Tempting tomes

Words and images resonate across the pages in compelling coffee-table offerings

Advertisement

Advertise with us

For booksellers, publishers and authors, the holiday season is one that’s looked upon with great anticipation. For book lovers, of course, December is also a time to eagerly contemplate what new titles might end up stuffed in a stocking or tucked under the tree.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Subscribe and receive a limited-edition Free Press branded hat or tote.

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $205*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*First annual payment billed as $205.00 + GST for one year. This annual subscription will automatically renew at $233.00 + GST every 52 weeks (10% off the regular annual price of $259.35). Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 03/12/2022 (1319 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

For booksellers, publishers and authors, the holiday season is one that’s looked upon with great anticipation. For book lovers, of course, December is also a time to eagerly contemplate what new titles might end up stuffed in a stocking or tucked under the tree.

Those looking to make a weightier splash with book lovers this year might consider opting for the ever-popular coffee-table book, which typically combines insightful text with stunning images or illustrations. From art forgeries to an ER doctor’s perspective on the pandemic to the beautiful bison and beyond, here are 10 books bound to become coffee-table staples.

 

A Stunning Backdrop: Alberta in the Movies, 1917-1960
By Mary Graham (Bighorn/University of Calgary Press, $55)

A Stunning Backdrop

A Stunning Backdrop

Graham, a writer and film historian, compiles her 12 years of research on Alberta’s film industry in the first half of the 20th century in this new collection. In addition to explaining the ways in which the province worked as the setting for many a frontier/western film, all manner of black-and-white photographs, film stills and contextual tidbits are provided throughout, with images offering a glimpse behind the camera at Alberta’s stunning landscape and some of the biggest names in cinema at the time.

Buy on mcnallyrobinson.com

 

 

Acting Class
By Nick Drnaso (Drawn & Quarterly, $35)

While not a coffee-table book in the strictest sense of the term, Nick Drnaso’s weighty new graphic novel Acting Class is an eye-catching book of big proportions. In a storyline that sounds like it could have been plucked from HBO’s Barry, Drnaso (author of the Booker-longlisted Sabrina) brings together a group of relative misfits, outcasts and generally awkward folks under the guise of the titular acting class, in a book bursting with beautiful browns and sepia tones to help tell their story. Great for graphic-novel buffs as well as neophytes.

Buy on mcnallyrobinson.com

 

 

Wendat Women’s Arts
By Annette W. de Stecher (McGill-Queen’s University Press, $50)

The women of Quebec’s Wendat First Nation have been creating intricate artworks made from moose hair and quill embroidery for centuries, imbuing their work with profound meaning and storytelling. In University of Colorado Boulder professor Annette W. de Stecher’s richly illustrated book, many of these artifacts are displayed for the first time, their historical and cultural context and significance explored and explained.

 

 

Dark Days at Noon: The Future of Fire
By Edward Struzik (McGill-Queen’s University Press, $40)

Our ever-changing climate has resulted in an increase in the number of wildfires ravaging North America, particularly along the West Coast. Struzik takes a deep dive into the history of such fires on our continent, offering insight about what the years ahead might hold for us and illustrated with dramatic photos of landscapes, fires and their aftermath.

 

 

The Ecological Buffalo: On the Trail of a Keystone Species
By Wes Olson and Johane Janelle (University of Regina Press, $40)

The Ecological Buffalo

The Ecological Buffalo

The third collaboration between bison expert Wes Olson and photographer Johane Janelle (following 2005’s Portraits of the Bison and 2012’s A Field Guide to Plains Bison), the pair’s latest volume offers detailed information about the lives of buffalo interspersed with stunning and insightful wildlife photography of buffalo and other fauna, all of which helps illustrate this comprehensive look at the stunning creatures and their surroundings.

 

 

The Great Canadian Art Fraud Case: The Group of Seven & Tom Thomson Forgeries
By Jon S. Dellandrea (Goose Lane, $48)

After Dellandrea acquired the last effects of an obscure artist, including chronicles of a 1962 art forgery trial involving Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven, he was moved to reexamine the events around the case. The result is a brisk account that reads almost like a thriller, illustrated with all manner of art by the group — as well as remarkably well-done facsimiles and fakes.

