Showing of Results

British Columbiana: A Millennial in a Gold Rush Town

08/07/2024
Unknown Author
No Subjects

Title: British Columbiana: A Millennial in a Gold Rush Town. 

Author: Josie Teed. 

Publication info: Toronto : Dundurn Press. 2023. eBook. 

Location: Academic eBook Collection

Description: A job as a heritage interpreter at a remote gold rush site propels an insecure and anxious twenty-four-year-old to find what she truly desires from life.“By turns deadpan and wryly candid, Teed has a keen observational eye and a talent for characterization. An excellent debut.” — ANDRÉ FORGET, author of In the City of PigsUnsure of her next steps after graduation, twenty-something Josie Teed accepts a position at Barkerville, a remote heritage site in British Columbia showcasing the nineteenth-century gold rush. She lives in the adjacent village of Wells, population 250. There is no cell reception and the grocery store is an hour away. Once a thriving gold mining community in the 1930s, Wells has become a haven for white Gen-X artists and flower children, struggling actors-turned-heritage-interpreters, and transient miners.Eager to move on from a master's thesis that left her questioning her passion for history, Josie dives headlong into her new job and life in a small town. Faced with the prospect of remaining long-term, she must decide if she will fight to carve a place for herself in Wells's idiosyncratic community. What follows is the story of a young woman trying to find connection and purpose in the twenty-first century while living in a village seemingly frozen in the past.

This post has no comments.
Field is required.
No Tags

Similar Posts

View All Posts

Title: Belonging: Natural Histories of Place, Identity and Home. 

Author: Amanda Thompson. 

Publication info: Edinburgh : Canongate Books. 2022. eBook.

Location: Academic eBook Collection

Description: Reflecting on family, identity and nature, Belonging is a personal memoir about what it is to have and make a home. It is a love letter to nature, especially the northern landscapes of Scotland and the Scots pinewoods of Abernethy – home to standing dead trees known as snags, which support the overall health of the forest. Belonging is a book about how we are held in thrall to elements of our past. It speaks to the importance of attention and reflection, and will encourage us all to look and observe and ask questions of ourselves. Beautifully written and featuring Amanda Thomson's artwork and photography throughout, it explores how place, language and family shape us and make us who we are.

No Subjects

Happy birthday to Dr. Leopold Auenbrugger! 

In the mid-1700s, in a hospital in Vienna, Austria, Auenbrugger found that by placing his ear to his patient's chest and lightly tapping, he could tell the density of organs within the body. By sensing if an organ or region feels hollow or dense, a doctor can detect blood clots, air pockets, masses, and other irregular conditions within the body. 

It wasn't until Dr. Rene Laennec developed the stethoscope in 1812 that other doctors used percussion to detect ailments in the body. 

Learn more about the medical applications of percussion in the video and links below! 

Read more: 

 

In 1959 musical satirist Tom Lehrer (who had a master's degree in mathematics from Harvard) created a song simply using the names of the chemical elements that were known in 1959 and setting them to the music of Arthur Sullivan (most specifically the music from the "Major-General's Song" from The Pirates of Penzance by Gilbert and Sullivan.

Around 2003, Mike Stanfill animated the song, updating it in 2012 with all the elements discovered since 1959. The video contains several visual puns, can you spot some of them?