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The Last Tasmanian
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 276

The Last Tasmanian

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2001
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  • Publisher: Gle Library

The Last Tasmanian has reaped more national and international recognition than any other novel by Herb Curtis. First published in 1991, it has remained in print continuously in its original edition and later in The Brennen Siding Trilogy. Now it's available again as a separate volume in the GLE Library Series. Brennen Siding, a hamlet on a small tributary of the famous Miramichi River, is home to an unforgettable crew — Shadrack Nash and his friend Dryfly Ramsey; Dry's mother, the homely, destitute Shirley, and Nutbeam, the big-eared hermit she marries; the American sports who come to the Cabbage Island Salmon Club to fish; and, above all, Hilda Porter, the elderly schoolteacher who treasures the story of Trucanini, the last Tasmanian on earth. Hilda herself is the last of the Porters, and, amid the invasion of TV, Elvis, and rich Americans, Shad and Dry may be the last true natives of Brennen Siding.

The Brennen Siding Trilogy
  • Language: en

The Brennen Siding Trilogy

The complete Brennen Siding Trilogy is now available in a single volume. Brennen Siding, a hamlet on a small tributary of the famous Miramichi River, is home to an unforgettable crew -- Dryfly and Palidin Ramsey and Dry's friend Shadrack Nash; Shirley Ramsey, Dry and Pal's homely, destitute mother, and Nutbeam, the floppy-eared hermit she marries; the American sports who come to the Cabbage Island Salmon Club to fish; and the "lads" who guide them. Dry, Shad and Pal, young teenagers in The Americans Are Coming, make some headway into maturity in The Last Tasmanian. By the end of The Lone Angler, when Palidin realizes what will happen to his beloved Atlantic salmon if he sells his secret of catching a fish on every cast, all three have launched themselves into adulthood. The boys' adventures gently lead the reader to reflect on the nature of humans and the place of humans in nature. Running through it all is the magical, mysterious river and the legendary Atlantic salmon. The Last Tasmanian won the 1992 Thomas Raddall Award and was a finalist for a Commonwealth Book Prize. The Americans Are Coming is a successful stage play.

The Scholten Story
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 224

The Scholten Story

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1996
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Alex Sholten and his wife Maria immigrated from the Netherlands to Canada in 1952 with their seventeen children.

The Americans Are Coming
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 263

The Americans Are Coming

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1999
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  • Publisher: GLE Library

The first book in the best-selling Brennen Siding Trilogy.

The Lone Angler
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 272

The Lone Angler

In his third hilarious novel about the Miramichi, Herb Curtis launches Palidin and Dryfly Ramsey and Shadrack Nash into full maturity. The Lone Angler follows Palidin to Texas, where he seeks his fortune by trying to sell the secret of hooking a salmon on every cast. When Pal makes friends with Brandy Burgess, the slightly mad founder of a huge sporting-goods chain, he looks further into the future. If he succeeds in his quest, his beloved Atlantic salmon will meet the fate of the Texas red wolf.

The Silent Partner
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 266

The Silent Partner

Corry Quinn starts off on the wrong foot. When he's very small, his mother dies. Then his feckless father, heading down the road from his Miramichi village to Toronto, deposits Corry with his Uncle Kid. Now, this is a pretty good arrangement: Kid knows full well that Corry's father will never come back to Silver Rapids, and he and Corry get along fine. But Corry is a sad young fellow. One winter day, angry and miserable, he sticks his tongue to an icy railroad spike. By the time the infection clears up and he gets out of hospital, half his tongue is gone, and he will never talk properly again. Strangely enough, his accident improves his life. He and Kid understand each other well, Kid talking, Corry writing notes. Kid is an ageing hippie with a heart of gold and a shed full of home-grown weed. This, not Kid's tiny fishing gear shop, supports the two of them. Eventually, after many tragicomic adventures involving girls, fish, and the elusive eastern cougar, both Kid and Corry grow up. Together they find simple yet cunning ways to turn their chub hole into a magical salmon pool, the shed into a sporting camp, Kid into an outfitter, and Corry into a man with a voice.

Botanical Gazette
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 514

Botanical Gazette

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1892
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Publishes research in all areas of the plant sciences.

City of Miramichi
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 60

City of Miramichi

Laugh and learn as you experience the “Special Language of Miramichi” as you have heard it spoken, or are hearing it for the first time. Pummesoltagod, shes the “Very Best” as they say. “Hello for a Good Time !” A Best-Seller by Canadian standards with over 8,000 copies sold.

Mac's Boys
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 362

Mac's Boys

This is the story of the 1953 Hoosiers, NCAA champions, coached by Branch McCracken and boldly led by star players Bobby Leonard and Don Schlundt. This legendary Indiana University team from the pre–Bob Knight era has begun to fade from memory, but Mac's Boys brings it vividly back to life. One of the Hoosier state's most beloved basketball teams, the 1953 Hoosiers was also one of the best in the history of college hoops. It was a squad that had a great coach, a pair of star players, and teammates who accepted their roles and executed them flawlessly. With Leonard and Schlundt sharing the spotlight, there was the versatile forward Dick Farley (who would have been an All-American had he pla...

Eternal Justice
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 175

Eternal Justice

Does God intervene in our lives? If so, why does God so often seem to ignore our prayers? There have been countless scholars throughout the ages who have attempted various answers to this most significant question. Thus, the issue isn't new, but as old as The Bible. It was certainly true for Job, and David perhaps said it best, "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me? Why are you so far from saving me, so far from the words of my groaning?" Psalm 22:1. Yet, as Christians we believe God does intervene in our lives. We have faith. Is that faith based merely upon what we believe or is it also based upon experience? Certainly, the Bible provides countless examples of God's intervention on behalf of His people, those reported in Exodus being perhaps the most vivid. Then there is the ultimate intervention in human history, the redeeming sacrifice of God's only son, Jesus Christ. But the question still lingers, does God intervene in our lives today? Eternal Justice answers this question with a resounding, YES. It tells the stories of some of God's most lost souls and how they made their way back to Him through His direct intervention in their lives.