Theytus Books Spring 2016

Transcription

Theytus Books Spring 2016
THEYTUS BOOKS
Theytus Books Spring 2016
Publishing the Indigenous Voice since 1981
Theytus Books Ltd.
Green Mountain Road, Lot 45
RR#2, Site 50, Comp. 8
Penticton, BC V2A 6J7
Phone: (250) 493-7181 ext. 2234
Fax: (250) 493-5302
E-mail: [email protected]
www.theytus.com
GST# 10526 1762 RT
www.theytus.com
We acknowledge the financial support of The Government of Canada through the Department of Canadian heritage for our publishing activities. We acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the
Arts, which last year invested $154 million to bring the arts to Canadians throughout the country. Nous
remercions le Conseil des arts du Canada de son soutien. L’an dernier, le Conseil a investi 154 millions de
dollars pour mettre de l’art dans la vie des Canadiennes et des Canadiens de tout le pays. We acknowledge the
support of the Province of British Columbia through the British Columbia Arts Council
New Releases
River of Salmon Peoples................................................................... 4
The Best of Funny You Don’t Look Like One................................... 5
These Threads Become a Thinner Light.............................................6
The Black Ship................................................................................. 7
Recent Releases
Legacy..............................................................................................8
The Girl Who Grew a Galaxy............................................................9
Adult Fiction
Red Rooms.................................................................................... 10
Midnight Sweatlodge..................................................................... 10
Broken But Not Dead.................................................................... 11
Where Mary Went......................................................................... 11
Porcupines and China Dolls........................................................... 12
In the Shadow of Evil..................................................................... 13
Wings of Glass............................................................................... 14
Two Trails Narrow.......................................................................... 14
Adult Non Fiction
As I Remember It........................................................................... 15
God Don’t Make No Junk.............................................................. 15
From Lishamie............................................................................... 16
My Life with the Salmon................................................................ 16
Behind Closed Doors: Stories from the Kamloops Indian
Residential School.......................................................................... 17
Following Nimishomis: The Trout Lake History of
Dedibaayaanimanook Sarah Keesick Olsen.................................... 17
Backlist...............................................................................18
Distribution List...............................................................20
New Releases | Spring 2016
Non Fiction
River of Salmon
Peoples
978-1-926886-41-1
$32.95 CDN | $32.95 USD
11 x 8.5 | 151 pages | Paper
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The River of the Salmon Peoples captures
what the Fraser River, and its most valuable
resource, the salmon, means to First
Nations communities along its basin. The
result of nine community engagements,
extensive research over two years, and
illuminating photographs and artwork,
this book captures the oral narratives of
each community along the river. The
book, while capturing timeless Indigenous
stories and legends about the salmon and
the river, is also an exploration of the
future of the salmon and of the waters of
the Fraser River. It will have high appeal
to readers interested in First Nations issues,
the sustainability of the salmon, and the
environmental challenges facing the world
today.
The River of the Salmon Peoples is an
expression of the people, culture and
ceremony along the Fraser of will be of
deep interest to both the general reader
and students of the environment and
Indigenous rights.
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www.theytus.com
New Releases | Spring 2016
Humour/Non Fiction
The Best of Funny
You Don’t Look Like
One
Drew Hayden Taylor
978-1-926886-33-6
$18.95 CDN | $18.95 USD
9 x 6 | 245 pages | Paper
The Best of Funny, You Don't Look Like
One, first published by Theytus Books
in 1998, has been a perennial bestseller.
Drew Hayden Taylor's wit, humour and
insightful commentaries have garnered
legions of fans and resulted in four Funny
You Don't Look Like One books over the
years. Infused with a trickster spirit and an
ability to traverse the sometimes seemingly
deep divide between the Native and nonNative worlds, Taylor is a sly commentator,
often with tongue planted firmly in cheek.
The Best of Funny, You Don't Look Like One
is the first best-of chosen by the author,
and a treat for fans and new readers alike.
About the Author
Marketing
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Drew Hayden Taylor is an Ojibway from
the Curve Lake Reserve in Ontario.
