A New Daytripper's Guide to Manitoba


Book Description

COMPLETELY REVISED with new chapter on Northwest OntarioFirst published in 2006, this full-colour guidebook from well-travelled Winnipeg Free Press columnist Bartley Kives off ers a wide range of idiosyncratic adventures available year-round in every region of Manitoba. Completely revised to include new Manitoba sites like the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, the MTS Centre, and countless other smaller gems, this edition also features, for the fi rst time, daytrips to north-westernOntario (which everyone knows is really part of Manitoba).




A Daytripper's Guide to Manitoba


Book Description

Sandwiched between North Dakota and Nunavut, Manitoba has never been the busiest chunk of tourism real estate in North America. To independent travellers, this is a good thing: Canada's undiscovered province offers uncrowded beaches, innumerable lakes, and unlikely cultural attractions, especially in the gritty/cool capital, Winnipeg. A Daytripper's Guide to Manitoba is the only comprehensive travel handbook to the province, and an indispensable tool for visitors from abroad, Canadians passing through, and Manitobans who want to get to know their own backyard. The new edition of the best-selling Canadian guidebook has expanded coverage of Winnipeg's cultural attractions, more Churchill ecotourism options, and a brand-new chapter on the Lake Of The Woods region of northwestern Ontario. Get the straight goods on cities, towns, and natural attractions in every corner of the province, compiled by one of Manitoba's most tenacious independent travellers, Bartley Kives. Remember, the only thing flat about Manitoba is the Trans-Canada Highway.




2022-23 Travel Guide to Canada


Book Description

The Travel Guide to Canada is published annually by Globelite Travel Marketing Inc. This high-quality magazine includes detailed editorial sections on each of Canada's Provinces and Territories, as well as feature sections on topics such as Indigenous Tourism, What's New, Food and Drink, Cruising Rail and more.




TheTravel Guide to Canada


Book Description

The Travel Guides to Canada are published annually by Globelite Travel Marketing Inc. This high-quality magazines includes detailed editorial sections on each of Canada's Provinces and Territories, as well as feature sections on topics such as Indigenous Tourism, What's New, Golf, Food and Drink, Cruising, Spas and more.




Library Journal


Book Description

Includes, beginning Sept. 15, 1954 (and on the 15th of each month, Sept.-May) a special section: School library journal, ISSN 0000-0035, (called Junior libraries, 1954-May 1961). Also issued separately.




Manitoba Walks


Book Description







Quill & Quire


Book Description







Stuck in the Middle 2


Book Description

The sequel to Stuck in the Middle: Dissenting Views of WinnipegSomewhere between North Dakota and Nunavut sits a curious land with a coastline patrolled by polar bears, highways lined with monuments to household produce and dinner plates drenched in a gluey condiment known as honey dill sauce. This is Manitoba, a province that has captured the imagination of ... well, maybe dozens of people around the world for more than a century. To many Canadians, Manitoba is nothing but canola, snow and mosquitoes. To people in Winnipeg, its capital and largest city, it's that place where the flood happens three out of every five years. So what exactly is Manitoba? It's one of the newest places on Earth, carved by glaciers and shaped by meltwater. It's one of the most Indigenous places on Earth, as all of its residents are beginning to comprehend and respect. But it's also a vast and largely empty land that lacks a singular identity, partly because of its vastness and emptiness - but also because most of its population barricades itself within Winnipeg's city limits. Stuck In The Middle: Defining Views of Manitoba finds photographer Bryan Scott and journalist Bartley Kives venturing beyond the Perimeter Highway to explore the architecture, landscapes and waterways of a province they know and love but may never truly understand. Armed with passionate ambivalence and an unwavering commitment to equivocation, Scott and Kives paint a perfectly imprecise picture of Manitoba for the rest of the planet to appreciate and revile and ultimately ignore.