It’s not all mountains and maple syrup, but love’s a rollicking adventure for these five Canadian couples. From the Rockies to the rink, enchanting romance awaits. Love Is in the Air: When Royal Canadian Mounted Police Sergeant Jim Cromwell and airline pilot Captain Sophie Berg are hurt in a drive-by shooting, their bond is palpable, even though he suspects she’s the head of the Maine drug smuggling ring he’s sworn to bring down. Then she’s kidnapped, and Jim must decide whether to believe his head or his heart. Saving Maggie: Reporter Maggie Kendall has retreated to tiny Woeful Creek to take over its small-town gazette and escape the turmoil of her life in the city. But she can’t shake her psychic gift, which incites a serial killer to play sadistic and deadly games with her. Only detective Joshua Tyler has the power to break this bond in time—that is, if she can make him believe her. Power Play: While being the wife of a professional hockey player may seem like a dream, for Lila Wallace it became a nightmare. Now, just as she’s about to finalize her divorce from superstar goaltender Cahal Wallace, he’s traded to their hometown of Toronto. But a stalker follows him, and he and Lila find themselves thrown back together as he tries to protect her. Can she ever trust the man who destroyed her dreams of a hockey happy ever after? Her Faux Fiancé: Hotshot lawyer Erik Sigurdson breezes into rural Akureyri, Manitoba, determined to survive a two-week family reunion. He makes his ex, combat photographer Analise Thordarson, an irresistible offer: pretend to be his fiancée and he’ll pay off her grandfather’s debts. But when their fake engagement is complicated by a very real pregnancy, they must sort out just who is using whom and if this sham relationship could lead to a real future. The Scandalous Mrs. Wilson: Jo Wilson is determined to keep her late husband’s bathhouse afloat despite the Fraser Springs society ladies’ public scorn. Writer Owen Sterling sailed to the tiny Canadian frontier town hoping to launch a serious journalism career with an exposé on the titillating rumors swirling around Wilson’s Bathhouse. But when the town’s small-mindedness lights a literal fire under their feet, Jo and Owen must choose what’s most important: tending to their careers or surrendering to their bubbling emotions. Sensuality Level: Sensual
advance praise for OMAR KHADR, OH CANADA “Some cases enshrine the deining moments of their time. Omar Khadr's is one. Future generations will rightly judge our shocking derelictions of responsibility in this matter.
Also by William D. Gairdner The Critical Wager The Trouble with Canada The War Against the Family Constitutional Crackup On Higher Ground The Trouble with Democracy Canada's Founding Debates (co-editor) WILLIAM D. GAIRDNER OH, OH, ...
defend Canada against terrorism then a significant and extensive training and equipping program for the infantry is necessary. On the other hand, if the government wants to operate offensively, a similar program is equally vital.
I will never forget the first time I saw the sun set on the Canadian prairies or my first view of the Rocky Mountains, ... Lowry wrote Under The Volcano and Hear Us O Lord From They Dwelling Place and The Spring Path Unto The Garden.
up with the golden sands of Sauble Beach at my doorstep, I realize now how rich we really were. Fondly referred to as the “Daytona of Canada,” Sauble Beach, Ontario is famous for its eleven kilometres of pure, golden, Sugary Sand, ...
A humorous look at Quebec's movement toward independence from Canada, remarking upon the Draconian language laws imposed on English-speaking Quebecois, the economic problems posed by the movement, and the troubles...
... and Pierre Pettigrew, “Speak Up, Mr Harper – Guantanamo Is a Disgrace,” Globe and Mail, 1 February 2007. 7Ian Austen, “Canada Reaches Settlement with Torture Victim,” New York Times, 26 January 2007. See also Gloria Galloway, ...
“What we knew then”: Janice Williamson, Omar Khadr, Oh Canada (Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2012). CSIS interrogations: Janice Williamson, Omar Khadr, Oh Canada (Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2012).
The largest survey of contemporary Canadian art ever produced outside Canada, Oh, Canada, featured work by more than 60 artists who hail from every province and nearly every territory in the country, spanning multiple generations and ...
My friend Vernon from New Orleans will tell you in a minute that he's no “black” man and Vernon will get righteously literal about it too. Paper is white and ink is black and since Vernon of New Orleans has never seen a human being the ...