And finally (typing fast before while my internet works!), I may not be a hockey fan anymore but I certainly was when I was growing up in the 60s. They call Gretsky 'the great one'...I don't think he holds a candle to Gordie Howe.
This one isn't signed by the author but it is signed by two members of the Mackenzie-Papineau Battalion. This was the Canadian volunteer group that went over to Spain during the Spanish Civil War to fight on the Republican side against Franco.
Well, it's pretty nippy here and it's snowing so I think I'll post a few more books.
This one was written by Ben Johnson. He's the Canadian runner who broke the world record for the 100 metres at the Seoul Olympics. He ran it in 9.79 seconds. Cheers and excitement all around...until he...
The whole Tudor line seemed a little inclined to the violent side! I thoroughly enjoyed The Tudors. Mmmm...might be time to dig out those DVDs, if my wife hasn't donated them somewhere!
The Richard III book was an interesting read, by the way.
Interesting that the Guardian article does point out that the suspect skull fragment was discovered a year after Hitler's body was found and that Hitler's dental record matched the original find. Frankly the DNA test simply proves they found a fragment from another body. Without being too...
As a British Army intelligence officer, Hugh Trevor Roper was tasked with determining Hitler's fate, once the war ended in Germany. His conclusion was that Hitler committed suicide in Berlin. He published his research in 1947 in The Last Days of Hitler. Although his reputation took a bit of a...
I've always been with Josephine Tey on that one. Frankly...no. I do believe Richard III played politics the way they seem to have played it in the 15th century: rough and pretty deadly. He certainly had it in for the Woodvilles. But I suspect the nephew thing was primarily Tudor propaganda...
That is great stuff, Lizzie. I like them all...from the obscure to the famous.
I particularly enjoy books either by more controversial authors or about controversial subjects. I picked up a signed copy of 'Crazytown' today. That was an expose by investigative journalist Robin Doolittle of...
I usually refer to things like this show as "could've been, should've been" history. Amusing to watch, a bit like those alternative history novels, but absolutely lacking credibility. Just because it could have happened doesn't mean it did. Sloppy history.
I was absolutely delighted to see the term "in cahoots" in a front page headline in the Toronto Star the other day. "Cops In Cahoots With Tow Truck Driver." Great stuff...could have been straight out of a newspaper from the thirties!
Ice cream trucks are still a daily visitor on my street during the summer and have been for a long time. It's still popular with neighbourhood kids.
Barber shops have been mentioned before. There was a period when they all seemed to disappear, yielding to 'hair salons' but I've started to...
December 17th, 1939: Graf Spee is scuttled outside Montevideo harbour. Excitement around the Battle of the River Platte was high. The city of Ajax in Ontario was named after the Leander class cruiser involved in the battle, HMS Ajax. Although at the time it was basically a community created...
I think I'm pretty lucky to live in a large city. I have quite a few thrift stores I can go to and there are contents sales pretty well every weekend. It also makes ones like this easier to find. Sting only held book signings in 3 North American cities, I believe. In each city, he only...
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