-
eBook Edition
- 978-1-03-918573-9
- epub, pdf files
-
Paperback Edition
- 978-1-03-918571-5
- 6.0 x 9.0 inches
- Standard Color interior
- 132 pages
-
Hardcover Edition
- 978-1-03-918572-2
- 6.0 x 9.0 inches
- Standard Color interior
- 132 pages
- Keywords
- Hudson Bay book,
- Northern Cree,
- Stories about Northern Ontario,
- Winisk Ontario,
- Hudson Bay Cree,
- Hunting & fishing,
- Hunting & trapping
Publish with FriesenPress
Learn how you can publish your book with the world’s only 100% employee-owned publishing services provider.
The North Then and Now
Stories from the Hudson Bay Lowlands
by
Albert Chookomolin
and
Bill Keller
The Hudson Bay Lowlands that cover the top of Ontario form one of the largest remaining wild spaces on earth. The Lowlands are a sometimes harsh but beautiful place that has long supported the Swampy Cree people—the Mushkegowuk. The North Then and Now: Stories from the Hudson Bay Lowlands tells what is has been like to live in that vast, remote land—and experience the changes that have happened to it and its people over the last seventy-some years.
Albert Chookomolin on Hudson Bay, off the mouth of the Winisk River. Albert belongs to the Weenusk First Nation at Peawanuck. He spends much of the summer hosting anglers at his fishing camp on Hawley Lake. Wendelin (Bill) Keller sampling North Raft Creek at Hawley Lake. Bill is a (mostly) retired freshwater biologist living in Sudbury. He is an adjunct professor and senior research fellow at Laurentian University.
Contributors
- Author
- Albert Chookomolin
- Author
- Bill Keller
What People are Saying
Other eBook Editions
This book is also available in eBook format from these sites.