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Ages 3 to 5 years. Journeying through familiar landscapes and sights, this series of board books highlights locales in Canada and the United States such as Nova Scotia and Maine. Bright, simple illustrations and a gentle rhyme scheme convey the comfort of home to children and invite them to explore the world around them, from famous historical landmarks to awe-inspiring natural wonders. Enlightening young Saskatchewanians about their region, this wonderfully illustrated tour of Canada's prairie province includes trips to the Cypress Hills, T-Rex Discovery Center, Athabasca Sand Dunes Provincial Park, and a Roughrider football game. From watching Mounties in Regina or exploring the Moose Jaw Wild Animal Park to dropping by the Little Stone School House in Saskatoon, the activities displayed in My Home: Saskatchewan make the province come alive.
An evocative collection of contemporary photography that shines a light on the charm and disintegration of small towns in Saskatchewan. Captured over 30 years, the 200 images in this finely wrought exhibition document prairie landscapes and rural structures like no other in recent memory. With skill, sensitivity, and a renowned eye for detail, documentary photographer George Webber once again transports the viewer with his lens across time, geography, and history. Bright colours, sun-baked facades, endless horizons, and straight edges are all beautifully haunted by the shadow of time's inevitable decay and nature's slow embrace of abandoned human settlements. The varying shades of prairie-blue skies can hum with optimistic vibrancy, while fists of cloud can march toward an unknowable front. Saskatchewan Book shows us that small prairie towns remain beacons of affection and bastions of memory, all the while succumbing to the enigmatic fate that eventually enfolds all living things.
The hardships and good times of early prairie homesteaders in the 1930's.
A bird specialist with the Canadian Wildlife Service, Alan Smith has used his experience to good effect in this colourful and beautifully illustrated book. Features 145 birds common to Saskatchewan with a description of each bird's key features for quick identification, as well as information about songs, habitat, nesting, feeding and best viewing sites.
"Saskatchewan abounds with wonderful places to see, but The Great Saskatchewan Bucket List cuts to the chase and takes you to the best of the best. In every case, it?s something special about nature that leaves you with a sense of wonder, that when you see it, you can?t help but say, ?Wow! This is really cool.? Follow award-winning writers and photographers, Robin and Arlene Karpan, to almost every corner of Saskatchewan, from the deep south to the far north, to experience the cream of the crop. Watch the rising sun magically transform Castle Butte into a brilliant red monolith. Enjoy the view from the top of Canada?s largest sand dunes. Marvel at the mysterious Eye Cave on the mountain-like ?Dead Man?s River?, or ponder the puzzle of the other-worldly Crooked Bush. Stand on the brink of Saskatchewan?s largest waterfall, or gaze over Lake Diefenbaker?s fairy-tale Sand Castle. Get up close and personal with wildlife that you find nowhere else in Canada. These and many more natural wonders await." --
Contains information of the following indian tribes: Assinboine, Beaver (Tsattine, Blood (Kainah), Chipewayan, Crow Shonshonie (band of formed by intermarriages),Dakota, ros Ventre, Iroquois, Kootenay (Kutenai), Piean, Plain Cree, Sarcee (Sarsi), Saulteaux (Ojibwa), Sekani, Siksikah, Slavey, Stoney (Assinboine) and Woodland Cree.
From fox hunting Victorian-style on the Prairies, to the crooked trees of Alticane, to sipping cappuccinos on Broadway in Saskatoon, or spa hopping and tunnel touring in Moose Jaw, this is the MUST list every Saskatchewanian MUST have. From strolling Regina's Wascana Centre to exploring outlaw haunts in the Big Muddy, Grey Owl, Dief, jazz and folk festivals, cherry orchards, Mounties and the Cypress Hills, it's all here. We've also rounded up expert Flatlanders from across the province to weigh in with their own MUST lists. Singer-songwriter Little Miss Higgins, authors Guy Vanderhaeghe and David Carpenter, birder Trevor Herriot, master gardener Patricia Hanbidge and Roughrider Gene Makowsky all share special places you simply MUST visit, as do Sheila Coles, John Gormley, Andrea Menard and others. This is the ultimate insider MUST list. If you love Saskatchewan, you simply MUST have the Saskatchewan Book of MUSTS.
"A guidebook to photogenic places throughout Saskatchewan."--
The more than 175 biographies in this volume together tell the story of writing in Saskatchewan. As David Carpenter notes in his introduction to the volume: "The writers whose lives are told in these pages are part of an extraordinary cultural community that has touched and been touched by the people and landscape of this province."
Progressions presents another batch of erudite and entertainingessays on a variety of topics covering Saskatchewan’s literarydevelopment, as well as tributes to some of the major con-tributors to that history, and a pictorial glimpse into the past.Writers stopped using typewriters, and even moved beyond theKaypro computer box for their compositions. The SaskatchewanSchool of the Arts was shut down, ending the Fort San writingexperience. But the Sage Hill Writing Experience quickly rose toreplace it. Saskatchewan literary presses really found their feet andpublished important and lasting books. A wave of new writersjoined the founders of the province’s literary tradition. Respondingto this growth in the community, the Saskatchewan Book Awards,and the Saskatchewan Festival of Words in Moose Jaw came intobeing. The Saskatchewan writing community stormed out of the20th Century in a frenzy of creativity and accomplishment.Essay contributors to Volume 2 include Dave Margoshes, JeanetteLynes, Aritha Van Herk, Alison Calder and seven more. The elevenessays include such topics as “To House or House Not: The NewSaskatchewan Women Poets”, “Contemporary Nature Writing inSaskatchewan”, “Fort San/Sage Hill” and “Brave and FoolishNonconformists”. In addition, literary tributes are offered for:Caroline Heath, Pat Krause, Martha Blum and Max Braithwaite.