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The Victoria Times-Colonist review of Canadian History for Dummies

Hilarious History

May Brown

Canadian history is interesting. Just ask Will Ferguson. Better yet, pick up a copy of Ferguson's book, Canadian History for Dummies, and discover how entertaining our past can be.

Who knew there was a Pig War? What group of Canadians were called hyenas in petticoats? Who were Galloping Head, Radical Jack and The Man in the Mask? What was the most famous graffito in Canadian history?

Most of these subjects were covered in school, but not like this. Winner of the 2001 Canadian Authors Associations Lela Common Award for History, Canadian History for Dummies is fun but it's also well-researched and organized, with plenty of sidebars, lists, quick reference guides and Web site addresses for more information.

There's a Cheat Sheet listing all the prime ministers; the kings and queens and when they ruled over Canada, and the provinces and territories and when they became part of Canada. You'll also find The Part of Tens chapters such as "Ten Political Firsts for Canadian Women" and "Ten Important Aboriginal Leaders."

But this is more than a book of lists; this is a book of stories, 450 pages packed with information, all easily readable and actually interesting. It starts with the First Nations and their initial contact with Europeans and takes us through to the people and events of the present day, such as APEC and the Pepper Spray and the formation of the Canadian Alliance.

Ferguson spent a year writing and researching Canadian History for Dummies, but he had a head start. He had just completed Bastards and Boneheads (Canada's glorious leaders, past and present) when he was approached to write the Dummies book, which ended up 100 pages longer than intended. Perhaps it was all that research he had already done, or maybe it was just that Canadian history is so full of good stories that he couldn't bear to leave any of them out.

There's talk of revising Canadian History for Dummies as a school textbook, and it's an idea worth pursuing. Ferguson is already talking about the changes that will have to be made, such as adding review and essay questions.

By the way, the most famous graffiti in Canadian history was written on a rock in 1793 by Scottish explorer Alexander Mackenzie, who had followed the Peace River into the Rockies and then portaged, hiked and paddled his way through the mountains and down to the Pacific.

After spending a terrifying night under the threat of imminent attack by the warlike Bella Bella, Ferguson writes, Mackenzie beat a hasty retreat, but not before he dabbed his name and the date on a large boulder.

It read: Alexander Mackenzie, from Canada, by land, 22nd July 1793.

I remember learning that in school, but I never thought of it as graffiti and I never considered that explorers could be scared. Maybe that's what makes the people in Ferguson's book so real and the events so compelling.

As for The Pig War, Radical Jack or The Man in the Mask, you'd be well advised to grab a copy of Canadian History for Dummies and look them up just for fun.

 

Victoria Times-Colonist
May 20, 2001

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