Unmarked: Landscapes Along Highway 16
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Unmarked: Landscapes Along Highway 16 is a 2004 book by Sarah de Leeuw about a number of small communities on Highway 16 in British Columbia, Canada. The book is a series of short essays, each linked to a specific place, evoking the local geography and community, and often linked to memories from de Leeuw's childhood.
[edit] List of essays
This is a list of the essays in the book, and the place where they are set:
- Tracing Movement Along Highway 16
- Starting Somewhere: Port Clements
- Widow Makers: Juskatla
- Thin Sided Glass Balls: Tlell
- Magnet Blood: Queen Charlotte City
- Highway of Monsters: Prince Rupert
- Aluminum Veins: Kitimat
- A Heart Split in Two: Kitwanga
- The Pissing Tree and Other Tales: Rosswood
- In a Field of Lava: The Nass Valley
- Balanced Nowhere: The Zoo at Cranberry Junction
- The Scent of Pulp: Prince George
- Screamed on a Fence, Beside a Passing Train: Burns Lake
- Wind Off the Surface: Fraser Lake
- To Preserve the Invisible: Lejac
- Unmarked: Terrace