| Three
of our leading writers have come together to tell the story of
how Rideau Hall has come to reflect so much that is both distinctive
and excellent from across Canada:
Margaret
MacMillan, Governor-General’s Literary Award winner,
contemplates the history of “home” in Canada, and
the story of the great house — the hub of the country’s
public life since before Confederation — through the people
who have given it life.
Marjorie
Harris, award-winning garden writer, writes vividly on
the Canadian woodland garden, the flowers and plants, as well
as the organic vegetable garden that provides the fresh herbs
and an impressive proportion of the fruits and vegetables for
both daily life and state dinners — essential reading for
all who love gardens, as well as those who aspire to creating
a Canadian garden.
Anne
Desjardins, award-winning Quebec food writer, shows how
Rideau Hall has become synonymous with contemporary Canadian cuisine,
its cross-country diversity and its riches — from the shellfish
and cloudberries of the Maritimes to the cheeses of Quebec; from
the oolichan of the West coast to the teas and caribou of the
Far North; from the wines of the Okanagan to Niagara, recognized
world-wide for their excellence. With an introduction to the country’s
leading food and wine producers, as well as thirty original recipes
tested for home cooks by Rideau Hall’s famous Chef Oliver
Bartsch.
Throughout
the book, Adrienne Clarkson and John Ralston Saul share their
experiences in helping to bring our national house — a place
that reflects Canada as diverse, bountiful, self-confident and
rich in achievement — into the 21st century.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Margaret
MacMillan is the Provost of Trinity College and a professor
of history. Her bestselling book Paris 1919: Six Months
that Changed the World won the Samuel Johnson prize for
non-fiction among others in the UK and the US; and in Canada the
2003 Governor General’s Literary Award for Non-Fiction.
Marjorie
Harris is Editor-in-Chief of Gardening Life
magazine and her column appears in The Globe and Mail.
A commentator on CBC radio and the author of over ten gardening
books, including the bestselling Seasons of My Garden,
her most recent is Botanica North America.
Anne
L. Desjardins’ column appears in Quebec City’s
Le Soleil. A producer of documentary series for Radio
Canada, she has won a gold medal from Toronto’s Human Rights
and Race Relations Centre for La Sens de la fête.
She is a member of the International Association of Culinary Professionals
and Cuisine Canada.
|