the ceremony. Why are the mages
              never seen again once they take their holy vows? A boy enslaved by magic. A princess imprisoned by her
              lineage. A man in search of a legend. Their paths will cross as they attempt to escape Appolumi, the flying
              castle of legend, the mythical forces within, and the bandits from below.
              Engen Books, 2021

Carcharodon                                                                                                    by Paul Carberry

              The small island of Newfoundland and its people are used to the perils of the sea, and the mysteries that lie
              beneath its murky depths. But even they could not have been prepared for the horrors that arose from be-
              neath the decks of the swift current one dark evening. That night, the sea birthed a perfect predator: hundreds
              of years old and gargantuan in size, with hungry jaws that have never needed to evolve, and glassy eyes that
              disguise a fierce intelligence. Can Newfoundland and her people survive this horror from an age gone by?

              Engen Books, 2020

                     Click on the book cover or title to go directly to our online catalogue.
                              Click on eBook or audiobook to go directly to our eLibrary.
Summer 2021 NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR
FICTION
Constant Nobody                                                                                      by Michelle Butler Hallett

             The time is 1937. The place: the Basque Country, embroiled in the Spanish Civil War. Polyglot and British
             intelligence agent Temerity West encounters Kostya Nikto, a Soviet secret police agent. Kostya has been dis-
             patched to assassinate a doctor as part of the suppression of a rogue communist faction. When Kostya finds
             his victim in the company of Temerity, she expects Kostya to execute her -- instead, he spares her.
             Several weeks later, Temerity is reassigned to Moscow. When she is arrested by the secret police, she once
             again encounters Kostya. His judgement impaired by pain, morphine, and alcohol, he extricates her from a
             dangerous situation and takes her to his flat. In the morning, they both awaken to the realities of what Kostya
             has done. Although Kostya wants to keep Temerity safe, the cost will be high. And Temerity must decide
             where her loyalties lie.
             Writing about violence with an unusual grace, Michelle Butler Hallett tells a story of complicity, love, tyranny,
             and identity. Constant Nobody is a thrilling novel that asks how far an individual will go to protect another —
             whether out of love or fear.
             Nimbus Publishing, 2021                                                               Also available as an eBook.

Don’t be Talkin’: recitations and other foolishness from Newfoundland and Labrador                              by Harry Ingram

             Within this book you’ll find stories and recitations told by the incomparable performer Harry Ingram. There are
             whimsical yarns of friendly moose and grouchy uncles, mixed with heartwarming tales about family and
             friends. You’ll also find yourself laughing out loud at some outlandish dialogue! How about a group of elderly
             ladies who create a bartering system that almost takes down the economy? Or perhaps Christmas nearly
             being ruined due to a labour dispute at the North Pole? Then comes a heartfelt account of a father and
             teenaged son, armed with a bucksaw and axe, embarking on a woodcutting expedition. From tear-jerking
             dramas to those that will tickle your funny bone, you’ll find them all in here.

             Flanker Press, 2021

Exposure                                                                                                         by Erin Vance

             Look, all Joshua Deering wanted was to pass his final photography project. It should have been simple: find a
             subject, take some photos, get an A, and get his dad off his back. But that's not what happened. And, okay,
             maybe he should've known better than to befriend a guy chilling out in a cemetery. Maybe he should've taken
             the hint when a mysterious girl stepped out of the mist and announced that there might be hunters after the
             cemetery guy. And maybe he should've studied more for his other exams instead of panicking about his
             project. But hindsight is 20/20, and now creepy cemetery guy Adrian, Josh, and Josh's two friends are being
             stalked by nameless, violent strangers. Their only defence is a heavy bookbag, an expensive camera,
             Adrian's big secret (that actually might be the reason behind this mess), and a lot of optimism.

             Engen Books, 2020

The Forgotten Worlds Series                                                                            by Prudence MacLeod

             This fantasy/Sci-fi series includes seven titles: Suvi, Echo, Jake, Ship, Fleet, Unite and Igen.

             From Suvi:
             Enslaved as a child, her DNA altered until she was barely half human, Jeannie Sorenson still managed to
             engineer her escape back to the ship that brought her to that deadly planet. Could the humans accept her
             now that she was half alien? Could she learn to interact with them and still retain her freedom? And why the
             hell did they keep asking her for answers when they didn’t want to hear them?

             Shadoe Publishing, 2018-2021                                                            Also available as eBooks.

