Traveling the roads and highways through the islands,
mountains, and plateaus of British Columbia, Rosemary Neering talks
to a fascinating cross-section of people in the small towns she
visits. In coffee shops, post offices and living rooms, she gathers
their stories with the inquisitive ear of the traveler and sets
them down with a storyteller's wisdom. When Rosemary Neering talks
to former urbanites used to having the world at their door, they
feel that life is more complete in places where people don't lock
their doors at night and where everyone knows your life better than
you do. But in many resource-based communities where the fisheries,
forests, and mines are increasingly controlled by large
corporations, there is resentment towards urban approaches to rural
problems. As she travels, a compelling portrait is formed of a
world often hidden to city dwellers. Awards BC Book Prize: 1992 -
The Hubert Evans Non-Fiction Prize Down the Road (winner)
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