Forty-eight Days Adrift
Title | Forty-eight Days Adrift PDF eBook |
Author | Job Barbour |
Publisher | Breakwater Books |
Pages | 260 |
Release | 1981 |
Genre | Atlantic Ocean |
ISBN | 9780919948655 |
Forty-Eight Days Adrift
Title | Forty-Eight Days Adrift PDF eBook |
Author | Job Barbour |
Publisher | [St. John's, Nfld.] : Breakwater Books |
Pages | 256 |
Release | 1981 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 9780919519336 |
Captain Joe Barbour was born in Newton, Bonavista Bay, in 1898. He began sailing as a boy and at the age of twenty-one he first became master of a vessel. For many years he sailed the treacherous waters of Newfoundland's Northeast coast, carrying provisions from St. John's to the outports. In 1932, while on one of these voyages in his three mastered schooner, Neptune II, he was driven off course across the Atlantic to the coast of Scotland by several storms. His thrilling story is the subject of this book.
Forty-eight Days Adrift
Title | Forty-eight Days Adrift PDF eBook |
Author | Job Barbour |
Publisher | |
Pages | 220 |
Release | 1932 |
Genre | Seafaring life |
ISBN |
The Long Run
Title | The Long Run PDF eBook |
Author | Leo Furey |
Publisher | Shambhala Publications |
Pages | 386 |
Release | 2007-10-09 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 0834826364 |
From a hill above town, the Mount Kildare Orphanage for Boys looks down on the small city of St. John’s, Newfoundland. The year is 1960. The orphanage is always cold, there is never enough to eat, and the Catholic Brothers who run the home are heavy-handed in their religious discourses and harsh in their discipline. Here, a group of boys manages to look out for each other and live by their own set of rules.By day the boys are obedient students, but when the sun goes down the Dare Klub rules the night: raiding the bakery; stealing sacramental wine; and talking endlessly about girls, sex, and the merits of Floyd Patterson versus Willie Mays. Above all, they help each other through the waves of loneliness and sadness that they all experience. Their secret society is their law and their family. But when the Brothers discover the wine is missing, they go on a manhunt, offering payoffs and bribes to any boy who will rat out the culprits.To buck up the frightened boys’ courage, the Dare Klub’s leader, Blackie, creates a program of secret training for the annual St. John's marathon. The boys sneak out at night for running sessions in the hours before morning prayers, devising elaborate rituals to protect their secrecy. Leo Furey has created a classic coming-of-age story of dazzling scope and powerful insight, leavened with razor-sharp wit.
Making Witches
Title | Making Witches PDF eBook |
Author | Barbara Rieti |
Publisher | McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP |
Pages | 207 |
Release | 2008-04-15 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 0773577939 |
There is a little-known tradition of witch lore in Newfoundland culture. Those believed to have the power to influence the fortunes of others are not mythological characters but neighbours, relations, or even friends. Drawing from her own interviews and a wealth of material from the Memorial University Folklore and Language Archive, Barbara Rieti explores the range and depth of Newfoundland witch tradition, looking at why certain people acquired reputations as witches, and why others considered themselves bewitched. The tales that emerge - despite their seemingly fantastic elements of spells and black heart books, hags, and healing charms - concern everyday affairs and reveal the intense social interdependence central to outport life. Frequently featuring women, they provide fascinating new perspectives on female coping strategies in a volatile economy. By addressing the perennial human issues at the heart of witchcraft - construction of enmity and intertwined fate - these narrative accounts also illuminate older witch beliefs revealed in witchcraft trial documents. Making Witches shows that in storytelling communities with a rich legacy of witch lore, witch tradition has endured well into the twentieth century.
The Dundurn Arctic Culture and Sovereignty Library
Title | The Dundurn Arctic Culture and Sovereignty Library PDF eBook |
Author | Michael Posluns |
Publisher | Dundurn |
Pages | 1835 |
Release | 2014-05-07 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1459729560 |
This special bundle is your essential guide to all things concerning Canada’s polar regions, which make up the majority of Canada’s territory but are places most of us will never visit. The Arctic has played a key role in Canada’s history and in the history of the indigenous peoples of this land, and the area will only become more strategically and economically important in the future. This bundle provides an in-depth crash course, including titles on Arctic exploration (Arctic Obsession), Native issues (Arctic Twilight), sovereignty (In the Shadow of the Pole), adventure and survival (Death Wins in the Arctic), and military issues (Arctic Front). Let this collection be your guide to the far reaches of this country. Arctic Front Arctic Naturalist Arctic Obsession Arctic Revolution Arctic Twilight Death Wins in the Arctic In the Shadow of the Pole Pike’s Portage Voices From the Odeyak
Castaways - Adrift and Abandoned
Title | Castaways - Adrift and Abandoned PDF eBook |
Author | Graham Faiella |
Publisher | The History Press |
Pages | 209 |
Release | 2021-04-01 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0750995394 |
Seafaring before the twentieth century bristled with peril. The safe haven of your vessel might be destroyed by tempest or misadventure, your security scuttled. When you were cast away with only the resources of pluck, stamina, hope – and luck. Where you might end up on the expanse of endless sea facing the prospect of imminent dehydrated, starving death. Or on a safe but potentially forbidding – yet occasionally lush – outcrop of an isolated shore, amongst which perils abounded accounts of courage and companionship. These are narratives of castaways abandoned to fend for themselves, and the ordeals they endured and survived and in remembrance of the seafarers who did not.