Drew is an award-winning playwright,
journalist, filmmaker and lecturer. He has
also directed three documentaries. One is
the very popular Redskins, Tricksters and
Puppy Stew, an examination of Native
humour produced by the National Film
Board.
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New Releases | Spring 2016
Poetry
These Threads
Become a Thinner
Light
David Groulx
“Groulx has an brilliant writing
style. He is able to set a scene in a
reader’s mind with clear words. Most
of the scenes are uncomfortable,
which is meant to show us the
reality that he and most of his
people are in.”
—Steven Buechler
The Library of
Pacific Tranquility 2014
978-1-926886-35-0
$14.95 CDN | $14.95 USD
5 x 4 | 104 pages | Paper
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About the Author
David Groulx is a powerhouse of
contemporary Indigenous poetry having
garnered critical admiration for his deft
and forceful wordplay, taking readers into
blisteringly honest reflections of survival
and momentary redemptions of a hidden
world in the underbellies of Canada’s major
metropolises and small towns. Raised in
Elliot Lake, Ontario he is proud of his
Anishnabe and French Canadian roots.
He has had 12 books of poetry published
winning various awards, appearing in over
a 170 magazines in 15 countries with his
poetry translated and published into both
French and Ojibwa.. He currently lives in
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
www.theytus.com
New Releases | Spring 2016
Fiction
The Black Ship
Gerry William
The Black Ship was originally published in
1994, and was ahead of its time. The novel
opened up the possibilities of science fiction
within Indigenous literature. This new
edition continues the adventures of Enid Blue
Starbreaks beyond the original publication
and is double the length of the original.
978-1-926886-38-1
$28.95 CDN | $28.95 USD
6 x 9 | 402 pages | Paper
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Enid Blue Starbreaks is a Repletian who
survives a mass killing of her people on the
Pegasus. She is later adopted and raised by an
Amphorian family. With the recent attention
given to the 60s scoop of Indigenous people
in Canada, the parallels in the novel are quite
striking. Despite the racism she experiences,
she rises up the ranks of the Amphorian navy,
and eventually becomes an admiral of the
fourth fleet. Eventually, her uncle Leon Three
Starbreaks connects with her, and her circle
back to her people is complete although
somewhat fractured.
About the Author
Gerry William has a BA in English Literature
and a PhD in Interdisciplinary Studies.
He is the first Spalumcheen band member
to receive a doctorate. He is a Dean at the
Nicola Valley Institute of Technology and
makes his home in Merritt with his wife,
editor and writer Beth Cuthand.
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Recent Releases | Spring 2016
Fiction
Legacy
Waubgeshig Rice
Legacy is the first novel by Waubgeshig
Rice, whose collection of stories; Midnight
Sweatlodge was the Gold Medal Winner of the
Independent Publisher Book Awards, 2012 for
Adult Multicultural Fiction. Set in the 1990s,
Legacy deals with violence against a young
Indigenous woman and its lingering aftershocks on an Anishnawbe family in Ontario. Its
themes of injustice, privilege and those denied
it, reconciliation and revenge, are as timely as
today’s headlines.
978-1-926886-34-3
$18.95 CDN | $18.95 USD
6 x 9 | 182 pages | Paper
BISAC: FIC000000
Marketing
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"Legacy is the interlaced story of a
single Anishinaabe family dealing with
the implications of Legacy, all the
legacies of human existence, from the
legacies our younger selves leave our
future selves, to the sins and violations
of the father and the mother visited
upon the sons and daughters to the
seventh generation. "
—John Richardson
Beyond the Hedge
About the Author
Waubgeshig Rice is a broadcast journalist and writer who lives in Ottawa. He grew up
in Wasauksing, an Anishinaabe community on the shores of Georgian Bay. His articles,
essays and columns have been published in national newspapers and magazines, and as a
television journalist for CBC he has filed reports from across Canada.
