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Showing 41 - 60 of 16657 items
Qui sommes-nous avant de naître?
By Roger Bessis. 2007
"Avant, tout semblait simple : la reproduction était le résultat de la sexualité et le foetus se développait dans le…
mystère du ventre maternel. Rompant avec des millénaires d'inconnu et de fatalisme, la médecine du foetus permet maintenant de connaître tous les détails de la période intra-utérine, de détecter précocement les troubles du développement prénatal et, le cas échéant, d'y remédier. Les bouleversements autour de la reproduction font cependant surgir mille questions médicales, juridiques, morales, éthiques et sociales qui exigent des choix cohérents. Le débat sur la question foetale a été jusqu'ici occulté tant est grande la crainte qu'il nuise au droit des femmes à l'avortement. L'individualisation du foetus ne s'y oppose pourtant en rien. Implicitement, mais certainement, une nouvelle société se dessine et le statut du foetus reste dans le flou. Il devient urgent de penser cette question de manière objective, de dépasser l'opposition entre chose et personne dans laquelle nous restons enfermés par peur d'ouvrir la boîte de Pandore." -- 4e de couv.La grande invasion: enquête sur les produits qui intoxiquent notre vie quotidienne
By Stéphane Horel. 2008
"Dans nos maisons, à notre insu, des milliers de substances chimiques partagent notre vie quotidienne, nichées dans la nourriture et…
l'eau, incrustées dans les détergents, les plastiques ou les tissus. Les hommes, les femmes, les enfants et même les ours polaires ont dans le sang des produits chimiques censés se trouver dans les tapis et grille-pains du monde moderne. Quels sont les risques pour la santé ? Tandis que l'industrie défend ses marchés et ses secrets de fabrication, les scientifiques s'inquiètent de l'augmentation de l'asthme, de certains cancers, de troubles du développement et du comportement ou de la chute spectaculaire de la fertilité dans les pays développés. Pour eux, cette pollution invisible et continue empoisonne l'humanité en toute discrétion, et touche en premier lieu les bébés. Souvent ignorée dans le débat environnemental, cette "Grande Invasion" soulève des questions qui dépassent largement le domaine de la médecine et de la science. Elle touche à l'organisation de nos systèmes économiques et politiques, et aux fondements de nos sociétés de profusion. En dévoilant l'identité chimique des produits de consommation courante, cette enquête rend accessible les travaux scientifiques les plus récents et propose des solutions pratiques pour se préserver." -- 4e de couv.Venus & Serena Williams (Champion sport biographies)
By Ken Sparling. 2000
Serena and Venus Williams have become a major force in woman's tennis. Their great success has inspired many young girls…
to take up the sport. This is a fascinating and inspiring story of how the Williams family has shaken up the world of professional tennis. For senior high readers. 2000.Scottish football quotations
By Kenny MacDonald. 1999
Kenny MacDonald delves into the sweat-stained and liniment-soaked dressing-rooms of the country, visiting after-match conferences and interview situations. He emerges…
with a batch of statements which seek to be profound and amusing, acerbic and perceptive, argumentative and plain bizarre. There are sections on Euro '96 and France '98, on celebrities as diverse as Alex Ferguson, Duncan Ferguson, and Scottish football's most famous fan, Hamilton Accies' legendary Fergie.The most amazing hockey quiz book ever
By Ron Wight. 2002
Think you know it all about hockey? These fan-stumping quizzes will dispel the hockey myths you have believed since you…
were a kid, and help you learn about the more unique hockey records that may never be broken, and the most intriguing moments in hockey history. Packed with statistics, Q&A's, fascinating stories, and a unique chapter on women's hockey. 2002.Legendary show jumpers: the incredible stories of great Canadian horses (Amazing stories)
By Debbie Gamble-Arsenault. 2004
Once in a while a horse comes along that is extraordinary. Air Pilot, Barra Lad, and Big Ben have all…
had their turn at being the brightest star blazing in the show-jumping sky. For more than 100 years, great Canadian high-flying horses have provided spectators with exhilarating displays of their jaw-dropping talent and love of jumping. 2004.Great Stanley Cup victories: glorious moments in hockey (Amazing stories)
By Rich Mole. 2004
The most thrilling and the most dramatic games are those played during the playoffs, when the stakes are high and…
everything is on the line. Celebrate the joy of victory with some of the greatest hockey stories of the past century, including the Montreal Canadiens of the 1970, the 1980's Edmonton Oilers, and the Toronto Maple Leafs of the 1960's. 2004.Toronto Maple Leafs: stories of Canada's legendary team (Amazing stories)
By Jim Barber. 2004
The Toronto Maples Leafs hockey team is one of Canada's greatest franchises. From their humble beginnings in the 1920s, to…
their remarkable Stanley Cup victories of the 1940s and 1960s, to their teambuilding challenges of the 1990s and beyond, the Leafs have a history packed with exhilarating accomplishments and devastating setbacks. 2004.Zamboni rodeo: chasing hockey dreams from Austin to Albuquerque
By Jason Cohen. 2001
Writer Jason Cohen follows the fortunes of the minor pro hockey team, the Austin Ice Bats, through one season. From…
Lake Charles to El Paso and Waco to Monroe, he chronicles the games, bus rides, and locker room incidents of the team. He uncovers a world where people still play for the love of the game, fans can get a free autograph, and the dreams of literally hundreds of Canadian and American men are found, and lost. Strong language. 2001.Brown: what being brown in the world today means (to everyone)
