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New answers to the Great Arctic Mystery
I was thrilled to see the headline on a yarn in the latest National Geographic magazine, electronic edition. “Seeking to solve the Arctic’s biggest mystery,” it began, “they ended up trapped in ice at the top of the world.” That “they” refers to Sir John Franklin and his 128-man crew, of course, who “disappeared while…
Read MoreWas I wrong to cite the Quartet?
Was I wrong? That is the question. Whenever I publish a book, I revise my business card, putting the new opus on the front. Over the course of a year, I must hand out, what? ten or twelve of these cards? That’s my idea of effective advertising. Highlight the new book in all things. But…
Read MoreWhy did I write this ‘big Franklin book?’
Early afternoon in Gjoa Haven, everyone gravitates to Qiqirtaq High School, a big modern building, for a cultural presentation. September 2017. I’m sailing in the Northwest Passage with Adventure Canada as a resource historian, giving talks as we travel. I’ve been rambling around Gjoa looking for Louie Kamookak, my old friend and fellow traveler.…
Read MoreMystery killer on the Churchill River
SHIPS OF MISFORTUNE // A ‘rare and extraordinary’ illness ravaged the crew of Jens Munk’s 1619 voyage in search of the Northwest Passage By Ken McGoogan Almost a century after a catastrophe that unfolded on the Churchill River, Cree hunters told a French fur trader a strange and grisly tale. Their ancestors had stumbled upon…
Read MoreThe Wager is a masterclass in story-telling
By Ken McGoogan / Special to the Toronto Star In March 1741, during a ferocious storm at the foot of South America, a creaky wooden ship called the Wager sailed into the Drake Passage — the most notorious channel in the world. The gunner on board, John Bulkeley, felt the vessel “hurtling on an avalanche…
Read MoreFlora MacDonald sojourns in Nova Scotia
[Nice to see a new biography of Jacobite heroine Flora MacDonald hitting the bookstores. Wonder if it will have anything to say about her sojourn in Nova Scotia. Here we have a few paragraphs that, in the final version of Flight of the Highlanders, I expanded considerably.] We drove sixty-five kilometres north out of Halifax,…
Read MoreParks Canada en route to the fate of Franklin
Wonderful to see that CBC Yellowknife is all over the search for the long-lost Franklin expedition. First, thanks to producer Peter Sheldon, they did a radio interview asking me about items salvaged from Erebus last summer. That spawned a TV interview on Northbeat, and then a news story in print, widely distributed through Canadian Press.…
Read MoreAnswering a screed on Canadian nonfiction
Ken Whyte is trolling, I know, but I can’t help responding to that scattershot screed he published by David Lemon. Some of what Lemon writes about Canadian nonfiction, let me be clear, I agree with. But much of it, speaking as a writer of historical and biographical narrative, much of it I reject. Lemon asserts…
Read MoreMemoir sings of the natural world
SPECIAL TO THE GLOBE AND MAIL Reading the Water: Fly Fishing, Fatherhood, and Finding Strength in Nature, by Mark Hume (Greystone Books, 276 pages) When he was just a tyke, Mark Hume lived on a farm in the Okanagan Valley where “a big Barred Rock rooster … attacked any perceived threat” to his flock of…
Read MoreRemember Michael Collins on the day he died
Excerpt from my book CELTIC LIGHTNING: Remembering Aug. 22, 1922. . . 100 years on. We got lost in the dirt roads north of Clonakilty. We were looking, Sheena and I, for the spot where Michael Collins got killed in an ambush. According to historian Tim Pat Coogan, Collins was “the man who made Ireland.”…
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