Historical fiction

  • The Mill

    Creator

    Cloran, Daryl

    MacFadzean, Matthew

    MacFadzean, Matthew

    Moscovitch, Hannah

    Beagan, Tara

    Atkins, Damien

    Abstract

    It's 1854 at the start of Now We Are Brody. The mill is boarded up as the townsfolk attempt to bury a dark shame from their past, but the arrival of a young woman with the deed to the mill threatens to unearth its secret. In The Huron Bride it is 1834 and Hazel Sheehan has braved the perilous journey across the Atlantic to work as a hired hand at her cousin's sawmill. When her cousin James asks her to marry him, Hazel is overjoyed, but will the ghost of James's ex-wife spoil their wedding plans?

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Playwrights Canada Press

    Not specified
  • You Fancy Yourself

    Creator

    Ardal, Maja

    Abstract

    When Elsa and her family move from Iceland to Scotland, she is filled with uncontrollable joy over the new adventure she is about to begin. With her infectious energy and love for the dramatic, Elsa stands out both in her community and within her classroom, but this exuberance also targets her as an outcast. Only through the faith of a new friend and the strength of her imagination does Elsa find the courage to look inside herself and find pride in who she is and where she came from.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Playwrights Canada Press

    Not specified
  • The Little Years

    Creator

    Mighton, John

    Abstract

    Kate possesses the makings of a gifted mathematician with an enthusiasm for exploring the mysteries of space and time. But this is the 1950s and women are routinely laughed out of scientific circles. Besides, every family has its star, and Kate's brother already holds that distinction. Hindered by prejudices against women, Kate is confined to a life of unfulfilling jobs, leading her to become bitter and unhappy. The Little Years confronts the impact of chauvinism and explores the nature of fame, the value of art, and the passing of time.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Playwrights Canada Press

    Not specified
  • A Nanking winter

    Creator

    Chan, Marjorie

    Abstract

    Marjorie Chan's gripping narrative intertwines the past and the present, transporting the reader between Irene and a small group of unlikely heroes caught in the invasion. Scrambling to create a refuge from the horror, the band's struggle to survive binds them in a promise that will span the ages of time, while Irene struggles to reveal the truth despite her publisher's conservative worries. a nanking winter brings the horror and endurance of a nation's history into stark focus with breathtaking clarity and brutal honesty.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Playwrights Canada Press

    Not specified
  • Outlaw

    Creator

    Foster, Norm

    Abstract

    A young Canadian homesteader travelling far from home finds himself accused of murder in the state of Kansas in 1871. With only his wits to defend himself, he turns the law of the land—and the men hell-bent on enforcing it—upside down. This authentic western is a unique take on the days when guns were the law.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Playwrights Canada Press

    Not specified
  • The Swallows Uncaged A Narrative in Eight Panels

    Creator

    McLean, Elizabeth

    Abstract

    Ambitious, emotionally resonant stories about the lives of women and girls in Vietnam over the past thousand years. In The Swallows Uncaged, Elizabeth McLean paints a sweeping yet intimate panorama of Vietnam in the style of a Vietnamese eight-panel screen: eight narratives that each capture a moment in time and yet speak to one another. Interweaving historical and fictional characters over ten centuries, the stories portray the passions and turmoils of successive generations of the Nguyen clan’s wives and daughters, and of their men.

    Publisher (Source)

    Calgary

    Freehand Books

    Not specified
  • Winner's Loss

    Creator

    Bradshaw, Mel

    Abstract

    In the fertile artistic milieu of 1927 Toronto ... After winning the commission to paint a war memorial mural for Christ Church Grange Park, Nora Britton is found dead on the church floor. An accidental fall from the scaffold she was working on? So it seems, until police detective Paul Shenstone discovers that she has been the subject of parishioners’ death threats. Shenstone’s sleuthing takes him from slum to mansion, from speakeasy to laboratory to artist’s studio. The dead Nora becomes his obsession.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Iguana Books

    Not specified
  • No Time To Bury Them

    Creator

    Eddy, Mark C.

    Abstract

    The Yukon, 1907. North America’s last untamed frontier. Dawson City has reached its tipping point. The citizens, and the people they count on to protect them, now live under the brutal control of Eric Morgan, a violent gang leader. Morgan’s power has only grown since the days of the Klondike Gold Rush, and he now prepares for his greatest score yet. Dawson’s salvation rests with Inspector Richard Carol, who will lead a team of Mounties to liberate the city. But can he trust his own people? And with so many of his own battles to fight, can Richard trust himself?

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Iguana Books

    Not specified
  • Tragic Links

    Creator

    Beveridge, Cathy

    Abstract

    Tragic Links is award-winning author Cathy Beveridge's fourth young adult novel focusing on Canadian disasters. This time Jolene and her family find themselves in Quebec where Jolene's father is conducting research for his Museum of Disasters. When Jolene finds a time crease, she discovers Montreal in the 1920s. Back there at the church, Jolene said, "I was hiding." But Stephan, the handsome boy who lives next door to her Grandma Rose in Montreal, knows otherwise. And so Jolene divulges their family secret: the ability to time travel through time creases.

    Publisher (Source)

    Vancouver

    Ronsdale Press

    Not specified
  • Winds of L’Acadie

    Creator

    Donovan, Lois

    Abstract

    When sixteen-year-old Sarah from Toronto learns that she is to spend the summer with her grandparents in Nova Scotia, she is convinced that it will be the most tedious summer ever. She gets off to a rough start when she meets Luke, the nephew of her grandmother’s friend, and one unfortunate event leads to another. Just when she thinks her summer cannot get much worse, she finds herself transported to Acadia in 1755. Here she meets Anne and learns much about the Acadian culture and history and the Acadians’ relations with the Mi’kmac people.

    Publisher (Source)

    Vancouver

    Ronsdale Press

    Not specified