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E Pauline Johnson

Kirjat ja teokset yhdessä paikassa: 77 kirjaa, julkaisuja vuosilta 1987-2026, suosituimpien joukossa Flint and Feather: The Complete Poems of E. Pauline Johnson, Tekahionwake (1922). Vertaile teosten hintoja ja tarkista saatavuus suomalaisista kirjakaupoista.

Mukana myös kirjoitusasut: E. Pauline Johnson

77 kirjaa

Kirjojen julkaisuhaarukka 1987-2026.

The Lost Island

The Lost Island

E. Pauline Johnson

SIMPLY READ BOOKS
2025
nidottu
My aim, my joy, my pride, is to sing the glories of my own people. -- E. Pauline Johnson A search for the timeless connection to the old world presages a vision of the future in the haunting story of The Lost Island from Legends of Vancouver, a book inspired by the friendship between a Mohawk poet and a Salish chief and storyteller. It was the first collection of West Coast legends retold in English by a native artist and has become a classic of Canadian children's and native literature. Set amidst the natural beauty of Vancouver, British Columbia, the detailed watercolour illustrations by Atanas convey a spirit infused with the love of nature.
The Lost Island

The Lost Island

E. Pauline Johnson

SIMPLY READ BOOKS
2025
sidottu
My aim, my joy, my pride, is to sing the glories of my own people. -- E. Pauline Johnson A search for the timeless connection to the old world presages a vision of the future in the haunting story of The Lost Island from Legends of Vancouver, a book inspired by the friendship between a Mohawk poet and a Salish chief and storyteller. It was the first collection of West Coast legends retold in English by a native artist and has become a classic of Canadian children's and native literature. Set amidst the natural beauty of Vancouver, British Columbia, the detailed watercolour illustrations by Atanas convey a spirit infused with the love of nature.
Legends of Vancouver

Legends of Vancouver

E. Pauline Johnson

Midtown Press
2024
nidottu
Legends of Vancouver was written at the turn of the last century and first published in 1911. The written collection of legends and myths was the result of a meeting, and later the fast friendship, between a Mohawk princess and a West Coast Squamish Chief. Before her arrival on the West Coast, Pauline Johnson had acquired notoriety as a poet and performer and as an active proponent of Mohawk culture. That she was drawn to local legends was a natural extension of an already prolific career as a writer and stage performer. Retiring from the stage when she reached Vancouver in 1909, it was only right that she continues to share her stories. These were first published separately in a local newspaper and later published in book form. Johnson's book of native legends quickly became a classic of Vancouver's literature. We can still detect to this day the joy of discovery that Johnson imprinted in her writing of the legends. Whether just arrived or long-time residents, readers will share with Johnson emotions of discovery when seized, through her writings, by the beauty of the surroundings, just as she was 100 years ago. This book is also a portrait of a very young Vancouver with its much loved Stanley Park, its rough-and-tumble gold diggers and its millennium old First Nations. Pauline Johnson's tomb is set in Stanley Park, near Third Beach. In 1922, almost 13 years after her death, the City of Vancouver paid tribute to this magnificent artist and her legacy by erecting a monument in her honour. This 100th anniversary edition combines a mix of archival pictures of Vancouver and photographs by Anne-Marie Comte to provide a sense of where these legends took place and how they are incorporated in the modern city.