Tomorrow, Next Year

by Elizabeth Mann


Formats

Softcover
$35.00
Softcover
$35.00

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 8/14/2008

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 536
ISBN : 9781425153342

About the Book

In the mid 1800's, the forward movement within the interior British Columbia lands were cattle, with their 'drovers', from as far south as Wyoming.

TOMORROW, NEXT YEAR is a fictionalized, historical novel, centered in the beginnings, on Charles Donovan and Thomas Greenhow's arrival, with their hundreds of animals, driven north, through their many month cattle drive toward the grasslands of the central Okanagan Valley. Today much of that ranch land is now enriched by grape vines and the growing picturesque cities of Vernon and Kelowna. It was no easy task to endure the ups and downs of cattle prices, the unforseen weather changes during the 115 years which the novel follows, as the ranchers in low tone resignation whispered: 'tomorrow? next year? prices will be better. The novel follows the changes of the valley from sternwheelers to steamships, to the railroad, from the activites at the Father Pandosy Mission, the early Fintry dairy farm, to the gatherings at the Naramata Theatre, through the losses of two World Wars, and through the trends for more focus on fruit growing, and the loss of cattle ranges; as these two stalwart ranchers try to hang on through three more equally dedicated generations.


About the Author

Elizabeth Mann, attended art school in Vancouver, and the University of B.C., and travelled extensively in Europe and Mexico. She also taught for a few years, then working towards her Masters Degree, in the late '60's, The back-to-the-landers movement made its impact on city lives. For her, and her architect husband Henry, it first meant homesteading in the Upper Squamish Valley of B.C., then for 25 years, onto a large abandoned ranch and once stage stop in the south Okanagan Valley hills, during the high interest and inflation years of the mid '70s. Her LAST RANCH book was published in 2007, by Trafford. Elizabeth Mann also put in many years as an agricultural journalist, editor, and worked actively to set up the B.C. Farm Women's Network, to provide a way for farm women's voices, awareness and needs to be shared and learned.