Danda’s Delightful New Book!

November 11, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Arts & Culture, Main Content, People, Place, Your Neighbors

 

Danda Humphreys, one of our talented writers in the neighborhood and a well-known local historian, offers a wonderful new book, Tour Guide Tales, a perfect gift for the globetrotter who’s long on digital photos and short on stories, a happy-faced hospitality industry employee with sore feet, or an armchair traveller living life in the slow lane.

If you have travelled, on your own or with a group, you’ll enjoy this book! “Tour Guide Tales” is a collection of real tales told by real people – tour guides, directors and managers from right across Canada. The stories, edited by Danda Humphreys and illustrated by Elke Hierl-Steinbauer, will make you chuckle, nod in agreement, shake your head in disbelief, maybe even a shed a tear a two.

Read about the "two bad apples" in a busload of tourists who threatened to ruin the group’s trip to Tofino… the European tourist looking for the location of the camp where he once was a prisoner-of-war… and what happened the day a royal duke decided to steer a SeaBus.  Along the way, you’ll share some of the questions people ask, such as (at Lake Louise), "How do they drain the lake so they can paint the bottom blue?", and (pointing to the Undersea Gardens in Victoria’s Inner Harbour), "How often does that ferry sail to Vancouver?"

It’s a fun read and a great gift! Enjoy this unique collection of Canadian tour guide tales!

“Tour Guide Tales” (6” x 9”, 150 pages) is available for $19.95 per copy (including tax) from Danda Humphreys: dandah@shaw.ca or www.dandahumphreys.com.
 

 

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Ripsnorting Reads Recommended by the Booklouse

October 5, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Arts & Culture, Booklouse, Features

 

Image Credit: Illustration by Baldinger

 

My fellow insects, 

 
Here are a couple of books that I thoroughly enjoyed reading and hopefully you will enjoy them too, as we cruise into the fall.
 
The Island by Victoria Hislop
 
This is a debut novel about a girl, Alexis, who is madly in love but at the same time wants to find out about her mysterious family history which mainly took place on the Greek island of Crete. Hislop has obviously done a great deal of research on the island of Crete and its much smaller offshore neighbour, Spinalonga, the once Greek leper colony. 
 
This is a saga of ruined relationships, resurrected love affairs and a wonderful insight into the all too complex feelings of various family members over two generations. Hislop writes with true feelings for her characters, both from their points of view as well as her view through the sharp lens of history. There are absorbing comparisons made between the Cretan characters and those who have been cast out to the leper colony. It never fails to amaze me how history can still cause dramatic effects on later generations.
 
The British newspaper, the Observer, said of this book: “At last – a beach book with a heart.” Believe me, it reads just as well in front of a roaring fire with or without a glass of Domestica.
 
There is another very good book by her based on the Spanish civil war which I have just finished reading and I will be writing about in a later blog posting. 
 
And now for a little non-fiction:
 
White Gold by Giles Milton 
 
I have to confess that this is written by one of my favourite historians. This is the story of the more than one million slaves of Islam in the 18th century, and it centres around the history of a cabin boy named Thomas Pellow who was captured by the Barbary pirates in 1716. Milton used the published versions of Pellows diaries and notebooks and those of others, on which to base this factual history. 
 
This book is an incredible account of a little known piece of history about white slaves under the Islamic regime of the sultans in Morocco in Africa. The sultan of the Imperial Moroccan court is a man who had 2000 horses in stables alongside his palace, where the horses could enjoy stained glass windows in their stables and crystal fountains in the stable yard. He had an army of some 10,000 men in the same palace that was surrounded by a wall which he attempted to build, measuring 300 miles long.
 
This is a fun and fanciful story, but at the same time a disturbing account of what it was like to be a white slave in Africa, where the characters of the minor players are as colourful as the events in which they take part. They even managed to keep the flag of Islam flying for six months on the island of Lundy off the North coast of Cornwall – so much for to-day’s concerns about Islam.
 
For those of you who might not know the marvelous work of this intriguing historian, he is also the author of Nathaniel Nutmeg and Big Chief Elizabeth, amongst other good non-fiction reads.
 
Good chewing till next time,
 

 

"The Booklouse" - A published children’s author and former James Bay resident who now works at Russell Books on Fort Street in Victoria, BC

 

 

 

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Two Colorful Characters in James Bay

 

 

Image Credit: Illustration by Dean Lewis, (from the front cover of Focus magazine, Volume 21, No. 3, December 2008, and insert for the article, "The Inconvenient Truth About Her Axe and His Tax" by Katherine Gordon) 

What would a "Snippets and Snapshots" gallery be without a few colorful characters?

The Legislative Precinct of James Bay has two prominent politicians, Gordon Campbell (Premier of the Province of British Columbia and Leader of the Liberal Party), and  Carol James (Leader of the Opposition and Leader of the New Democratic Party) who are known to frequent the neighborhood every now and then when the affairs of state demand their presence.

Thanks to the artistic hand of Dean Lewis, (a resident of James Bay who delights visitors to the Inner Harbour every summer with their very own caricatures), we now have some rather pithy portraits of these powerful political potentates.

