Bishop worked for the FBI and it was his job to investigate the cocaine smugglers who were now operating from a coastal town in Spain. Disguised as a sailor on shore-leave--and with two small packets of cocaine to flush out the dealers--he found Brad, his contact, and everything was going just fine. Then he ran into a blonde American tourist, Banjo Kelly, who wouldn't leave him alone ... and a young pimp named Pablo, very helpful, very persistent, who introduced him to Pepita, a black-haired gypsy who only wanted to take him to bed.
Then Brad...
PURE SWEET HELL
Bishop worked for the FBI and it was his job to investigate the cocaine smugglers who were now operating from a coa...
Montreal is in the midst of a heatwave. And if that weren't miserable enough, private eye Bill Yates is hired by a lush to tail his wayward wife. Yates hates divorce cases. But this case has more than meets the eye. The lush's rich mother-in-law wants to hire Yates away from the case. Then she gets hit by a bus and killed. The lush fires Yates. His wife, Gloria, promptly hires Yates herself. Gloria's big sister, Fay, gets in on the act. Things get complicated. And between the boyfriend who wants to rough him up, the crooked cop who wants to bust him, the...
THE DEADLY DAMES
Montreal is in the midst of a heatwave. And if that weren't miserable enough, private eye Bill Yates is hired by a...
Lawyer Robert Race has always been a straight-arrow guy, taking on underdog cases against all odds. He believes in his client's innocence. But one night his confidence is shattered when racketeer Kresnik forces him to collect a suitcase at the docks, and Race stumbles into a world he didn't know existed. He runs into his old flame, Ginny, who for some reason now despises him. He is confronted by his neighbor Paul Taylor's wife, Laura, who confesses that her husband has been having an affair with Race's wife, Eve, right under his nose. His protEgE, Tony...
NIGHT OF THE HORNS
Lawyer Robert Race has always been a straight-arrow guy, taking on underdog cases against all odds. He believes ...
More than thirty years ago, section 35 of the Constitution Act recognized and affirmed the existing aboriginal and treaty rights of the aboriginal peoples of Canada. Hailed at the time as a watershed moment in the legal and political relationship between Indigenous peoples and settler societies in Canada, the constitutional entrenchment of Aboriginal and treaty rights has proven to be only the beginning of the long and complicated process of giving meaning to that constitutional recognition.
In From Recognition to Reconciliation, twenty leading scholars reflect on the...
More than thirty years ago, section 35 of the Constitution Act recognized and affirmed the existing aboriginal and treaty rights of the aboriginal ...
More than thirty years ago, section 35 of the Constitution Act recognized and affirmed the existing aboriginal and treaty rights of the aboriginal peoples of Canada. Hailed at the time as a watershed moment in the legal and political relationship between Indigenous peoples and settler societies in Canada, the constitutional entrenchment of Aboriginal and treaty rights has proven to be only the beginning of the long and complicated process of giving meaning to that constitutional recognition.
In From Recognition to Reconciliation, twenty leading scholars reflect on the...
More than thirty years ago, section 35 of the Constitution Act recognized and affirmed the existing aboriginal and treaty rights of the aboriginal ...