Search results for ""Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd""
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Meteorites Stories
£14.19
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd It's Only the Himalayas: And Other Tales of Miscalculation from an Overconfident Backpacker
"A hilarious travelogue for a social media generation ...Bedford [leaves] the door open for another journey. If it is anything like this trip, it'll be worth reading too." --Publishers Weekly Sue, a disenchanted waitress, embarks upon a year-long quest around the world with her friend, Sara--who's exasperatingly perfect. Expecting a whimsical jaunt of self-discovery, Sue instead encounters an absurd series of misadventures that render her embarrassed, terrified, and queasy (and in a lot of trouble with Philippine Airlines). Whether she's fleeing from ravenous lions, dancing amid smoking skulls, trekking Annapurna underprepared, or (accidentally) drugging an Englishman, Sue's quick-witted, self-deprecating narrative might just inspire you to take your own chaotic adventure.
£13.14
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Your Heart Is the Size of Your Fist A Doctor Reflects on Ten Years at a Refugee Clinic
£14.12
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd In This Together: Fifteen Stories of Truth and Reconciliation
The release of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's (TRC) findings and recommendations in the spring of 2015 was an immensely important day for the people of Canada. It marked the hopeful beginning of change-a change of thinking, a change of opinion, a change in understanding. But how do we begin? Chief Justice Murray Sinclair, chair of the TRC, says that the most common statement the commission heard from the public was: "I didn't know any of this, and I acknowledge that things are not where they should be, and that we can do better. But what can we do? What should we do?" This collection of fifteen true stories of real reconciliation by both Indigenous and Non-Indigenous Canadians is in response to that question. Written by journalists, writers, academics, visual artists, filmmakers, a city planner, and a lawyer, each of these writers expound on their 'light bulb moments' regarding Canada's colonial past and present. They look at their own experiences and assumptions about race and racial divides in Canada under a microscope in hopes that the rest of the population will do the same. With an afterword that is essentially a candid conversation by renowned CBC radio host Shelagh Rogers and Chief Justice Sinclair about their time working with the TRC, this collection is one of the many ways to begin the work of reconciliation in Canada. Metcalfe-Chenail hopes that these voices will inspire other Canadians who want an open dialogue and to maintain the conversation long after the buzz of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's report has faded.
£13.12
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Do You Think This Is Strange?: A Novel
Shortlisted for the 2016 Amazon.ca First Novel Award Longlisted for the 2016 Leacock Medal for Humour Writing Winner of an Independent Publishers Book Award (IPPY) "Outstanding debut." -- Publisher's Weekly Freddy has problems. Some of them are because he's autistic. Most of them are because he's a teenager. When he's seven years old, Freddy's mother walks him to the train station, sits him on a bench, kisses his forehead, and disappears from his life. In a few short days, everything changes. His father moves him across town, enrolls him in a different school, and takes him away from little Saskia, the only friend he's ever had. Ten years later, Freddy is struggling to get through his last year of high school. He painstakingly avoids interactions with other students, who don't understand his hyper-literal perspective. But then Saskia appears, and she's different from the laughing little girl he remembers. She no longer smiles, and she doesn't speak. As they reconnect, Freddy begins to remember what really happened ten years ago. And everything he thought he knew begins to unravel. Both humorous and heartbreaking, Do You Think This Is Strange? is a coming-of-age tale you won't soon forget.
£13.30
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd The Unfinished Child
£18.89
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd The Canterbury Trail
£18.89
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Blue Duets
£18.89
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Sweetness from Ashes
£18.89
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Climbing Patrick's Mountain: A Novel
£18.89
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Always Brave Sometimes Kind
£16.99
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Orphans of Empire
£16.99
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd One Good Thing
£14.33
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd An Extraordinary Destiny: A Novel
It’s 1947 in Lahore, and the Sharma family is forced to flee their home during the violence of the Partition of India. As the train tracks measure the ever-growing distance between Varoon and his mother, who vanished during the panic to escape, the boy is thrust towards an uncertain future.Forty years later, Varoon’s grown son, Anush, desperately tries to disentangle himself from his father’s demands, which are mired in grief and whiskey. Compounding the pressure is Anush's unusually auspicious kundali—a Vedic birth chart—which threatens to suffocate Anush with lofty expectations. But when he meets Nasreen, Anush feels he may finally be experiencing the incredible fate foretold by the stars. Until his father threatens to block his chance at true happiness.Threading artfully through three generations of an Indian family, An Extraordinary Destiny crafts an intricate narrative that reveals, in layers, how decades-old grief rooted in the trauma of history, and couched in familial duty and custom, threaten to sever the sacred connection between ancestors and descendants.
