Antiques & collectibles
Architecture
Art
Bibles
Biography & autobiography
Body, mind & spirit
Business & economics
Comics & graphic novels
Computers
Cooking
Crafts & hobbies
Drama
Education
Family & relationships
Fiction
Foreign language study
Games
Gardening
Health & fitness
History
House & home
Humor
Language arts & disciplines
Law
Literary collections
Literary criticism
Mathematics
Medical
Music
Nature
Performing arts
Pets
Philosophy
Photography
Poetry
Political science
Psychology
Reference
Religion
Science
Self-help
Social science
Sports & recreation
Study aids
Technology & engineering
Transportation
Travel
True crime
Young fiction
Young nonfiction
Architecture
Art
Bibles
Biography & autobiography
Body, mind & spirit
Business & economics
Comics & graphic novels
Computers
Cooking
Crafts & hobbies
Drama
Education
Family & relationships
Fiction
Foreign language study
Games
Gardening
Health & fitness
History
House & home
Humor
Language arts & disciplines
Law
Literary collections
Literary criticism
Mathematics
Medical
Music
Nature
Performing arts
Pets
Philosophy
Photography
Poetry
Political science
Psychology
Reference
Religion
Science
Self-help
Social science
Sports & recreation
Study aids
Technology & engineering
Transportation
Travel
True crime
Young fiction
Young nonfiction
Dispatched from Southport
United Kingdom
Usually dispatched within 48 hours
United Kingdom
Usually dispatched within 48 hours
Publisher Description:
Created by the crashing together of tectonic plates, worn down by the passage of ice and time and shaped by hot, dry chinook winds, the foothills of the Rocky Mountains are a special place. In composing his ode to the land he loves, best-selling author and mountain man Sid Marty skilfully weaves together First Nations legends with the harrowing tales of miners, early homesteaders and his own family's experiences living in an old ranch headquarters. The result is a passionate and vivid book: dense with information, lyrical in its appreciation of the land and the people who have inhabited it, but also cut by icy irony and sardonic wit. As evocative today as when it was first published in 1995, this new edition of the best-selling western classic may just be one of the best books ever written about Alberta for the way Marty captures the unique character of the land that lies between the mountains and the prairies.
Created by the crashing together of tectonic plates, worn down by the passage of ice and time and shaped by hot, dry chinook winds, the foothills of the Rocky Mountains are a special place. In composing his ode to the land he loves, best-selling author and mountain man Sid Marty skilfully weaves together First Nations legends with the harrowing tales of miners, early homesteaders and his own family's experiences living in an old ranch headquarters. The result is a passionate and vivid book: dense with information, lyrical in its appreciation of the land and the people who have inhabited it, but also cut by icy irony and sardonic wit. As evocative today as when it was first published in 1995, this new edition of the best-selling western classic may just be one of the best books ever written about Alberta for the way Marty captures the unique character of the land that lies between the mountains and the prairies.