 

 

The Last Steam Railways – Volume 1: The People’s Republic of China
By Robert D. Turner (Harbour Publishing, $80)

The Last Steam Railways, Vol. 1

The Last Steam Railways, Vol. 1

Turner has spent the last four decades traveling the globe to write about and photograph steam engines, and for this handsome new hardcover series takes readers into and throughout China. Over 500 colour photographs of trains, people and places are contained within the first volume of The Last Steam Railways, offering a fascinating glimpse into the last two decades of steam trains in China — once the benchmark of mining and passenger transportation, numbering in the thousands, and now with just a handful still in operation.

 

 

Out of the Studio: The Photographic Innovations of Charles and John Smeaton at Home and Abroad
By John Osborne and Peter Smeaton (McGill-Queen’s University Press, $50)

Out of the Studio

Out of the Studio

Charles and John Smeaton weren’t well known inside or outside the world of photography, but the brothers, born in Quebec in the first half of the 19th century, documented life in the province and later in Europe with remarkable attention to detail. Before his death in 2021, John’s great-grandson Peter offered up a number of photo albums to Osborne, an academic, who in turn compiled many of them in Out of the Studio to go along with his chronicle of the brothers.

 

 

Shadows and Light: A Physician’s Lens on COVID
By Heather Patterson, MD (Goose Lane, $40)

While working as an emergency-room physician in Calgary during the COVID-19 pandemic, Heather Patterson turned to her beloved hobby of photography to help cope. As the pandemic wore on she began chronicling the goings-on at the hospital through her stark, emotional black-and-white photography, which is collected (along with her reflections on working on the front line) in Shadows and Light. The highs and lows experienced by medical staff, patients and families is captured here in dramatic fashion.

 

 

Wendat Women’s Arts
By Annette W. de Stecher (McGill-Queen’s University Press, $50)

Wendat Women’s Art

Wendat Women’s Art

The women of Quebec’s Wendat First Nation have been creating intricate artworks made from moose hair and quill embroidery for centuries, imbuing their work with profound meaning and storytelling. In University of Colorado Boulder professor Annette W. de Stecher’s richly illustrated book, many of these artifacts are displayed for the first time, their historical and cultural context and significance explored and explained.

Buy on mcnallyrobinson.com

 

 

books@freepress.mb.ca

Ben Sigurdson

Ben Sigurdson
Literary editor, drinks writer

Ben Sigurdson edits the Free Press books section, and also writes about wine, beer and spirits.

Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.

Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

'Code red': UN scientists warn of worsening global warming

Seth Borenstein, The Associated Press 10 minute read Preview

'Code red': UN scientists warn of worsening global warming

Seth Borenstein, The Associated Press 10 minute read Tuesday, Aug. 10, 2021

BERLIN - Earth is getting so hot that temperatures in about a decade will probably blow past a level of warming that world leaders have sought to prevent, according to a report released Monday that the United Nations called a “code red for humanity.”

“It’s just guaranteed that it’s going to get worse,” said report co-author Linda Mearns, a senior climate scientist at the U.S. National Center for Atmospheric Research. “Nowhere to run, nowhere to hide.”

But scientists also eased back a bit on the likelihood of the absolute worst climate catastrophes.

The authoritative Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report, which calls climate change clearly human-caused and “unequivocal” and “an established fact,” makes more precise and warmer forecasts for the 21st century than it did last time it was issued in 2013.

Read
Tuesday, Aug. 10, 2021

Blue is the new black

Colleen Zacharias 7 minute read Preview

Blue is the new black

Colleen Zacharias 7 minute read Saturday, Jan. 11, 2020

Consumers can expect Pantone’s selection of Classic Blue as its colour of the year for 2020 to influence everything from interior paint colour to fabrics for cushion covers and bedspreads as well as fashion and accessories. But will the colour of the year announcement affect your plant choices? The 2019 colour of the year was Living Coral, a warm pink orange. I can safely say Living Coral had little influence on my plant purchases. The colour blue in the garden, however, has immense appeal to gardeners on many levels.

