Every month our knowledgable and friendly staff pick their favourite new book, ranging in topic from children's books to biography,
adventure to personal development.

Relax in the evening with a good book after a fun filled day in the spectactular Canadian Rockies.

 

march 2010

Joy's Pick:

Honolulu

by Alan Brennert

A colorful novel  describing Hawaii in the early 1900’s. Regret ( her parents wanted a boy)is  a young picture bride who leaves Korea to join the husband who has chosen her on this “island paradise”. Having secretly learnt to read she hopes for education and a more valued life. Instead she finds abuse and oppression. The description of Hawaii and the different culture takes us into the homes and traditions and personalities of the Korean culture and the resourcefulness of the picture brides as they turn their back on all that they have known . An interesting historical account of an Island as it grows and transforms and a great tale of one woman who goes against her upbringing to find that she is not Regret but Jin, a successful and loved woman who learns to forgive

Joy's Pick:

The Help

by

Jocey's Pick:

The Thirteenth Tale

by Diane Setterfield

If you were to mix 'Wuthering Heights', Du Maurer’s 'Rebecca', and 'The Shadow of the Wind', you might get something close to this wonderfully odd story. Margaret Lea lives a quiet life caring for rare books in her father's antiquarian bookshop. Vida Winter is one of England's most beloved and prolific novelists, but has spun a lifetime of mystery by beginning her career with a book called The Thirteenth Tale, a volume of twelve gothic fairytales that was strangely missing the thirteenth tale. Known for her eccentricity surrounding the missing tale as well as her own childhood, Winter invites Margaret into her life as a biographer. An eerily fantastic bedside read filled with dusty libraries, crumbling estates, rain swept moors and very dark secrets

Jocey's Pick:

Swan Thieves

by Elizabeth Kostova

Swan ThievesElizabeth Kostova A brilliant and talented painter named Robert Oliver enters the National Gallery,attempts to destroy a painting called ‘Leda and the Swan’, and then slip into a tortured silence for months. This extraordinary story is narrated almost like a painting itself, with layers of texture, brushwork, and language. The mystery surrounding the silent Oliver only deepens as his obsession with portraiture and a packet of letters written a century before,  between a young French Impressionist painter and her mentor, is discovered. Beautiful and haunting, this is by far the best book I've read in the last few years and will fill your creative soul

Jenni's Pick:

The Luxe YA NOVEL

by Anna Godbersen

As sumptuous as the cover this is a great drama of the upper-class society of New York, circa 1940. Behind the classy exterior is a world of lies and deceit. Friends backstab, boys are shared and rules are broken. All the shocking secrets of society are revealed in this enthralling tale. Little does everyone know, the “angel” of the town hides some dark secrets. Held in check by the tight expectations of society girls, she cannot reveal how she really feels. But eventually, everything comes out...

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