Last Friday I gave a talk to Bridlington Library Writers. They were an appreciative group and I hope I left them enthused to study their own writing, and the writing of others, from a slightly different angle.
During the tea break a gentleman quietly pushed a tome towards me.
He'd been present at a previous talk I'd given and knew of my interest in
Native American historical life-styles. The book was trade paperback size, a
good 1.5 inches thick, and sported a beige rough cardboard cover with a rather
crude depiction of an “Indian” in a canoe in white-water. Handbook of Indians of Canada.
The print, in two columns, is arranged on 57 lines per page, which will give an
idea of the print size – it looks like 8pt or 9pt tops. As can be imagined, it
hardly seems as if it has been opened. I accepted it with what I hope was good
grace.
Yesterday I opened it, magnifying glass in hand. It’s not a handbook, it’s an encyclopaedia. The edition might date back to only 1971, but the
information it contains is part of a work started in …1873… and only completed in 1910. The map attached to the back
cover mentions Treaties dating from 1850. A random opening of pages shows
mention of meetings at Montreal in 1778, mention of the Kiowa, Dakota, Sauk
& Fox, which rather blurs the distinction of …Indians of Canada.
Where the gentleman got it from, he didn’t say, but I now need to hunt him
down to thank him properly. What can I say? Wow! What a resource.