News

Research and publishing grant program launched

Posted by on July 25, 2013

Bob MorganThe Beaton Institute at Cape Breton University and CBU Press are pleased to announce that the long-awaited grant-in-aid of research and publishing program has been launched.

The Beaton Institute, in partnership with CBU Press, invites applications to the Robert J. Morgan Grant-in-Aid Program. The Grant-in Aid Program is open to scholars, researchers, authors, societies and organizations for the purpose of bringing to publication a Cape Breton related work suitable for inclusion in the Cape Bretoniana: Beaton Institute Research Series.

The Grant-in-Aid Program is made possible through the generous endowment of Robert J. Morgan Ph.D. (1938-2011). In memory of Dr. Morgan’s contribution to archives, community history and local publishing this award is intended to assist researchers of Cape Breton related themes reach a broader audience through publication by CBU Press.
Details on the program and application forms are now available on the Beaton Institute website: http://www.cbu.ca/beaton/dr-robert-j-morgan-grant-aid-program
Read the original announcement (Dec. 3, 2012) here: http://cbup.ca/blog/bob-morgan-gift-to-launch-new-research-book-series/

The Beaton Institute at Cape Breton University and CBU Press are pleased to announce that the long-awaited grant-in-aid of research… Continue»

CBU Press launching two books in Scotland

Posted by on July 19, 2013

Fògradh, Fàisneachd, FilidheachdBearing the People Away

Latest books have international flavour

Two new books from Cape Breton University Press will see their first light in Scotland in August, part of a festival commemorating the Highland Clearances.

Cape Breton and Nova Scotia have close ties with the Highlands and Islands of Scotland, in no small part due to thousands of Gaelic-speaking Scots immigrants displaced by often brutal 19th-century land-use reforms. The blunt result was a culture fundamentally altered, if not destroyed, and it resonates today among millions of descendants of Scots origins.

Bolstering its list of Celtic- and Gaelic-centred titles, CBU Press’s new offerings are directly connected with those Clearances.

Compiled by Scots-born American resident June Skinner Sawyers, Bearing the People Away: The Portable Highland Clearances Companion is part reference guide, part handbook, part travel guide and part resource in an encyclopedia format geared toward the general reader.

Entries vary in length from brief sentences to several pages and include major Clearances sites, major and minor figures associated with the Clearances, Clearances-related sites outside Scotland, places and historical events with Clearances and or Highland connections, books, recordings and relevant museums and organizations.

The second book being launched is even closer to home in Nova Scotia. Fògradh, Fàisneachd, Filidheachd / Parting, Prophecy, Poetry is a transcription and translation of the Gaelic contributions of Rev. Duncan Blair (1815-1893) in the famous Gaelic newspaper Mac-Talla, published in Sydney between 1892 and 1904 by Jonathan MacKinnon.

Translated and edited by John Alick MacPherson and Michael Linkletter, Parting, Prophecy, Poetry includes Blair’s articles on the Clearances, other historical essays, travelogues and a selection of his poetry. Uist-born MacPherson is a well-known Gaelic scholar and translator living in Grand Mira, Cape Breton. Linkletter is Chair of Celtic Studies at St. Francis Xavier University.

A native of Strathchur and Laggan in the Scottish Highlands, Rev. Duncan Blair was a Minister in the Presbytery of Pictou Nova Scotia. The small Presbyterian church in Garden of Eden, Pictou County, bears his name to this day.

Blair was a prolific writer who contributed to Gaelic publications on both sides of the Atlantic. He was mentor to Rev. Alexander Maclean Sinclair, a famed minister, Maritime Gaelic scholar and poet.

CBU Press will launch the books in Helmsdale, Sutherlandshire, where the Timespan Museum is hosting a Translocation Festival August 2-18. This year, 2013, is the bicentenary of the Kildonan (Sutherland) Clearances. Displaced Gaels from this area were resettled in what is now Winnipeg, among other areas in Upper Canada and Nova Scotia.

Following the official launch in Helmsdale August 9, CBU Press editor-in-chief Mike Hunter and authors June Skinner Sawyers and John Alick MacPherson will be making presentations in Ullapool, Thurso, Inverness, Portree, Glasgow and Edinburgh – place names familiar to Nova Scotians.

The launch and tour were in part made possible by a grant from the Nova Scotia Department of Communities, Culture and Heritage.

“We are so pleased to have the continuing support of the government of Nova Scotia on this and other of our publishing activities,” says CBU Press editor-in-chief Mike Hunter.

“Nova Scotia books are an important cultural resource worth sharing with the world,” he added.

Fògradh, Fàisneachd, Filidheachd / Parting, Prophecy, Poetry and Bearing the People Away: The Portable Highland Clearances Companion will be available in Canada and the U.S. in September.

Latest books have international flavour Two new books from Cape Breton University Press will see their first light in Scotland… Continue»

“A well-told tale”: review

Posted by on July 3, 2013

Jeanne Dugas of AcadiaA great overview of Jeanne Dugas of Acadia, our new novel by Cassie Deveaux Cohoon, was published by the Oran last week (June 26 edition): “…a remarkable feat of imagination supported by countless hors of research.”

The novel is biographical fiction, the story of an Acadian woman and her family as they try to stay one step ahead of deportation.

Jeanne Dugas of Acadia is a story for any reader who enjoys a well-told tale,” the review continues, “and if during that reading you are made aware of some of Nova Scotia’s darkest corners, least proud moments, feel perhaps for the first time a twinge of shame, [then] Cassie Cohoon has achieved much with her work.”