                    Click on the book cover or title to go directly to our online catalogue.
                             Click on eBook or audiobook to go directly to our eLibrary.
FICTION
Garden of the 8th Circle: An Infinites Novel                                             by Ellen Curtis and Matthew LeDrew

              There is a house standing alone in the wilderness of Arizona where sane men dare not go. Years ago,
              something happened to Victor there that changed his view on the world, the man he would become, and the
              path he would take to make people safe. Now the people who had lived in that house have returned to seek
              their revenge, and Victor's team -- Chad, Abby, Alice & Theo -- are closer than ever to discovering the dark
              secrets of his past. Can Victor stop these ghosts from his past before they cost even more innocent lives?

              Engen Books, 2020

The Gut                                                                                                        by Brad Dunne

              Welcome to The Gut. Maria Costa was doing just fine working as a private investigator: digging up dirt
              on the husbands of rich wives and getting drunk in the time between. That was before a new case pulled her
              back to The Gut, a dark ghetto she'd avoided since she quit being a cop. On the surface it looks like
              The Gut has changed — the body count has dropped, and the politicians are calling it a renaissance. But
              Maria's ex-partner, Kieran Hynes, suspects there's a sinister reality to the improvements: prostitutes and drug
              dealers are going missing, falling off the face of the earth. Can Maria and Kieran stop the ancient evil threat-
              ening life in their entire city?

              Engen Books, 2020

The Hanged Woman’s Daughter                                                                           by Nellie P. Strowbridge

              Where does a person go when she loses her family, her home, and her place in a community? What can she
              do when she feels that she doesn’t belong anywhere or to anyone? After John Snow of Salmon Cove
              disappears and Catherine, his wife, is convicted of complicity in his murder and hanged in 1834, Bridget, their
              eldest daughter, faces the challenge of losing more than her family and their home. She risks losing herself as
              she sets out on a perilous journey fraught with mystery, and her future unfolds in a way she had not dared
              imagine. Strowbridge weaves a tantalizing tale of the elusive Bridget, the scattering of her family by a
              heartless magistrate, and her attempt at anonymity—all on the heels of her mother’s execution, whose death
              is made all the more devastating when Catherine Snow’s apparent criminal guilt is brought into question. A
              poignant and engrossing novel enriched by its Newfoundland flavour.
              Flanker Press, 2021                                                                  Also available as an eBook.

Lady of Vision: Daughters of Aether Book 1                                                                by Amanda Labonté

              In a time when other young women are learning the art of pouring the perfect cup of tea, Lady Hazel
              Winchester dreams of a front page byline. Just because the war with the Americas is over doesn't mean there
              isn't a story hiding in the aether tinged streets of London and she means to uncover it. But perhaps the
              biggest story of all is the secret she's keeping about herself.

              Engen Books, 2021

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FICTION
Last Hummingbird West of Chile                                                                             By Nicholas Ruddock

              A stunning work of imaginative fiction, Last Hummingbird West of Chile spins a tale of adventure that is in
              turn comedic, violent, poignant and thoughtful. Through the exploits of a young sailor born in questionable
              circumstance and a pair of murderous servants, as well as an assortment of other 19th century regulars, the
              vital subjects of today--race, religion, sexuality, environment--are framed in history and human culture.
              Through narration by human protagonists, a tree, a hummingbird, various beasts, and the landscape itself,
              Ruddock tells a story of colonialism and environment, brutality and privilege, and the best and worst of human
              nature.

              Breakwater Books, 2021

The Love of Julia                                                                                           by Sarah Thompson

              In the cutthroat world of high-stakes journalism, the job has to absorb you. There can't be anything to distract
              you from the next scoop, the next clue, the next story. That suited Steph just fine. She’s done everything
              possible to keep her personal life private. Unfortunately, that means when her girlfriend leaves her, Steph has
              no one to lean on. Then Julia Demendo pushes her way in, like any intrepid journalist, and places herself as
              the one friend Steph can rely on. But friendships can be hard enough among coworkers without falling
              in love with them. Steph must weave her way carefully as the new boss, juggling a major murder story, adding
              to her news team, and learning to date all over again. Can she do it all without letting her attraction
              to Julia win out? Or will her feelings topple her carefully constructed persona?
              Book 2 of the Northbeach Romances series
              Engen Books, 2020

The Retreat: a novel                                                                                    by Elisabeth de Mariaffi

              Maeve Martin arrives at the High Water Center for the Arts determined to do one thing: launch her own dance
              company. Time is running out for the former principal dancer and mother of two to find her feet again after the
              collapse of a disastrous and violent marriage. At first, there’s a thrill to being on her own for the first time in
              years, isolated in the beauty of a snowy mountain lodge. But when an avalanche traps the guests inside, ten-
              sions run high. Help is coming, so they just have to hold on, don’t they? But as days pass, the other guests
              are struck down by mysterious deaths, one by one. Now, as she waits in fear, Maeve must admit how little
              she knows about anyone else . . . and how useless a locked door is if the darkness is already inside.

