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Accessibility Summary: This title is screen reader friendly and it will be accessible to a person using text-to-speech or refreshable braille. This publication contains headings for navigation through various chapters and sections. All non-decorative images have alt text or captions, or are described in the surrounding text. This publication does not contain page numbers that can be navigated.Certified Accessible By: National Network for Equitable Library ServicePublisher:BC Libraries Cooperative, 2022 -
Accessibilité:
- Affichage personnalisable
- Images décrites
- Navigation par rubriques
- Navigation dans la table des matières
Accessibility Summary: This title is screen reader friendly and it will be accessible to a person using text-to-speech or refreshable braille. This publication contains a table of contents for navigation through the various chapters and sections. All non-decorative images have alt text or captions, or are described in the surrounding text. This publication does not contain page numbers that can be navigated. This publication meets accepted accessibility guidelines (WCAG-AA).Certified Accessible By: National Network for Equitable Library ServicePublisher:BC Libraries Cooperative, 2022
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- Author: Wagg, LenDate:Created2021Summary:
It's been more than a year since COVID-19 arrived in Nova Scotia. In the spring of 2020, then-premier of Nova Scotia Stephen McNeil implored citizens to "stay the blazes home"--and they did. But the full-scale lockdown is now a thing of the past. As wide-scale testing and vaccines begin to have an impact, many people have returned, in limited ways, to their businesses, their pastimes, and even their social lives. And although we are still in the thick of the pandemic, Nova Scotians, by necessity and by nature, have continued to step up to help one another through the ongoing crisis. Who are these heroes who, on a daily basis, have continued to risk their lives, their livelihoods, and their own well-being to help us get through this pandemic? How have Nova Scotia's front-line workers, business owners, support workers, health-care workers--people from all walks of life--adapted to find ways not just to survive and help others survive, but to thrive through it all? In the follow-up to his national bestseller Stay the Blazes Home, award-winning photographer and author Len Wagg, now with co-author Angela Mombourquette, brings dozens of compelling stories and powerful images of hope and resilience to light, illuminating the many ways Nova Scotians continue to serve as beacons of hope for all Canadians.
Sujets: Social aspects | Social conditionsOriginal Publisher: Halifax, NS, Nimbus PublishingLanguage(s): EnglishISBN: 9781774710227, 1774710226