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www.theytus.com
Recent Releases | Spring 2016
NEW EDITION
Fiction
The Girl Who Grew A
Galaxy
Cherie Dimaline
New Edition
From award-winning author Cherie
Dimaline comes a tale of struggle hope and the
kind of magic that can only happen when you
mix the Mississippi and the Georgian Bay.
978-1-926886-31-2
$18.95 CDN | $18.95 USD
6 x 9 | 351 pages | Paper
BISAC: FIC000000
Marketing
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Ruby Bloom has a lot going on; her mother
is eating herself to death, a soul-crushing
museum job, and her flamboyant best friend
who humiliates and saves her in equal doses.
And then there’s a galaxy of odd planets that
spin around her head. When Ruby’s sent to
New Orleans for work, she finds an astronomer
in an attic that just might be the way out of her
chaotic solar system.
"Ruby Bloom is the smartest, most
resilient and most beautiful character
ever
created in Indian Country.”
—Lee Maracle
About the Author
Cherie Dimaline is Ojibway and Métis. Cherie is the Writer in Residence for First
Nations House at the University of Toronto. Her first book, Red Rooms, was published
in 2007 and won the Anskohk Fiction Book of the Year Award. She is the editor of
First Nations House Magazine, an Aboriginal student periodical; Muskrat Magazine, an
online indigenous publication; and FACE, a national print quarterly focused on food
sovereignty and culture. Her short fiction has been anthologized internationally.
www.theytus.com
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Adult Fiction | Spring 2016
Red Rooms
Cherie Dimaline
New Revised Edition
In Red Rooms, Naomi tells the tales of a young
prostitute and her invasive spirits, a terminally
ill couture collector, a photographer looking
for homegrown identity in foreign lands, a
businesswoman who discovers the diary of a
jingle-dress dancer and a woman emerging
from an obsessive affair. They all check in for a
temporary stay, living out complicated lives in
these simple spaces. Strung together through
Naomi’s narration, the stories in Red Rooms
portray a complex and beautiful urban Native
community.
978-1-926886-17-6
$18.95 CAD | $18.95 USD
6 x 9 | 192 pages | Paper
BISAC: FIC019000
Midnight Sweatlodge
Waubgeshig Rice
Gold Medal Winner of the 2012 Independent
Publisher Book Awards in the category of
Multicultural Fiction.
978-1-926886-14-5
$18.95 CDN | $16.95 USD
5 x 7 | 96 pages | Paper
BISAC: FIC029000
10
Midnight Sweatlodge tells the tale of family
members, friends and strangers who gather
together to partake in this ancient healing
ceremony. Each person seeks traditional
wisdom and insight to overcome pain and
hardship, and the characters give us glimpses
into their lives that are both tearful and true.
Rice captures the raw emotion and unique
challenges of modern Aboriginal life. It’s a
hard-hitting and genuine look at the struggles
First Nations people face
www.theytus.com
Adult Fiction | Spring 2016
Broken But Not Dead
Joylene Nowell Butler
Silver Medal Winner of the 2012 Independent
Publisher Book Awards in the category of
Canada-West – Best Regional Fiction
978-1-926886-16-9
$18.95 CDN | $16.95 USD
9 x 6 | 281 pages | Paper
BISAC: FIC022000
Doctor Brendell Meshangom, a recently
resigned university professor, retreats to her
isolated cabin to repair her psyche and she
is confronted by a masked intruder. His
racial comments lead her to believe she is
the solitary victim of a hate crime. After two
bizarre days inflicting a sadistic captivity, the
intruder mysteriously disappears. Brendell
conceals the incident from the police, but will
keeping quiet keep her safe? And when her
beloved daughter, Zoë, is threatened—and
Brendell takes matters into her own hands.
Where Mary Went
Lynne Sherry McLean
978-1-894778-96-1
$22.95 CDN | $21.95 USD
6 X 9 | 292 pages | Paper
BISAC:FIC000000,
FIC027050
www.theytus.com
Mary Fisher has not had an easy life. Forced
into a residential institute after the death
of her mother, she and her siblings suffer
appalling abuse and neglect. While many
around her languish, Mary grows stronger. A
precocious child, Mary matures into a resilient
woman with a kind heart and quick smile
that endears her to everyone she meets and
two men in particular: Gmiwan, a sensitive
artist whom she will one day marry, and Tom
Dunsby, the mayor of Jackson, whose love
can never be acknowledged. When Gmiwan
goes off to war, Mary struggles to raise her
young son alone during the Depression.
