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Books with author Roy Brown

  • Rails Across the Prairies: The Railway Heritage of Canada’s Prairie Provinces

    Ron Brown

    Paperback (Dundurn, July 24, 2012)
    Follow the evolution of the rail legacy of the Canadian Prairies from the arrival of the first engine on a barge to today’s realities. Rails Across the Prairies traces the evolution of Canada’s rail network, including the appearance of the first steam engine on the back of a barge. The book looks at the arrival of European settlers before the railway and examines how they coped by using ferry services on the Assiniboine and North Saskatchewan Rivers. The work then follows the building of the railways, the rivalries of their owners, and the unusual irrigation works of Canadian Pacific Railway. The towns were nearly all the creation of the railways from their layout to their often unusual names.Eventually, the rail lines declined, though many are experiencing a limited revival. Learn what the heritage lover can still see of the Prairies’ railway legacy, including existing rail operations and the stories the railways brought with them. Many landmarks lie vacant, including ghost towns and elevators, while many others survive as museums or interpretative sites.
  • The Secret Society: Cecil John Rhodes’s Plans for a New World Order

    Robin Brown

    eBook (Penguin, Nov. 1, 2015)
    Cecil John Rhodes made a fortune from diamonds and gold, became prime minister of the Cape, and had a country named after him, but his ambitions were far greater than that. When he was still in his twenties, after a meeting with General Gordon of Khartoum, Rhodes set up a Secret Society with the aim of establishing a new world order. The society, disciplined on Jesuit-style rules, became Rhodes’s lifelong obsession, and after his death it lived on and grew under the leadership of his executor, Lord Alfred Milner. The society played a key role in the governance of Britain during the Great War and the peace terms to end it, and it was linked to appeasement initiatives involving Hitler, the Duke of Windsor and Mrs Simpson before World War II. Echoes of the Secret Society survive in different guises to this day, including the Royal Institute of International Affairs (Chatham House) and the Rhodes Scholarships. In The Secret Society, Robin Brown unpacks this astonishing and largely unknown history. He brings Rhodes, his companions and his successors to life by drawing from diaries and letters, and sheds new light on Rhodes’s homosexuality. Ranging from the diamond mines of Kimberley to the halls of power in Westminster, and peopled with characters such as General Gordon, Leander Starr Jameson, W.T. Stead, Olive Schreiner, the Princess Radziwill, Joseph Chamberlain and David Lloyd George, this book is a page-turner that will make you see the world, both past and present, in a different light.
  • The Viaduct

    Roy Brown

    Paperback (Nelson Thornes Ltd, April 9, 1973)
    None
  • Find Debbie!

    Roy Brown

    Hardcover (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, May 1, 1976)
    A detective's professional objectivity mixes with his emotions during his search for Debbie, a retarded child who is reported missing, but not particularly missed, by her parents and siblings
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  • The Viaduct

    Roy Brown

    Hardcover (Macmillan, Jan. 1, 1968)
    Juvenile fiction.
  • A Saturday in Pudney.

    Roy Brown

    Hardcover (MacMillan Co, )
    None
  • Santa Mouse Meets Marmaduke

    Brown

    Paperback (Grosset & Dunlap, May 1, 1978)
    Paperback 1981 11.00x8.25x0.25 CHILDREN FUNNY STORY
  • Find Debbie!

    Roy Brown

    Loose Leaf (Seabury Press, March 15, 1976)
    A detective's professional objectivity mixes with his emotions during his search for Debbie, a retarded child who is reported missing, but not particularly missed, by her parents and siblings.
  • The cage: A novel

    Roy Brown

    Hardcover (Seabury Press, March 15, 1977)
    A group of teenage boys plan an escape when they realize their imprisonment is part of an experiment to repattern their personalities.
  • Rails Across the Prairies: The Railway Heritage of Canada’s Prairie Provinces

    Ron Brown

    eBook (Dundurn, June 30, 2012)
    Canada's rail lines were pivotal in establishing the icons that mark today's landscape: massive bridges, sentinel-like grain elevators, pattern-book wayside stations. Odd and unusual place names dot the lines, while countless ghost towns and stories abound like the "ghost train" of St. Louis and the tunnels of Moose Jaw.
  • Chubb Catches a Cold

    Roy Brown

    Hardcover (Abelard-Schuman, Sept. 6, 1979)
    None
  • Flight of sparrows

    Roy Brown

    Paperback (Macmillan, March 15, 1972)
    The adventures of four runaway boys who band together in a bleak area of London.