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ISBN 0-9698606-5-X - 160 pp - 6 x 9 - pb
- $15.95 CAD
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THE HOME PLACE: LIFE IN RURAL PRINCE EDWARD
ISLAND IN THE 1920s AND 30s
Non-fiction by Jean Halliday MacKay
In The Home Place: Life in Rural Prince Edward Island in the
1920s and 30s, Jean Halliday MacKay paints a vivid picture of
life in the early part of the twentieth century. She begins with
a brief look at the Halliday family's arrival to Belfast as "Selkirk
Settlers" in the early 1800s. There they settled and farmed,
becoming part and parcel of the Island's historical landscape. Written
especially for her family, this book is primarily about the time
of Jean's growing up. These are her stories: her memories of life
in the home and on the farm, in the one-room school and in the community.
Praise for The Home Place:
"As a long-time researcher and teacher involved with the study of
food and culture and how families manage the problems of everyday life,
I found this to be the type of narrative that today's students find fascinating.
It portrays a different model of family life in a different time, when there
was less emphasis on the individual and more on the commonality of community
life. There is good reason for such warm and unassuming storytelling —
stories that bolster our 'sense of belonging, rootedness, and continuity.'
We can meet the future with more confidence as, in retrospect, we realize
the human capacity for resourcefulness in living everyday life . . ."
J. Estelle Reddin
Retired Professor of Home Economics
University of Prince Edward Island
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