By Kamal Al-Solaylee. 2016
Brown is not white. Brown is not black. Brown is an experience, a state of mind. Historically speaking, issues of…
race and skin colour have been interpreted along black and white lines, leaving out millions of people whose stories of migration and racial experiences have shaped our modern world. The book takes a global look at the many social, political, economic and personal implications of being a brown-skinned person in the world now. Brown people have emerged as the source of global cheap labour (Hispanics or South Asians) while also coming under scrutiny and suspicion for their culture and faith (Arabs and Muslims). Packed with personal narratives and on-the-street reporting conducted over two years in ten countries from four continents. Winner of the 2016 Shaughnessy Cohen Prize for Political Writing. 2016.Canada quiz: how much do you know about Canada? (Canada Quiz Ser. #Vol. 1)
By E. Calvin Coish. 1992
Firewater: how alcohol is killing my people (and yours)
By Harold Johnson. 2016
Drawing on his years of experience as a Crown Prosecutor in Treaty 6 territory, the author challenges readers to change…
the story we tell ourselves about the drink that goes by many names—booze, hooch, spirits, sauce, and the evocative “firewater.” Confronting the harmful stereotype of the “lazy, drunken Indian,” and rejecting medical, social, and psychological explanations of the roots of alcoholism, Johnson cries out for solutions, not diagnoses, and shows how alcohol continues to kill so many. Bestseller. 2016.Race against time (CBC Massey lectures)
By Stephen Lewis. 2005
Stephen Lewis advances real solutions to help societies across the globe achieve the Millennium Goals, established by the UN in…
2000, a series of 8 goals to lay the foundation for a prosperous future. He shows how dreams such as universal primary education, a successful war against the AIDS pandemic, and environmental sustainability are within the grasp of humanity. 2005. (CBC Massey lectures series)Letting rip: the fast bowling threat from Lillee to Waqar
By Simon Wilde. 1994
Between the world and me
By Ta-Nehisi Coates. 2015
Americans have built an empire on the idea of "race", a falsehood that damages us all but falls most heavily…
on the bodies of black women and men--bodies exploited through slavery and segregation, and, today, threatened, locked up, and murdered out of all proportion. What is it like to inhabit a black body and find a way to live within it? And how can we all honestly reckon with this fraught history and free ourselves from its burden? In a letter to his adolescent son, the author shares the story of his awakening to the truth about his place in the world through a series of revelatory experiences, from Howard University to Civil War battlefields, from the South Side of Chicago to Paris, from his childhood home to the living rooms of mothers whose children’s lives were taken as American plunder. Bestseller. Winner of the National Book Award. 2015.The rebel league: the short and unruly life of the World Hockey Association
By Ed Willes. 2004
The WHA began as the scheme of two California lawyers, and it introduced 27 new hockey franchises, a trail of…
bounced cheques, fractious lawsuits, folded teams, and the crackpots, goons, and crazies that are so well remembered as the league's bizarre legacy. But the WHA also drove hockey into the modern age, ended the NHL's monopoly, freed players from the reserve clause, ushered in the 18-year-old draft, moved the game into the Sun Belt, and put European players on the ice in numbers previously unimagined. Some strong language. 2005, c2004.The tiger: a true story of vengeance and survival
By John Vaillant. 2010
Nature writer follows a government tiger-control team as it pursues an endangered Siberian tiger, which had killed a poacher, through…
Russia's far east in the winter of 1997. Explores the beauty of the setting, the tiger's strength, and the political and geographical forces that shaped this remote region. Canada Reads 2012. 2010.Too fat, too slutty, too loud: the rise and reign of the unruly woman
By Anne Helen Petersen. 2017
A popular BuzzFeed columnist examines the phenomenon of popular provocative womanhood to discuss the rise of such counterculture stars as…
Amy Schumer, Nicki Minaj, and Caitlyn Jenner, exploring why they are popular in spite of nonconforming behaviors. 2017.One day we'll all be dead and none of this will matter: essays
By Scaachi Koul. 2017
In suburban Calgary, at a young and impressionable age, Scaachi Koul learned what made her miserable. Not just uncomfortable, not…
just mild irritants, not just the long commute you have in the morning: things that make you doubt your humanity. And it turns out, everything did. Scaachi shares her observations, fears and experiences as a woman of colour growing up in Canada. These are stories ranging from shaving her knuckles in grade school, to a shopping trip gone horribly awry, to internet garbage, to parsing the trajectory of fears and anxieties that pressed upon her immigrated parents and bled down a generation. Stories of returning to India where her parents grew up, and ultimately about trying to find her place in the world. 2017.The Montreal Canadiens: 100 years of glory
By D'Arcy Jenish. 2008
The Habs were the NHL gold standard for years, with 24 Stanley Cups and an almost unbroken line of stars,…
from Georges Vézina and Newsy Lalonde to Ken Dryden, Guy Lafleur, and Patrick Roy. Jenish traces not just the century-old équipe des habitants, but the events of the day that affected hockey and the world away from it, including two world wars, the flu outbreak of 1918, and the Quiet Revolution of Quebec nationalism. Some descriptions of violence and some strong language. 2008.