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Good morning.
I am an historian by nature and not at all enamoured of A-I. However, I accidentally asked A-I for a comment on my book "A Métis Man's Dream; From Traplines to Tugboats in Canada's North". Here is what it came up with. "A Métis Man's Dream: From Traplines to Tugboats in Canada's North" by Neil Gower is a biography about Gordon Gill, a successful Métis business owner who built his career from humble beginnings. The book explores Gill's life journey, from working on his grandfather's trapline to becoming a prominent figure in Canada's North, founding companies like Northern Arc Shipbuilders and Northern Crane Services. *Key Themes:* - *Overcoming Adversity*: Gill's experiences with residential schools, poverty, and personal injuries shaped his resilience and work ethic. - *Cultural Identity*: The book highlights the history and struggles of the Métis community, as well as Gill's efforts to preserve his cultural heritage. - *Northern Development*: The story touches on the growth and decline of the marine industry in Canada's North and the impact of oil and gas exploration on Indigenous communities. The book is praised for its engaging storytelling, historical context, and the author's meticulous research. Gill's life serves as a testament to perseverance, hard work, and the importance of family and community ties." Who would have thought it? And maybe you'd enjoy it too! I have many interests but four passions: my family, friends, honourable public service (especially among politicians), and my writing. (well, books too). On a positive note, SATURDAY IS INDEPENDENT BOOKSTORE DAY. So today I stocked up Audreys Books Ltd. with both A Métis Man's Dream and Blue Sky, Red Canoe! I hope you support your local independent book stores.
Also, Well, I am pretty excited about my new manuscript, Nobody Waved Goodbye; A Shipwreck Summer in Canada's North. I am out looking for a publisher. Here is some information about the story: About the Book In the hectic summer shipping season of 1956, fierce, unpredictable storms took two northern tugboats to the bottom, one on Lake Athabasca and the other on Great Slave Lake. Never before, in seventy-five years of commercial Mackenzie River shipping had a northern vessel taken its crew to the bottom. Yet, in 1956, not one but two ships were lost in the depths of vast northern inland seas. It was a time of sudden death, close-call rescues, and unanswered questions. Even now, seventy years later, mysteries remain; what happened to the MV Clearwater? What became of her crew? Where lay the remains of the MV Sandy Jane? Why have they never been located? Huge lakes hidden in the wilderness of northern Canada reveal their secrets only haltingly. That summer, teenage boys and young men ventured north, taking a crack at real life on the tugs. Some never returned. Others instinctively took to northern waters for extended careers, serving one of the largest, most important and least known maritime transport systems in the country. Seven decades of memories and newly uncovered evidence tell the stories of the summer when northern and nautical history was made, the summer Nobody Waved Goodbye. Neil has completed the manuscript for his new book, Nobody Waved Goodbye; A Shipwreck Summer in Canada's North.
In the spring of 1956, young men of different places and circumstances went north. They came to work the tugboats and barges of Canada’s longest river. They gathered in the largest north-bound drainage in North America. Most of them crossed the deepest lake on the continent in little, shallow-draft workboats, hundreds of miles from anyone who might look up to note their passing. In a land where the waters brings mystery, they had more than their share. For the north was, in 1956, (and in many ways is still) a place where the people are dependent on small ships for supplies and equipment which sustain them through long, cold, dark winters. It is a land where the legendary wind blows down cold from the hinterland, where in the summer of 1956, for the first and last time, two tugboats sank in large northern lakes, the summer Nobody Waved Goodbye... We are looking for a publisher. Keep your eye on this space for news! |
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AuthorNeil Gower is a writer living in Edmonton, AB. Archives
May 2026
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