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Unveiling of Land & Sea Murals at Ogden Point

September 23, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Arts & Culture, Events, Main Content, News

Over the course of the past summer, a portion of the Ogden Point Breakwater inner wall has been transformed from a dark concrete surface into a series of a colorful hand-painted First Nations’ mural panels.

The Ogden Point Mural project, a collaboration between the Greater Victoria Harbour Authority and aboriginal Coast Salish artists Butch Dick (representing the Songhees First Nation) and Darlene Gait (representing the Esquimalt First Nation), and a team of aboriginal youth is a tribute to the unique artistic traditions of Canada’s first people.

The murals feature a series of undulating wave and sand forms filled with a variety of land and sea creatures common to the Westcoast which can be seen by visiting cruiseship passengers and those who walk the 2km long Ogden Point Breakwater.

The images of the land represented by Darlene Gait’s images of the cougar, the running deer, the raven and the eagle as well as the wolf are symbols of family unity, honesty, generosity, and respect, values which exemplify the dignity and nobility of First Nations people.

The artwork of Butch Dick portrays images of sea life including the salmon, the harbour seal, the devil fish (octopus), and the sea monster.

The "Ogden Point Land & Sea Mural Blessing Ceremony" organized by the Greater Victoria Harbour Authority with invited guests and dignitaries will take place in the Ogden Point Pocket Park (at the south end of Ogden Point adjacent to the Pilot Station) on Thursday, September 24, 2009 at 4 pm.

 

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Poetry Book Launch in James Bay!

September 16, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Arts & Culture, Entertainment

Keep your arts calendar clear for the evening of Thursday, September 24th!

Then mosey on over to James Bay Coffee & Books at 143 Menzies Street, to experience the warm hospitality of owner Kim Willoughby as she introduces a talented poet and James Bay resident by the name of Hubert Meeker.

What makes this event special is the fact that Mr. Meeker has more than seven decades of life under his belt, and at this tender age…he’s just published a book entitled, 18 Wheels: Poems that Move (illustrated by artist friend, Alana Kapell).

An American by birth, he spent much of his working life in Ontario and British Columbia. Having earned his M.A. in English Literature in Ohio, this talented renaissance man has penned five unpublished novels, a hundred short stories and plays, not to mention a thousand poems and light verse in between earning a living as a teacher, journalist, school bus driver, psychotherapist, hotel night cleark, counsellor, building superintendent, free-lance writer and janitor.

What makes this collection unique is the theme of "distances and dissonance", more particularly how vehicles have shaped our relationships — be strollers that carried us as children to the three-wheelers, and bikes to the more sophisticated automobiles, trains and planes that offer us the convenience of speed and comfort, and finally to the humble wheel chair which may accompany us out of hospital, or even out of life!

His poems chronicle the milestones, misadventures and memories of life a well led, not to mention the wonder and vision of an elder generation who gathers and sifts through them to glean the wit and wisdom that only time can give us.

So, drop by, and appreciate some poetry from the heart of man who knows how to weave words well! Pip pip hoorah – another contribution to the rich treasury of talent right here in our very own neighborhood! 

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Fellow Insects

September 15, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Arts & Culture, Booklouse

Image Credit: Lindedesign at flickr.com

The reason why this column is not called "Bookworms" is as follows:

No single species may properly be called the bookworm because a large number of insects feed upon dry, starchy material or paper amd may damage books.

(The above was extracted from the Encyclopedia.)

Each month I shall be reviewing a couple of books that I think will be of interest to you; if they are not , please do not chew on them in your fury as they will probably taste revolting. Also, a number of the books that I recommend, some of you may well have read, as I shall not necessarily be reviewing NEW books all the time.

If you would like to ask for suggestions in a given genre, please feel free to contact me via the contact form on this website.

Here’s a couple for you to enjoy in the meantime:

The Meaning of Night: A Confession (by Michael Cox)

I love the opening of this book:

‘After killing the red haired man, I took myself off to Quinns for an oyster supper.’

You guessed it, this is a Victorian thriller written in Victorian English. This book is an absolute delight to read and has an excellent plot line as told by a male protagonist (stay with me). This is one of those books where you think you have nailed the plot early on, but there might just be a few twists and turns before you realise that you weren’t quite right. The writing is old fashined enough to be wonderfully descriptive, but not so old fashioned as to be difficult to read or in any way affect your enjoyment of the story. Watch out for the fun historical notes at the bottom of some of the pages, which all end with the letters: Ed (see my final paragraph).

Sadly, Michael Cox died of a rare form of cancer about three months ago, but not before he heard from his publisher that they were going to publish the sequel, The Glass of Time. Let me tell you, there had to be a sequel, you will know what I mean when you finish The Meaning of Night.

The Glass of Time: A Novel (by Michael Cox)

Here is another excellent read, but this time with a female protagonist. It is 22 years later, and again the plot is one of those that seems so simple at the beginning; but just you wait. Whatever you do, be sure to read these in order.

If you are wondering about the late Mr. Cox’s credentials for this type of writing, he was the Editor at Oxford University Press for many years, specializing in Victorian matters, including crime.

Happy chewing till next time,

"The Booklouse" - A published children’s author and former James Bay resident who now works at Russell Books on Fort Street in Victoria, BC

 

 

 

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