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Adult Fiction | Spring 2016
Porcupines and China
Dolls
Robert Arthur Alexie
“To understand this story, it is important to
know the People and where they came from
and what they went through.” So begins a
haunting story that explores with frank and
honest words the dark legacy of the residential
school system and its impact on individuals,
families and communities.
James Nathan and Jake Noland have been best
friends for life. After finishing mission school,
they return to their Gwich’in community in
the Northwest Territories. Their lives revolve
around bootleggers, the bar, drug abuse and
meaningless sex. James and Jake try to dull
their painful memories of the school. Each
hides a dark secret that fuels their nightmares.
Hardcover Edition
978-1-894778-68-8
$24.95 CDN | $24.95 USD
9 X 6 | 306 pages | Paper
BISAC: FIC000000
Enough alcohol silences the demons for
a night; a gun and a single bullet silences
demons forever. When a friend commits
suicide and a former priest appears on
television, the community is shattered. James
and Jake confront their childhood abuse and
break the silence to begin a journey of healing
and rediscovery.
“A terrific book that deals with
present day concerns. Its narrative
strategy is on the North American
readers aren’t going to be used to …
But for Native readers, what they’ll
hear is some of the overtones of oral
literature and oral story telling.”
—Thomas King, Governor General’s
Award nominee for Green Grass, Running
Water and author of Medicine River
and The Truth About Stories: A Native
Narrative.
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www.theytus.com
Adult Fiction | Spring 2016
In the Shadow of Evil
Beatrice Culleton Mosionier
New Revised Edition
978-1-926886-01-5
$19.95 CDN | $18.95 USD
6 x 9 | 206 pages | Paper
BISAC: FIC022000
Christine’s quiet life of writing and repose
is shattered when her husband and son
disappear into the Peace River in a suspicious
truck accident. The peaceful family life she has
constructed rapidly disintegrates, revealing a
childhood of foster care, abuse and duplicity.
Christine struggles to maintain a grasp on her
tenuous reality in the face of ever-increasing
threats. Her life suddenly unravels revealing
the ghosts and events of her past, as she
struggles to convince the authorities that this
was no simple accident.
"Mosionier is well known and highly respected for her first novel, In
Search of April Raintree (1983), which received serious critical attention
and has been widely taught at the university level...In this second novel, In
the Shadow of Evil, Culleton Mosionier revisits some familiar territory,
although the emphasis on Aboriginal experience is reduced. She tells the
story of a conflicted sister relationship, this time from the perspective
and narrative voice of the darker-skinned younger child; the incompetent,
alcoholic mother; the untrustworthy foster care system; and the main
character’s long struggle to undo the effects of betrayal and loss ... This
novel, too, has a story – a very important one, one that is not often told –
the story of how the evil of sexual violation grips a child, even though she
is a “survivor,” and, throughout her life, keeps her in its “shadow.” Culleton
Mosionier shows how this evil is both psychologically internalized and
externally manifested – a powerful metaphor for how the sexual predator
steals the joy of a child victim’s life."
—Jeanne Perreault
BC Studies
www.theytus.com
13
Adult Fiction | Spring 2016
Wings of Glass
AmberLee Kolson
Bronze winner of the 2011 PubWest Book
Design Awards.
978-1-894778-86-2
$20.00 CDN | $18.00 USD
5.5 x 8.5 | 244 pages | Paper
BISAC: FIC000000
Married to a successful lawyer and mother to
two, the unnamed main character, was living
the life many people only dreamed about. Her
husband tells her she should be happy, but
she is not. The memories of her controlling
and manipulative adoptive mother haunt her
and threaten to poison her numb existence.