Blue is considered a cool colour and can be effectively used in the garden to create a perception of spaciousness. When blue plants are combined with mauve and grey plants, visually the plants appear to recede into the border. A background of blue-flowered plants — say, for example, Blue Boy clematis or Veronicastrum virginicum Culver’s Root — draws our eye upward toward the sky making a small space feel light and airy.

In announcing the Pantone colour selection for 2020, Leatrice Eiseman, Executive Director of the Pantone Color Institute, said that Classic Blue provides an anchoring foundation and lends itself to relaxed interaction. Nicole Bent, co-owner of Shelmerdine Garden Centre, concurs and says that using colour combinations of blue, gray, purple, indigo, even black, give a garden space a sense of stability and calm. Shelmerdine will offer a tempting array of plants this spring with captivating blue tones.

Deanne Cram, greenhouse manager at Shelmerdine, says a blue-flowered must-have perennial is Amsonia. Commonly known as blue star, Amsonia tabernaemontana pushes up green shoots from the soil in spring that by late June are fully adorned with round clusters of light periwinkle blue star-shaped flowers.

Read
Saturday, Jan. 11, 2020

Liberals’ pledge to end poverty includes establishing a minimum income, voluntary work program

Ben Waldman 5 minute read Preview

Liberals’ pledge to end poverty includes establishing a minimum income, voluntary work program

Ben Waldman 5 minute read Tuesday, Aug. 20, 2019

The Manitoba Liberal Party pledged on Tuesday to eliminate poverty in Manitoba by 2024, a lofty goal party leader Dougald Lamont insisted was realistic.

Lamont said the Liberals would do it by instituting a minimum basic income, reforming Employment and Income Assistance, boosting the minimum wage from $11.35 to $15 per hour by 2021, and implementing a voluntary work program in the mould of then-U.S. president Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Works Progress Administration from the 1930s. It's a set of ideas that would require a $700-million increase over current annual EIA spending, which is $600 million.

“I know there will be questions about the cost of this to the public purse, but we also have to look at the costs of poverty, and they are astronomical,” Lamont told reporters at Bonnycastle Park.

Lamont said the number of Manitobans on EIA had risen each year since 2008; currently, 71,000 adults rely on the service at a cost of $600 million annually. He also pointed to the $500 million used to provide support for children in care as a cost which would decrease through the Liberal initiatives.

Read
Tuesday, Aug. 20, 2019

Name-change sex abuser pleads guilty

Dean Pritchard 4 minute read Preview

Name-change sex abuser pleads guilty

Dean Pritchard 4 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

A convicted child sex predator who changed his name before going on to abuse another victim is now facing a likely 15-year prison sentence.

Ryan Knight, 44, pleaded guilty Monday morning to sexual interference and making child sexual abuse and exploitation material.

Knight remains in custody and is expected to be sentenced in the fall, when Crown and defence lawyers will jointly recommend the repeat offender serve 15 years in prison.

Knight, who was born Ryan Gabourie, has been in custody since last July when he was charged with sex crimes involving a 13-year-old boy.

Read
2:01 AM CDT

Slam the door on overly aggressive suitor

Maureen Scurfield 5 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

DEAR MISS LONELYHEARTS: My new boyfriend wanted a key to my place and I told him, “Not yet — we just met. It’s too soon.”

So, last night I came home from playing tennis and there he was in my little house sitting in my new recliner. He was eating a bag of chips, drinking a beer and watching TV.

He laughed when he saw my shocked face! Then he said, “Hello, beautiful! I just let myself in. You must be hungry. Can I make you something to eat?”

I said, “You’re acting like you live here, but you don’t. Where did you get my house key? You scared me!”

Structural flaws affect health-care performance

Alan H. Menkis 6 minute read Preview

Structural flaws affect health-care performance

Alan H. Menkis 6 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

The record is not background. It is the forecast.

Past performance is the best available indicator of future performance. That principle belongs to every field in which the conditions producing a result are more durable than the result itself.

It belongs equally to health system governance. When the structural conditions that produced failure remain intact, the failure is not a risk. It is a probability.

Manitoba’s cardiac care program has been examined repeatedly and formally reviewed twice by the profession’s own experts, separated by more than a decade.

Read
2:00 AM CDT