Rudy Wiebe, author of nine novels and three collections of stories as well as numerous other works, is best known for his historical fiction-particularly for novels featuring Canada\u27s Native peoples. A first-generation Canadian whose German-speaking Mennonite parents fled Stalinist Ukraine in 1929 and then homesteaded in Saskatchewan, Wiebe has tended to set his fiction on the prairies or in the north. Appalled by the prevailing view that the Plains were empty before European immigrants arrived, he has consistently worked to document the repressed history of Canada. His writing has focused not only on the First Nations of his native land, however, but also on his own immigrant people. Wiebe\u27s considerable power is evident in all his...
The Doukhobor story has had an abiding interest for students of group settlement on the Canadian Pra...
The Land Where the Sky Begins is a small coffee-table book, elegantly illustrated with photographs a...
Review of: "Natives of a Dry Place: Stories of Dakota before the Oil Boom," by Richard Edward
Rudy Wiebe, author of nine novels and three collections of stories as well as numerous other works, ...
Excerpt: Come Back is a beautifully written novel, manifesting Wiebe\u27s immense skill with the wr...
Canadian novelist Rudy Wiebe’s award-winning memoir, of this earth: A Mennonite Boyhood in the Borea...
Bill Waiser\u27s sweeping narrative of the history of Canada\u27s most identifiable agricultural pro...
Hard Passage is an intelligent, innovative, and eloquently written family history. It recounts the l...
Frances Swyripa\u27s study of the ethno-religious landscape of the Canadian prairies is a delightful...
Excerpt: Perhaps the most powerful first-person story shared by a Mennonite in the past year has ye...
Canada\u27s leading prairie author Frederick Philip Grove (1879-1948) had a predilection for strong ...
Candace Savage and her companion Keith Bell first discovered Eastend, Saskatchewan, on a journey hom...
Saskatchewan: The Luminous Landscape is a compelling photographic anthology of the diverse and compl...
In the aftermath of September 11th, the recommendation of a book by what the Toronto Star called on...
Michael Forsberg’s magnificent photos of land, animals, and people compelled me initially to turn pa...
The Doukhobor story has had an abiding interest for students of group settlement on the Canadian Pra...
The Land Where the Sky Begins is a small coffee-table book, elegantly illustrated with photographs a...
Review of: "Natives of a Dry Place: Stories of Dakota before the Oil Boom," by Richard Edward
Rudy Wiebe, author of nine novels and three collections of stories as well as numerous other works, ...
Excerpt: Come Back is a beautifully written novel, manifesting Wiebe\u27s immense skill with the wr...
Canadian novelist Rudy Wiebe’s award-winning memoir, of this earth: A Mennonite Boyhood in the Borea...
Bill Waiser\u27s sweeping narrative of the history of Canada\u27s most identifiable agricultural pro...
Hard Passage is an intelligent, innovative, and eloquently written family history. It recounts the l...
Frances Swyripa\u27s study of the ethno-religious landscape of the Canadian prairies is a delightful...
Excerpt: Perhaps the most powerful first-person story shared by a Mennonite in the past year has ye...
Canada\u27s leading prairie author Frederick Philip Grove (1879-1948) had a predilection for strong ...
Candace Savage and her companion Keith Bell first discovered Eastend, Saskatchewan, on a journey hom...
Saskatchewan: The Luminous Landscape is a compelling photographic anthology of the diverse and compl...
In the aftermath of September 11th, the recommendation of a book by what the Toronto Star called on...
Michael Forsberg’s magnificent photos of land, animals, and people compelled me initially to turn pa...
The Doukhobor story has had an abiding interest for students of group settlement on the Canadian Pra...
The Land Where the Sky Begins is a small coffee-table book, elegantly illustrated with photographs a...
Review of: "Natives of a Dry Place: Stories of Dakota before the Oil Boom," by Richard Edward