Hard Passage is an intelligent, innovative, and eloquently written family history. It recounts the last years of Heinrich and Helena Kroeger\u27s life in Russia, upheaval and exile in the Soviet Union, and their migration to and settlement in Alberta. It also recounts the eventual acculturation of the Kroegers\u27 five sons and a daughter to middle-class, liberal Canadian life. The author, Arthur Kroeger, was one of the sons and the one who was able to attend university-the University of Alberta and then Oxford; he subsequently developed a successful career in Canada\u27s foreign service, earned multiple appointments as federal deputy minister, and finally served as a university chancellor in Ottawa. To my mind, the book\u27s innovativeness...
Marlene Epp\u27s overview of two hundred years of Mennonite women\u27s history in Canada focuses lar...
The Doukhobor story has had an abiding interest for students of group settlement on the Canadian Pra...
Excerpt: In many ways, Sarah Klassen\u27s novel, The Wittenbergs, turns on the question of family h...
Hard Passage is an intelligent, innovative, and eloquently written family history. It recounts the l...
For much of their history, Mennonites have tended to think of themselves as apolitical, quietistic f...
What Russian Mennonite child has not heard the stories of the massive migration from Russia to the N...
This small, compact volume is one of the Newcomers to a New Land series, which describes the roles o...
Without a doubt, the Bolshevik Revolution altered the course of world history. Millions of lives wer...
This book appears in the government sponsored series A History of Canada\u27s Peoples, aiming at the...
Along with the original narrative this volume provides an epilogue by Jacob Calof, Rachel\u27s young...
Intent on preserving their deep-seated beliefs and values, the most conservative of the Russian Menn...
Review of: Family, Church, and Market: A Mennonite Community in the Old and New Worlds, 1850-1930. L...
Review of: Settling the Canadian-American West, 1890-1915: Pioneer Adaptation and Community Building...
Rudy Wiebe, author of nine novels and three collections of stories as well as numerous other works, ...
Belonging to the genre of local history, Trailblazers explores the lives of two Canadians in the pro...
Marlene Epp\u27s overview of two hundred years of Mennonite women\u27s history in Canada focuses lar...
The Doukhobor story has had an abiding interest for students of group settlement on the Canadian Pra...
Excerpt: In many ways, Sarah Klassen\u27s novel, The Wittenbergs, turns on the question of family h...
Hard Passage is an intelligent, innovative, and eloquently written family history. It recounts the l...
For much of their history, Mennonites have tended to think of themselves as apolitical, quietistic f...
What Russian Mennonite child has not heard the stories of the massive migration from Russia to the N...
This small, compact volume is one of the Newcomers to a New Land series, which describes the roles o...
Without a doubt, the Bolshevik Revolution altered the course of world history. Millions of lives wer...
This book appears in the government sponsored series A History of Canada\u27s Peoples, aiming at the...
Along with the original narrative this volume provides an epilogue by Jacob Calof, Rachel\u27s young...
Intent on preserving their deep-seated beliefs and values, the most conservative of the Russian Menn...
Review of: Family, Church, and Market: A Mennonite Community in the Old and New Worlds, 1850-1930. L...
Review of: Settling the Canadian-American West, 1890-1915: Pioneer Adaptation and Community Building...
Rudy Wiebe, author of nine novels and three collections of stories as well as numerous other works, ...
Belonging to the genre of local history, Trailblazers explores the lives of two Canadians in the pro...
Marlene Epp\u27s overview of two hundred years of Mennonite women\u27s history in Canada focuses lar...
The Doukhobor story has had an abiding interest for students of group settlement on the Canadian Pra...
Excerpt: In many ways, Sarah Klassen\u27s novel, The Wittenbergs, turns on the question of family h...