£14.42
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd A Thousand Consolations
£15.05
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd The Pull of the Moon: Stories
Whether set in a cottage or a Montreal market, a graveyard or a backyard, these stories transport readers into the lives of people they'll recognize. We may not have neighbors who want to make squirrels into pets or sell us a piece of the moon; our son may not have been asked to donate sperm to his girlfriend's mother; our sister may not want us to bring a dead cat across the border; we may not have an imaginary husband, a secret brother, or a friend who's turned to murder in a custody battle. But in each of these stories, people are trying to figure out how to live in a world that doesn't always seem hospitable. The Pull of the Moon examines both human nature and animal instinct, as well as the negotiation between these impulses and desires. Ultimately, these characters want what most of us want: connection, belonging, love, and forgiveness.
£15.09
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Her Voice, Her Century: Four Plays About Daring Women
£18.89
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Cadillac Couches
£18.89
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd The Matter of Sylvie
£18.89
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd I Am Full Moon: Stories of a Ninth Daughter
£18.89
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd The Age of Water Lilies
£18.89
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd In the Hands of Anubis
£18.89
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd What We're Left With
£17.99
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd The Edmonton Queen: The Final Voyage
£18.89
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd The Five Hole Stories
£18.89
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Winging Home: A Palette of Birds
£23.39
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd The Wolves at Evelyn: Journeys through a Dark Century
£23.39
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Morgantown: Difficulty at the Beginning Book 2
£21.59
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Labrador: a one-person show
£12.59
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Kidmonton: True Stories of River City Kids
£10.99
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Anna, Like Thunder: A Novel
In 1808, eighteen-year-old Anna Petrovna Bulygina is aboard the Russian ship St. Nikolai when it runs aground off on the west coast of Washington State on the Olympic Peninsula. The crew, tasked with trading for sea otter pelts and exploring the coast, are forced to the shore into Indigenous territory, where they are captured, enslaved, and then traded among three different Indigenous communities. Terrified at first, Anna soon discovers that nothing—including slavery—is what she expected. She begins to question Russian imperialist aspirations, the conduct of the crew, and her own beliefs and values as she experiences a way of life she never could have imagined. Based on historical record, Anna, Like Thunder blends fact and fiction to explore the early days of contact between Indigenous people and Europeans off the west coast of North America and offers a fresh interpretation of history.
£16.57
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Walking in the Woods: A Métis Memoir
£22.99
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd In the Flesh: Twenty Writers Explore the Body
£23.39
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Rocky Mountain Kids
£12.59
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd A Raw Mix of Carelessness and Longing
£18.89
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd One Crow Sorrow
£17.99
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Tornado Magnet: A Salute to Trailer Court Women
£14.39
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Lonesome Hero
£18.89
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Succession
£18.89
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Irresponsible Freaks, Highball Guzzlers and Unabashed Grafters: A Bob Edwards Chrestomathy
£10.99
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd The Tartarus House on Crab
£18.89
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Radiant Voices 21 Feminist Essays for Rising Up Inspired by Emma Talks
£14.11
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd The Whole Beautiful World Stories
£14.12
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Waiting for the Cyclone Stories
£13.12
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Flying Time
£15.74
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd When is a Man
Paul Rasmussen is a young ethnographer and academic recovering from prostate cancer. Broken, he retreats to the remote forests and towns of the Immitoin Valley. As an outsider, he discovers how difficult it is to know a place, let alone become a part of it. Then a drowned man and a series of encounters with the locals force him to confront the valley's troubled past and his own uncertain future. As Paul turns his attention to the families displaced forty years earlier by the flooding of the valley to create a hydroelectric dam, his desire to reinvent himself runs up against the bitter emotions and mysterious connections that linger in the community in the aftermath of the flood. An original debut novel that is meditative and erotic, raw and exuberant in tone, Aaron Shepard's When is a Man offers a fresh perspective on landscape and masculinity.
£15.49
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd Rosine, the Midwife
£18.89
Brindle and Glass Publishing, Ltd The Apple House
£18.89