              Harper Collins Canada, 2021

My Father’s Son                                                                                                   by Tom Moore

              Felix Ryan is a high school teacher jaded after twenty-five years in the classroom. We find him on the edge of
              a cliff in St. John's having a serious mid-life crisis. But everything changes when he gets a call from an old
              lover, Tammy Green. She tells him that someone is stealing his family land in their hometown, Curlew. John
              Baron, an oil magnate from North Dakota, wants to start fracking and promises millions to the community if
              they sign his leases. Only Felix's father objects to the project. Felix returns to his hometown, where he finds
              himself in the biggest and most important fight of his life.

              Flanker Press, 2021

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                              Click on eBook or audiobook to go directly to our eLibrary.
FICTION
New Girl in Little Cove                                                                                     by Damhnait Monaghan

               It's 1985. Rachel O'Brien arrives in Little Cove seeking a fresh start after her father dies and her relationship
               ends. As a new teacher at the local Catholic high school, Rachel chafes against the small community, where
               everyone seems to know her business. The anonymous notes that keep appearing on her car, telling her to
               go home, don't make her feel welcome either. Still, Rachel is quickly drawn into the island's distinctive music
               and culture as well as the lives of her students and fellow teacher, Doug Bishop. As Rachel begins to bond
               with her students, her feelings for Doug also begin to grow. Rachel tries to ignore her emotions because Doug
               is in a long-distance relationship with his high school sweetheart. Or is he? Eventually, Rachel's beliefs clash
               with Church and community, and she makes a decision that throws her career into jeopardy. In trying to help
               a student, has she gone too far? Only the intervention of the Holy Dusters, local women who hook rugs and
               clean the church, can salvage Rachel's job as well as her chance at a future with Doug.
               Harper Collins, 2021                                                                      Also available as an eBook.
                                                                                               Also available as a digital audiobook.

Safe Harbour                                                                                                          by Mike Martin

               Sgt. Windflower is on a special assignment in St. John’s and adjusting to life in the big city. He is navigating
               traffic, a difficult boss at work and what seems like an epidemic of missing girls. He becomes more interested
               when he discovers that one of the girls is from Grand Bank. Then a girl approaches his RCMP van one night
               and he is pulled into the underlife of the capital city. But he still manages to enjoy all of the good things in life.
               His family, old and new friends, and the love of living so close to the Atlantic Ocean.

               Book 10 in the Sgt. Windflower Mystery series.
               Ottawa Press and Publishing, 2021

Slipstreamers series                                                                                         by JD Ryot and guests

               Slipstreamers, the revolutionary new series from Engen Books, has been making waves in the indus-
               try with its adaptive structure on serialized fiction, allowing multiple authors to write the same series while
               maintaining a solid, entertaining tone. The series takes on the structure of a television series, with individual
               episodes each co-written by head writer JD Ryot and a guest author, each taking main character Cassidy
               Cane to a new world and leading up to an explosive finale!
               Guest authors include: Lisa M. Daly, Jon Dobbin, Peter Foote, Ali House, Matthew Ledrew, Nicole Little,
               Jennifer Shelby and more.

               Engen Books 2020

Us, Now: Stories from the Quilted Collective                                                                   edited by Lisa Moore

               Us, Now roves from Indonesia to the Middle East, Taiwan, Mexico, China, Africa, Jamaica, Barbados, India,
               Pakistan, and points in between, converging in Newfoundland. These stories by racialized Newfoundlanders
               are by turns joyous, tender, hilarious, and heart-wrenching. They confront racism and celebrate the act of
               enduring. They are about settling and getting unsettled, about parents and their children, about language,
               about facing down the horrors of homophobia, about the joy of love, about lifelong relationships or the glee of
               a magnificent crush. Here social and domestic violence are countered with tenderness and the penetrating
               power of narrative. This is a book about distance and coming together, about what it means to be seen and
               understood, or—devastatingly—to be seen and judged, or to be invisible and misunderstood. What it means
               to belong. These are new writers and new visions of an in-the-present-moment Newfoundland, stories shaped
               by powerful voices, stories urgent, radical, and sparking with beauty.
               Breakwater Books, 2021

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                                Click on eBook or audiobook to go directly to our eLibrary.
FICTION
Variety Show                                                                                                       by Ali House

