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The Ginger Prince Series $12.00
The Ginger Prince is excited to build a robot with his Dad but he almost misses out when he loses his temper. Watch as GP learns the importance of being quick to listen and slow to anger.
The Ginger Prince Series $12.00
Join the Ginger Prince on a rainy day as he learns to be thankful even when things don't go as planned.
Your Nickel’s Worth Publishing $16.95
"My parents and my three older sisters were already in the Model T Ford. I think it was old because it had no top. It was moving day. My dad had filed on a homestead and we were about to begin the two-hundred-mile trek from Watrous to Carrot River, Saskatchewan. My powder blue dress was scattered with tiny pink flowers. Mother had fashioned it from pieces that had once been part of a dress she had worn. To me, the move mattered not at all. The usual aura of family security prevailed. How could a child of barely five years know the hardships that lay ahead?"

Ileen (née Sheehan) Boechler's plainspoken memoir of a childhood spent homesteading beyond the 53rd parallel tugs at the roots of northern life, peeling back the layers of family and community connections to reveal the growth that is possible because of them.
Blow Creative Arts $24.00

H is for Home: A Saskatchewan Alphabet is a story that reigns true for many people in this province and even in this country.  With hints of humour woven through a rhyming text, this ABC book will draw in readers, young and old.  Each illustration is done in watercolour paint and ink, set on an off-white background.  This book makes the perfect baby gift, coffee table book, or Saskatchewan keep-sake.  

 

Blow Creative Arts $24.00

Children’s Book

With playful watercolour illustrations and rhyming text, Grandpa’s Garage follows in the footsteps of Amber’s first book, H is for Home: A Saskatchewan Alphabet. Although perfectly suited for the young people in your life, this book is an invitation to spark stories and anecdotes between generations.  Grandpa’s Garage  is “a place where things are kept and repaired. And most importantly, it’s a place where memories are shared.” The illustrations are done in Amber’s signature watercolour/ink style set on a natural paper. 

ISBN 978-1-9995462-1-2

Written and Illustrated by Amber Antymniuk 2021

Printed and bound in Canada at Houghton Boston Printers, Saskatoon.

Grandpa's Garage is respectfully printed on Treaty 6 Territory and the Homeland of the Métis.

Blow Creative Arts

Your Nickel’s Worth Publishing $39.95

Magical adventures in Ukraine! When the wind brings Natalia babushkas just like the ones her baba once wore, she is taken on a series of magical journeys to a time long ago and discovers the traditions of her Ukrainian heritage—the greatest of which is the love of family.

Your Nickel’s Worth Publishing $29.95

These stories from the Peepeekisis Cree Nation tell of the Little People, Wesuketchuk, and the Sky People, and share the Plains Cree worldview, values, and spiritual beliefs. “I am hoping that our Indian culture will not be lost, that there will always be someone to write and speak about it. As the treaty reads, ‘As long as the grass grows and the water flows.’” —Eleanor Brass, 1987

Your Nickel’s Worth Publishing $14.95

A grandma’s love cannot be broken ... no matter what! A funny, poignant exploration of a child’s quest to understand the meaning of a grandma’s love. I Will Always Love You ... No Matter What! will resonate with today’s grandmas as they negotiate their role in an ever-changing family dynamic.

Your Nickel’s Worth Publishing $19.95
"A long time ago, Our People came from the Northern Woodlands to the Great Plains looking for food," Grandfather said. "They saw that the Buffalo lived in harmony with Mother Earth the same as Our People did."

Through the Creator, the buffalo gave themselves as a gift for the sustenance and survival of the Plains Cree people. The largest land animal in North America once thundered across the Great Plains in numbers of 30 to 50 million. They provided shelter, food, clothing, tools, hunting gear, ceremonial objects and many other necessities for those who lived on the Plains.

But by 1889, just over a thousand buffalo remained, and the lives of the Plains Cree people changed. The buffalo is honoured to this day, a reminder of life in harmony with nature as it was once lived. This is the story of how the buffalo came to share themselves so freely.
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