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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Really, really enjoyable --- and not just for men!,
By
This review is from: Brew North: How Canadians Made Beer and Beer Made Canada (Paperback)
A beer book read by a woman! Who would have thought. I bought it for my husband but once I started to flip through it I was hooked (and I am more of a wine lover but do like the odd brew). Brew North is a well-written yet fun book - great balance between all the elements that make a book like this enjoyable. The photos are wonderful and a bit quirky - the history is actually very interesting but the author doesn't fall into the trap of way too much information. He obviously spent a great deal of time and effort pulling everything together. Kind of makes you proud to be a Canadian! Well done, Mr. Coutts!
4.0 out of 5 stars
Definitely Approved by A Good Beer Blog,
By Alan McLeod (Eastern Lake Ontario ish.) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Brew North: How Canadians Made Beer and Beer Made Canada (Paperback)
After reading "In Mixed Company" by Julia Roberts last weekend, it easy to point out that this is a pop history but a good one. The thing that caught my eye immediately was the quality of the images. The high production quality of this paperback results in very crisp and detailed photos, including a number in my favorite section, the one on the little discussed dreary phenomena know as the "beer parlour." The Canadian standard drinking establishment from the end of prohibition to the 1970s regulated to be the opposite of a saloon, these were dark, male, dull places without a bar, music, women, windows, air or until a certain point the right to stand up with your beer and walk across the room. I recall around 1982 being offered a raw steak in one of the last of these places, Halifax's Ladies Beverage Room or LBR. It was still in its Dominion Store wrapper, flashed from under the coat of its shoplifter.Logically divided in to eras based on the regulation and restrictions on beer, on homeliness and later homogeneity of brewing in Canada, this is a book worth giving to the newbie and intermediate good beer fan with an interest in history - including up to the present day with a photo of Bar Volo with Ralph himself looking out from amongst the crowd from under his hat. It is a great addition to the still all too small selection of writing of the history of beer in Canada. I have suggested to Ian that he could put another ten of these books out - one on each province. I couldn't tell from his expression if he thought I was mad or if there was a proposal to his publisher being made mentally right in front of me. Mark your Google calendar mobile apps. Book launch at the Kingston brew pub, Sunday September 19th from 3:30 to 6:30 pm. [...]. |
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Brew North: How Canadians Made Beer and Beer Made Canada by Ian Coutts (Paperback - Aug 9 2010)
CDN$ 24.95 CDN$ 15.64
In Stock | ||