She sees only one solution: suicide. When
her attempts fail, she must find other ways to
cope with her daily routines or succumb to
the voices that tell her she is unlovable.
Two Trails Narrow
Stephen McGregor
Ryan McGregor and Abraham Scott have a lot
in common. Both are Algonquin half-breeds
unhappily attending St. Xavier’s Residential
School in Ontario and desperately seeking
to escape the clutches of the abusive Jesuit
priests. One night, the boys—along with
Ryman’s sister—make a break for it, but
RCMP trackers quickly pick up their trail.
The runaways barely evade capture and begin
the long journey to their respective homes,
where they part company.
978-1-894778-36-7
$21.95 CDN | $19.95 USD
6 x 9 | 342 pages | Paper
BISAC:FIC014000
FIC032000
HIS027100
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But years later Ryman’s and Abraham’s paths
cross again. They see the horrors of war
through soldiers’ eyes, and they reunite with
two nursing sisters, Belle O’Hara and Brenda
Parker, whom Ryman and Abraham knew in
their youth.
www.theytus.com
Adult Non Fiction | Spring 2016
As I Remember It
Tara Lee Morin
Winner of the 2013 Burt Award for First
Nations, Metis and Inuit Literature
978-1-926886-15-2
$18.95 CDN | $16.95 USD
5.5 X 8.5 | 259 pages | Paper
BIC: BIO028000
Taken from her Native birth mother as a
baby, removed from her adoptive parents’
home at 5 and caught shoplifting at 11. On
the streets prostituting at 14. This is the stark
childhood and adolescence of Tara Lee, the
protagonist of As I Remember It. Tara
Lee yields first-person insight into these
issues, but beyond that, this book draws
you in with its unblinking portrait of a
young girl who discovers that she possesses
a core of strength equal to that of her
storybook heroines.
God Don’t Make No
Junk
Peggy MacTaggart
Accompany Bobby as she traces back the
path of her life; from her Ojibwa roots to her
rejection of her culture following the horrific
abuse she endured during her childhood. She
reflects on her life with sadness and humor
recalling her tumultuous marriage and
divorce, her life as a single parent, her battle
with drugs and alcohol and the long road
back to her traditions and healing that took
decades.
978-1-926886-12-1
$18.95 CDN | $16.95 USD
5.5 X 8.5 | 126 pages | Paper
BIC: BIO028000
www.theytus.com
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Adult Non Fiction | Spring 2016
From Lishamie
Albert Canadien
With astonishing detail, Albert Canadien
fondly recounts his boyhood years in
Lishamie, a traditional Dene camp north
of the Mackenzie River, and reflects on
the devastating and long-lasting impact
residential schooling had on him, his family
and his people. Separated at a young age
from his parents and forced to attend a strict
Catholic boarding school, the author—and
many like him—was robbed of his language,
community and traditional way of living.
From Lishamie is a candid memoir of loss and
of the journey back.
978-1-894778-65-7
$22.95 CDN | $21.95 USD
5.5 X 8.5 | 272 pages | Paper
BISAC: BIO028000
My Life with the
Salmon
Diane Jacobson
978-1-894778-88-6
$18.95 CDN | $16.95 USD
5.5 X 8.5 | 174 pages | Paper
BISAC 1:BIO022000
BIO028000
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Diane “Honey” Jacobson’s latest book is an
important comment about First Nations
efforts to save the salmon and her personal
youthful journey to find meaning and a sense
of place in life. Like the style in her first book
My Life in a Kwagu’l Big House, Diane’s
style in My Life with the Salmon is full of
action, amazing adventures and fascinating
connections between land, water and people.
In My Life with the Salmon, we follow
“Honey” through sometimes hilarious and
sometimes difficult periods but we always
learn a life lesson.
www.theytus.com
Adult Non Fiction | Spring 2016
Behind Closed Doors:
Stories from the
Kamloops Indian
Residential School
Agnes Jack
978-1-894778-41-1
$26.95 CDN | $24.95 USD
8 X 10 | 226 pages | Paper
BISAC 1: HIS006020
HIS028000
Behind Closed Doors features written
testimonials from thirty-two individuals who
attended the Kamloops Indian Residential
School. The school was one of many infamous
residential schools that operated from 1893
to 1979. The storytellers remember and share
with us their stolen time at the school; many
stories are told through courageous tears. A
vital legacy.