A great overview of Jeanne Dugas of Acadia, our new novel by Cassie Deveaux Cohoon, was published by the Oran… Continue»

Writing workshop with a difference

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encampmentWe thought we would pass along a unique writing workshop being planned by friends and writers Paul MacDougall and Steven Rolls at Moosebait.com: a writing encampment. On the weekend of Sept. 7-8, an overnight workshop at Fortress of Louisbourg will “explore the fortress and surrounding shoreline while exploring writing and finding inspiration in the history, drama, and conflict of the fortress.” – See more at: moosebait.com

We thought we would pass along a unique writing workshop being planned by friends and writers Paul MacDougall and Steven… Continue»

Music video “Trapper Boy” now on-line

Posted by on June 29, 2013

Hugh R. MacDonaldCBU Press has produced a music video of author Hugh R. MacDonald performing his song “Trapper Boy,” the writing of which was the inspiration for Hugh’s novel of the same name. Now available among a series of excerpts from a studio interview with CBU Press Assistant Editor Laura Bast, the song showcases Hugh’s talents as a songwriter and performer. Pretty darn good, if we do say so ourselves! Link here to the series or here directly to the song.

CBU Press has produced a music video of author Hugh R. MacDonald performing his song “Trapper Boy,” the writing of… Continue»

Select CBU Press e-books part of Canada Day weekend sale

Posted by on June 28, 2013

A number of fiction titles from CBU Press are being featured by Kobo.com as part of a Canada Day weekend sale on Canadian titles. E-book consumers have until July 1 to take advantage of savings.

CB novels include: A Forest for Calum; A Possible Madness; Blood Brothers in Louisbourg; Cibou; Jeanne Dugas of Acadia; Thomas, A Secret Life and Trapper Boy.

Link to the promotion here

A number of fiction titles from CBU Press are being featured by Kobo.com as part of a Canada Day weekend… Continue»

Miners’ Museum featuring Trapper Boy

Posted by on June 27, 2013

Trapper_FC-webTuesday, July 2, The Cape Breton Miners’ Museum, 3-6 p.m., is hosting a book-signing with Hugh MacDonald, author of Trapper Boy, the acclaimed novel for young people. Come and meet Hugh; he’d be happy to discuss the history behind his novel.

Tuesday, July 2, The Cape Breton Miners’ Museum, 3-6 p.m., is hosting a book-signing with Hugh MacDonald, author of Trapper… Continue»

Check out the Atlantic summer reading guide

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ABT_logo_A_FV02The annual Atlantic Summer Reading Guide is published by Atlantic Books Today. The print version of the catalogue is being circulated in select newspapers this week and copies are available in bookstores and libraries across the region.

Experience Atlantic Canada with books for every region—with over 80 titles, including 50 ebooks! You can also view or download a pdf of the catalogue directly from the Atlantic Books Today website.

The summer reading guide is also linked with www.49thshelf.com, an on-line catalogue of Canadian books.

The annual Atlantic Summer Reading Guide is published by Atlantic Books Today. The print version of the catalogue is being circulated in… Continue»

Blood Brothers and “amazing tale … that rings true”: review

Posted by on June 14, 2013

Roy-BB-cover-webA very nice review of Blood Brothers in Louisbourg, by Philip Roy, today at www.thechildrensbookreview.com.

An “amazing tale. As each son struggles with personal questions about his father, the author contrasts the two cultures’ approach to war, spirituality, human dignity, love, and loyalty. This is a moving story that rings true and that resonates long after you put down the book.”

Read the whole review here: http://tinyurl.com/m6dh4hh

(CBU Press is pleased to announce Philip Roy’s forthcoming historical novel: Me & Mr. Bell. October 2013.)

A very nice review of Blood Brothers in Louisbourg, by Philip Roy, today at www.thechildrensbookreview.com. An “amazing tale. As each… Continue»

CBU Press launching historical fiction Jeanne Dugas of Acadia

Posted by on June 13, 2013

Jeanne Dugas of AcadiaFour events in various corners of Cape Breton will launch our latest historical fiction this weekend.

Jeanne Dugas of Acadia author Cassie Deveaux Cohoon will be interviewed on CBC Radio One Cape Breton’s Information Morning on Friday (June 14) at 8:15.

The novel will be featured during the French Colonial History Society conference at Fortress of Louisbourg on Friday evening (14th); officially launched in Chéticamp on Sunday (16th) at La salle des retraités at 7 p.m.; a reading and discussion in St. Peter’s on Monday (17th) at 6:30 p.m. at the Nicolas Denys Museum and again at the Petit de Grat Library on Tuesday (18th) at 6:30 p.m.

Jeanne Dugas of Acadia is a true-life novel, fictionalized account of the remarkable life of one of the founding families of Chéticamp.

The title character was born of Acadian parents at Louisbourg in 1731. For more than thirty years, she and her husband, their family and extended families, lived under the threat of capture and deportation by the British militia and of attacks by pirates and privateers.

At various times the family lived in Louisbourg, Grand Pré (NS), Port Toulouse and Mira (Cape Breton), Île Saint-Jean (PEI), Remshic (NS), Restigouche (NB) and back again – sometimes more than once – before being captured and imprisoned on George’s Island (Halifax harbour), where three of their four children died.

When released, the family sought refuge on Île Madame (Cape Breton) and eventually found peace and permanence in the area now known as Chéticamp.

Written by Chéticamp native Cassie Deveaux Cohoon, Jeanne Dugas of Acadia is, in many ways, the story of the Acadians.

http://cbup.ca/blog/new-novel-chronicles-deportation-era-family/

Four events in various corners of Cape Breton will launch our latest historical fiction this weekend. Jeanne Dugas of Acadia author… Continue»