               Wendy Marshall never considered becoming an actor. That was, until she happened upon an ad for a local
               theatre company that she had never known existed. Now, six months later, she's discovered a new passion,
               new friends, new family, and even new love. But there's still more that she wants. After finally landing the lead
               role in the Quaint Little Theatre's newest play, she's determined to show the rest of the troupe that she can
               handle the pressure and pull off a great performance. But when strange things start happening at the theatre,
               her focus is torn. Have they somehow awakened a vengeful spirit? Is a mysterious illness making its way
               through the troupe? Has her dream role turned into a nightmare? It's said that all theatres have ghosts, but
               what if there's something much more sinister lurking within the basement of The Quaint Little Theatre?
               Engen Books, 2019

CHILDREN & YOUNG ADULT
Ashes                                                                                                      by Lauralana Dunne

               When fifteen-year-old Phoenix loses her caregiver, everyone that she has ever known inexplicitly turns their
               back on her. Given the impossible burden of repaying an unknown debt, Phoenix sets out on her own with her
               trusty donkey, Muler, as her only companion. However, the roads are not safe, and Phoenix finds herself
               navigating the unfamiliar terrain of the Darkened Wood, scrambling to escape the unseen creatures that have
               designated her as their prey. A chance encounter with Malcourt, a mysterious traveller, not only saves her life,
               but sets it on a trajectory that she would have never thought possible. Buoyed by the support of her newfound
               friends, she settles into life at Castle Angor and attempts to carve a place for herself. A chance encounter with
               Rorin, the gargoyle spy, has her agreeing to the incredible task of protecting King Benedict, and keeping the
               kingdom of Angoria safe. As suspicions grow within the castle walls, so do Phoenix’s mysterious gifts, and so
               does her resolve. In a race against time, Phoenix must learn to control her Power and stop a deadly threat, or
               risk losing everything - and everyone - she has come to hold dear.
               Engen Books, 2020

Bizzie Tizzie is Gonna Be Everything from A to Z                                                              by Yvonne Bryant

                  Come along with Bizzie Tizzie as she takes you to the moon and back and all the exciting possibilities in
                  between!

                  Illustrated by Kevin and Jessica Tobin.

                  SaltWire Printing, 2021

Captured in Paint                                                                                              by Ann M. Miller

               Ice Princess. That’s what the kids at St Peter’s High call seventeen-year-old Julia Parsons, the girl who
               doesn’t show emotion. But that all changes when Julia loses the protection of her late mother's charmed
               necklace and the emotions that have been locked deep inside her are unleashed. Now, after years of priding
               herself on being calm, cool and collected, Julia is forced to accept two life-altering revelations—she can feel
               just as deeply as any other teen and her emotions can make paintings come alive. As Julia struggles to
               control her ability, she discovers that her boyfriend, Nick, is trapped inside a mural that she herself created.
               She enters the wintry world to save him before it’s painted over but quickly realises that a mysterious force is
               keeping Nick tethered to the work of art. Unless Julia can learn how to harness the power of her new and
               unfamiliar emotions, they won’t make it out of the painting alive.
               Finch Books, 2021                                                                     Also available as an eBook.

                      Click on the book cover or title to go directly to our online catalogue.
                               Click on eBook or audiobook to go directly to our eLibrary.
CHILDREN & YOUNG ADULT
East Coast Counting                                                                                              by Dawn Baker

                   A colourful and educational picture book featuring iconic imagery from the four Atlantic Canadian
                   provinces.

                   Pennywell Books, 2021                                                             Also available as an eBook.

Hare B&B                                                                                                      by Bill Richardson

                   After her parents are duped by a coyote who is a master of disguise, Harriet ("Harry" for short) and her
                   seven younger siblings are left to fend for themselves. Their only resource is their parents' now-empty
                   bedroom, so Harry and her brothers and sisters open a "hare bed and breakfast." It is a great success.
                   Then, the coyote comes calling again and learns that revenge is a dish best served as breakfast. Award-
                   winning author Bill Richardson and acclaimed artist Bill Pechet join forces in this charming and hilarious
                   tale about self-reliant young hares and a coyote who gets her comeuppance.

                   Running the Goat, 2021

The Land Puffin                                                                                                   by Lori Doody

                Pete was an unusual parrot. He wanted to be a puffin. So he decided to leave town, and head for the coast.
                When Pete the parrot looks back on his seafaring family history—including his grandmother, Polly Pirate,
                and his grandfather, Paul Privateer—he decides to leave his cozy city home in search of the rugged puffin
                life on the coast. The puffins are friendly and welcome Pete with fish—which he doesn’t like to eat—and a
                swim in the ocean—which he doesn’t like to do—and they seem to do little more than sit on the rocks all day
                and night—which doesn’t interest him. Worst of all, they don’t seem to have much to say. Can Pete really
                live like a puffin, or is he just too different?

