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Showing 1 - 10 of 10 items
By John Ralston Saul. 2008
In this vision of Canada, Saul unveils 3 founding myths: he argues that the famous "peace, order, and good government"…
that supposedly defines Canada is a distortion of the country's true nature. He describes Canada as a Métis nation, heavily influenced and shaped by aboriginal ideas. Lastly, he believes that Canada has a colonial non-intellectual business elite that doesn't believe in Canada. c2008.By Anna Porter. 2000
In this memoir, the author shares stories told by her grandfather while she was growing up in Budapest, describing how…
these tales of heroes, strife and survival give her a sense of personal history. She also tells of her own experiences, from hiding Jews in her basement during World War II, through the advent of the Communist era, the 1956 Revolution in Hungary, and the family's exile to New Zealand. c2000.By Lise Weil. 2018
When Lise Weil came out in 1976, lesbian desire was the pulsing center of an entire way of life, a…
culture, a movement. The air throbbed with possibility. But after fifteen years of torrid but ultimately failed relationships, Weil had to admit that desire was also a conduit for childhood wounds--and it tended to trump love, over and over again. When a friend invited her to attend a Zen retreat in the mid-'80s, she was desperate enough to say yes. Her first day of sitting zazen was mostly hell--but, smitten with the (female) roshi, she stuck with it. Ultimately, the dive into Zen practice became a turning point in her quest for love. 2018.By Claude Messier. 2002
Atteint de dystonie musculaire, l'auteur raconte son existence remplie de bons autant que de mauvais moments. Celui qui veut qu'on…
le considère comme un homme à part entière, malgré son lourd handicap, offre avec ce livre le témoignage positif d'un être courageux qui a su réaliser ses rêves. [SDMBy Fadette. 1999
De 1874 à 1881, une jeune fille de Saint-Hyacinthe décrit ses impressions face à ses parents, ses professeurs et son…
confesseur. Elle a quatorze ans quand elle amorce cette "quête d'identité" et manifeste déjà une forte personnalité. Plus qu'un document d'époque, un témoignage qui dépasse l'individualité et mérite d'être lu encore aujourd'hui tant pour le langage que pour l'humanité qui s'y retrouveBy Louis Hamelin. 1999
"Des textes qui se promènent entre la Gaspésie et la Mauricie, lieux des souvenirs d'enfance et de la vérité première,…
et entre Montréal et Paris, là où, parfois brutalement, j'ai été éjecté de l'univers". C'est ce que partage avec son lecteur l'auteur de Betsi LarousseBy Pierre Gagnon. 2005
Recueil de textes brefs : un homme atteint du cancer nous raconte sa vie à l’hôpital, les traitements reçus, le…
contact avec les oncologues et le personnel hospitalier, la compassion pour d’autres malades, dont des enfants. Le ton est d’une profonde humanité, tantôt humoristique, tantôt grave, toujours tendre.By Stanislaw Lem. 2020
Scientists attempt to decode what may be a message from intelligent beings in outer space. By pure chance, scientists detect…
a signal from space that may be communication from rational beings. How can people of Earth understand this message, knowing nothing about the senders—even whether or not they exist? Written as the memoir of a mathematician who participates in the government project (code name: His Master's Voice) attempting to decode what seems to be a message from outer space, this classic novel shows scientists grappling with fundamental questions about the nature of reality, the confines of knowledge, the limitations of the human mind, and the ethics of military-sponsored scientific research.By Stanislaw Lem. 2020
A playful, witty, reflective memoir of childhood by the science fiction master Stanisław Lem. With Highcastle, Stanisław Lem offers a…
memoir of his childhood and youth in prewar Lvov. Reflective, artful, witty, playful—“I was a monster,” he observes ruefully—this lively and charming book describes a youth spent reading voraciously (he was especially interested in medical texts and French novels), smashing toys, eating pastries, and being terrorized by insects. Often lonely, the young Lem believed that he could communicate with household objects—perhaps anticipating the sentient machines in the adult Lem's novels. Lem reveals his younger self to be a dreamer, driven by an unbridled imagination and boundless curiosity. In the course of his reminiscing, Lem also ponders the nature of memory, innocence, and the imagination. Highcastle (the title refers to a nearby ruin) offers the portrait of a writer in his formative years.By L. Sprague DeCamp. 1992
Time and Chance is the autobiography of Hugo, World Fantasy and SFWA Grand Master Award-winning author, L. Sprague de Camp.…
It is a fascinating insight into a man who began writing in the late 1930's and remained an active voice in the genre up until his death in the last year of the twentieth century, and who was a prime mover in the formation of the fields of Science Fiction and Fantasy as we know them today.