Following
Nimishomis: The
Trout Lake History of
Dedibaayaanimanook
Sarah Keesick Olsen
Helen Agger
Following Nimishoomis tells the story
of Dedibaayaanimanook Sarah Keesick
Olsen and the Namegosibiing Trout Lake
community in northwestern Ontario. The
story reveals the many challenges that she and
her community faced in that critical period of
change.
978-1-894778-60-2
$24.95 CDN | $22.95 USD
6 x 9 | 322 pages | Paper
BISAC: HIS054000
BIO028000
www.theytus.com
A resourceful and competent young woman,
Dedibaayaanimanook adapted to the new
and ever-changing world around her. She
met a European man and raised a family
that shared the values of both their cultures.
Following Nimishoomis recounts the life of
this extraordinary woman.
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BACKLIST | Spring 2016
Backlist
LEGENDS
978-1-894778-69-5
The Old Man and the Otter Medicine by John Blondin $19.95 CDN | $19.95 USD
FICTION
978-1-894778-45-9
Slash by Jeannette Armstrong
$21.95 CDN | $21.95 USD
978-0-919441-99-6
Whispering in Shadows by Jeannette Armstrong
$18.95 CDN | $15.95 USD
LAW
978-1-894778-24-4 Aboriginality and Governance: A Multidisciplinary Perspective Edited by Gordon Christie $40.95 CDN | $38.95 USD
978-1-894778-13-8 Box of Treasures or Empty Box? Twenty Years of Section 35 Edited by Ardith Walkem and Halie Bruce
$29.95 CDN | $24.95 USD
978-0-919441-66-8 Our Elders Understand Our Rights: Evolving International Law Regarding Indigenous Peoples |
by Sharon Helen Venne
$22.95 CDN | $19.95 USD
LITERARY CRITICISM
978-0-919441-91-0
(Ad)dressing Our Words: Aboriginal Perspectives on Aboriginal Literatures by Armand Ruffo
$22.95 CDN | $16.95 USD
978-1-894778-08-4
Creating Community: A Roundtable on Canadian Literature Edited by Renate Eigenbrod and Jo-Ann
Episkenew
$22.95 CDN | $16.95 USD
978-0-919441-92-7 Crisp Blue Edges: Indigenous Creative Non-Fiction Edited by Rasunah Marsden
$18.95 CDN | $15.95 USD
MEMOIR
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978-1-894778-20-6
My Life in a Kwagu’l Big House by Diane Jacobson
$18.95 CDN | $15.95 USD
www.theytus.com
BACKLIST | Spring 2016
POETRY
978-0-919441-89-7 Bent Box by Lee Maracle $14.95 CDN | $10.95 USD
978-1-894778-58-9 Voices in the Waterfall by Beth Cuthand $14.95 CDN | $12.95 USD
WOMEN’S STUDIES
978-1-894778-22-0
Threads of My Life: The Testimony of Hilaria Supa Huamán, A Rural Quechua Woman
by Hilaria Supa Huamán $26.95 CDN | $24.95 USD
www.theytus.com
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Guelph, ON N1L 1P5
Phone: (905) 317-5056
Fax: 1-866-431-9542
E-mail: christa
Western Canada
Manitoba, Saskatchewan,
Alberta and British Columbia
Ed Mueller & Associates
Ed Mueller
11251-10th Avenue
Edmonton, AB T6J 6S2
Phone: (780) 438-7328
Fax: (780) 438-7328
E-mail: [email protected]
Theytus Books, Sales and
Marketing
Theytus Books
Green Mountain Road, Lot 45
RR #2, Site 50, Comp. 8
Penticton, BC V2A 6J7
Phone: (250) 493-7181 ext.
2234
Fax: (250) 493-5302
E-mail: [email protected]