Hamatsa: The Enigma of Cannibalism on the Pacific Northwest Coast
By Margery Fee
BC Studies no. 123 Autumn 1999 pp. 87-91
The Name of War: King Philip’s War and the Origins of American Identity
By Christopher Paci
BC Studies no. 123 Autumn 1999 pp. 77-80
The True Spirit and Original Intent of Treaty 7
By Kenichi Matsui
BC Studies no. 123 Autumn 1999 pp. 80-81
On the North Trail: The Treaty 8 Diary of O.C. Edwards
By Melinda Jette
BC Studies no. 123 Autumn 1999 pp. 81-3
By Ken Favrholdt
BC Studies no. 123 Autumn 1999 pp. 83-4
A Story as Sharp as a Knife: The Classical Haida Mythtellers and Their World
By Joel Martineau
BC Studies no. 123 Autumn 1999 pp. 91-2
You Are Asked to Witness: The Sto:lo in Canada’s Pacific Coast History
By E. Douglas
BC Studies no. 123 Autumn 1999 pp. 93-4
‘Boston Men’ on the Northwest Coast: The American Maritime Fur Trade, 1788-1844
By Jim Delgado
BC Studies no. 123 Autumn 1999 pp. 94-5
Fraser Gold 1858! The Founding of British Columbia
By Daniel Marshall
BC Studies no. 123 Autumn 1999 pp. 95-7
Beyond the City Limits: Rural History in British Columbia
By Margaret Conrad
BC Studies no. 123 Autumn 1999 pp. 98-100
Growing Up: Childhood in English Canada from the Great War to the Age of Television
By Andre Turmel
BC Studies no. 123 Autumn 1999 pp. 100-3
Environmental Management on North America’s Borders
By Larry Pynn
BC Studies no. 123 Autumn 1999 pp. 103-5
Roderick J. Barman, an expert on the history of Brazil, teaches Latin American history at the University of British Columbia. He has applied his knowledge of packing in Brazil to the Pacific Northwest and will shortly publish “Packing in British Columbia: Transport on a Resource Frontier” in the Journal of Transport History.
Charlene Porsild is a native of the Yukon and a former Fulbright Scholar. She teaches history at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln where she also edits the Great Plains Quarterly. Her book, Gamblers and Dreamers: Women, Men, and Community in the Klondike(Vancouver: UBC Press, 1998) won the W. Turrentine Jackson Prize of the Western History Association and the Clio Award from the Canadian Historical Association in 1999.
Arthur J. Ray, a Professor of History at the University of British Columbia, teaches and does research in the area of First Nations economic history and has been involved as an expert witness in numerous Aboriginal and treaty rights cases across Canada. He is the author of I Have Lived Here Since the World Began: An Illustrated History of Canada’s Native People (Toronto: Key Porter & Lester, 1996).
Laurie Ricou is the Poetry Editor of BC Studies. A Professor of English Literature, he teaches Pacific Northwest and British Columbia writing at the University of British Columbia.
Peter Trower was a logger for twenty-two years before he turned to writing poetry and fiction. He divides his time between Gibsons and North Vancouver. His book of poetry, Chainsaws in the Cathedral, has just been published by Ecstasis Editions and his third novel is due soon from Harbour Publishing.
Tom Wayman’s most recent book of poems is The Colours of the Forest, (Madeira Park: Harbour, 1999). He currently teaches writing at Douglas College and Kwantlen University College .
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