I enjoyed this detailed, first-person account of peak colonialism in the N.W.T.
Category: non-fiction
Northerners: 24 short, but vivid, biographies from 1989
These 24 capsule biographies from 30 years ago still do the trick.
A Plain Language Guide to the Nunavut Land Claims Agreement
Well-written and beautifully packaged.
The Berger Inquiry, 1970s journalism, and a book that captures it all
This reporter's account rips through the insanity of the Berger inquiry to get to the point: the gripping testimony by northerners, much of which is captured verbatim here. Hard to find, but great reading.
From Lishamie, Albert Canadien’s memoir of a village that no longer exists
I didn’t know that Treaty Day in Fort Providence, N.W.T., was also TB testing day, and I wouldn’t have known it if not for this highly detailed memoir.
I searched for value in this atrocity of a book; I found none
I had developed the idea, independent of this book, that this screed, which has been denounced repeatedly since it was first published in 2008, might actually contain some merit that had been buried in poor rhetoric and politics. Wrong.
Old Town, by Fran Hurcomb
A concise, charming book that definitively documents ‘Yellowknife’s defining neighbourhood.’
Fire into Ice: The insanely adventurous life of Chuck Fipke, diamond hunter
Armchair adventure at its finest.
The Right to Be Cold: Sheila Watt-Cloutier’s urgent memoir
Earnest memoir recounts minute details of a fascinating life, bureaucratic tussles included.
I, Nuligak: A memoir of Inuvialuit life in the last heyday of the whalers
‘Because I was an orphan and a poor one at that, my mind was always alert to the happenings around me. Once my eyes had seen something, it was never forgotten.’