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The Time We All Went Marching spins tales from On to Ottawa

The Time We All Went Marching

The Time We All Went Marching

by Arley McNeney
(Goose Lane Editions,
2011;
$19.95)

The last spike was driven in the transcontinental railway in 1885, satisfying a commitment made to British Columbia by the Canadian federal government. The railway would unite the Confederation, open up new lands for colonization, and provide greater access for industry and trade. Fifty years later, in June 1935, hundreds of unemployed men took to those same rails in what was dubbed the On to Ottawa Trek.

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Elle's story

 Elle

Elle

by Douglas Glover
( Goose Lane Editions,
2003;
$18.99)
Elle is, according to its narrator, "the unofficial account of an anti-quest." Elle boldly explores the supposed "discovery" of the New World by the Old, in a tale that turns the Canadian historical novel on its head. It is a story that is also thoroughly embodied in its heroine — an unnamed, bawdy young woman, who is equal parts clever, romantic, and hilariously brazen.

"What do you do with a headstrong girl?" Elle is based on the true story of a 16th Century Frenchwoman who is unceremoniously dumped from her uncle's New World expedition for her lusty behaviour on board his ship. She is left, pregnant with her lover's child, on an island on the Labrador coast, with the lover and her nurse.

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