In the late 1920s, a fur trapper went to Edmonton to find a wife. After marrying the first woman he spoke to, the story is of the people, the environment and the trials and tribulations they experienced in an isolated area of northern Canada.
About the Author: Kenneth Conibear, was born in Orrville, Ontario in 1907, and moved with his family to the Northwest Territories in 1912, travelling there by rail, stagecoach and barge. He was raised in Fort Smith and, other than one year of formal education at the Fort Smith mission school, was educated to the grade 10 level by his parents and friends within that community.
He was sent out to Edmonton to formally complete grades 11 and 12, and continued on to the University of Alberta where Kenneth majored in English and Philosophy. He was selected as the Alberta Rhodes Scholar in 1931 and spent 3 years at Oxford studying English. He spent the next three years in England writing and had his first novel, "Northland Footprints" published in 1936. He was referred to as 'The Kipling of the North'. In 1937 his publisher, Lovat Dickson, hired him to travel with and manage Grey Owl's speaking tour of England, and because of that close association, Kenneth has often been consulted as an expert on Grey Owl. In 1938 he returned to the Northwest Territories and had "Northward to Eden" published, followed in 1940 by the novel, "Husky" written in collaboration with his brother Frank, the inventor of the Conibear trap. In 1995 his fourth novel, "The Nothing Man" was privately published and his fifth is 'in the works'. All of these novels are based on his knowledge and love of the people, then northern environment and the animals of the north.
Kenneth's careers 'down north' were writer, hunter, trapper, storekeeper and, following his service with the Canadian navy from 1943 to 1946, he returned to the territories and operated freight boats on the Mackenzie River system, chiefly on Great Slave Lake, while continuing his writing.
These 'down north' careers were followed by his "outside" careers as executive secretary of the B.C. Hospital Association, part-time English instructor in English at Simon Fraser University, departmental assistant and student advisor in S.F.U.'s English department, lecturer in continuing Education for Senior Citizens and, following his retirement in 1977, Program Co-ordinator in the Dean of Arts Office, part time. In 1979 he became associate director of S.F.U.'s Senior Citizens Certificate program and is still an honorary associate director. This background makes his own life 'the stuff of novels'.