                Nimbus Publishing, 2021                                                             Also available as an eBook.

The Last Tree                                                                                              by Michelle Churchill

                It is said that when the first tree fell, the first humans of Impardia appeared. From the branches and berries of
                the second tree came the elves, and that tree too fell. Then there was the last tree. The tree of the faeries.
                Some say that one still stands, deep within Impardia’s forest. But most of Impardia has long forgotten about
                the elves and the faeries, as the kingdom has long been unknowingly divided. A kingdom partly shrouded by a
                veil. With a single act of kindness, Augustus sets off on a journey that might just reunite the kingdom of
                Impardia once more.

                With art by Ariel Marsh.
                Engen Books, 2019

My Indian                                                                                     by Mi’sel Joe and Sheila O’Neill

                In 1822, William Epps Cormack sought the expertise of a guide who could lead him across Newfoundland in
                search of the last remaining Beothuk camps on the island. In his journals, Cormack refers to his guide only as
                “My Indian.” Now, almost two hundred years later, Mi’sel Joe and Sheila O’Neill reclaim the story of Sylvester
                Joe, the Mi’kmaq guide engaged by Cormack. In a remarkable feat of historical fiction, My Indian follows
                Sylvester Joe from his birth (in what is now known as Miawpukek First Nation) and early life in his community
                to his journey across the island with Cormack. But will Sylvester Joe lead Cormack to the Beothuk, or will he
                protect the Beothuk and lead his colonial explorer away? In rewriting the narrative of Cormack’s journey from
                the perspective of his Mi’kmaq guide, My Indian reclaims Sylvester Joe’s identity.

                Breakwater Books, 2021                                                               Also available as an eBook.

                       Click on the book cover or title to go directly to our online catalogue.
                               Click on eBook or audiobook to go directly to our eLibrary.
CHILDREN & YOUNG ADULT
Once Upon an Iceberg: Errol’s Twillingate adventure                                                                by Sheilah Lukins

               Errol is off on another adventure! With his new-found friend Gus, Errol travels to Twillingate to help search for
               Gus's father. In the course of his search, he finds treasures on the beach, almost floats away with the ice-
               bergs, and visits the Long Point Lighthouse. There he meets Olivia and her family, who help him on his quest,
               showing him around and hunting for clues. But time is running out; they have to head home to Beachy Cove--
               and there's still no sign of Gus's dad!

               With illustrations by Laurel Keating.
               Breakwater Books, 2021

One Bully at a Time                                                                                by Sadie Sue Goulding-Wallace

                  Bullying is a painful reality and a major challenge in society. Any opportunity we have to talk openly about
                  bullying, especially to children, should be embraced. Tackled with tenderness and rhyme, One Bully at
                  a Time will be a much-appreciated conversation starter for many adults trying to teach children important
                  lessons about bullying. It also reminds us that, even though many of us get bullied, "there is always some-
                  one there who cares and wants to help."

                  Friesen Press, 2019

Santa’s Mysterious Christmas Eve                                                                               by Gordon A. Francis

               It’s Christmas Eve and Santa is on his way. Without warning his sleigh begins to lose control. In the distance
               he can see the beam of a bright light and steers toward it. Upon following it he finds an area where he can
               land, managing to do so without injury to himself or his reindeer. He has landed on Signal Hill, the historic site
               where Marconi sent the first wireless signal across the Atlantic and the home of the amazing Johnson Geo
               Centre, a geological interpretation centre. What has happened to Rudolph and will Santa deliver presents
               this Christmas Eve?

               Self-published, 2016                                                                      Also available as an eBook.

BOOKCLUB KITS
Each Bookclub Kit contains 10 copies of the book, plus discussion questions, biographical information and more. The loan
period is 6 weeks.

The Night Season                                                                                                   by Paul Bowdring

               The Night Season is the story of Will, a disillusioned English professor experiencing an emotional and
               spiritual crisis. It is winter during the mid-1980s. Will has left his job, having almost ruined his love for literature
               by teaching it for a living, his marriage has disintegrated and he has left his home and young daughter.

               Killick Press, 1997

                      Click on the book cover or title to go directly to our online catalogue.
                                Click on eBook or audiobook to go directly to our eLibrary.
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