Why Pearson still matters: the quiet years that built modern Canada
Lester B. Pearson was never the loudest voice in Ottawa, but the years between 1963 and 1968 quietly drew the outline of the country we live in today.
Read ArticleFrom the early years and the long shadow of two world wars to the prime ministers who reshaped a country, History of Canada traces the leaders, decisions and economic shifts that built the Canada we know today.
A clear-eyed look at how leadership, identity, and economic change have shaped a nation — and where it is heading next.
Canada stands at the intersection of history, policy and economic change. History of Canada explores the forces that have shaped the nation — from leadership decisions and national identity to the shifting dynamics of its housing market and financial landscape.
With a clear and engaging approach, the book breaks down how rising interest rates, market trends, and buyer behavior are transforming opportunities across the country.
A nation is not its borders or its anthem — it is the long sum of the choices its leaders make and the people who live with them.— Steven Cashman
The French, English and Indigenous threads woven through the Canadian story.
How four prime ministers across forty years reshaped policy and the country.
Housing, interest rates and the financial landscape redrawing opportunity.
From hockey rinks to coffee counters — the icons that bind a nation together.
Get author updates, release news, and behind-the-pages reflections — straight to your inbox.
From a Concordia lecture hall in 1977 to a writing desk in Montreal — a quiet, lifelong study of how Canada became Canada.
Steven Cashman is a Canadian author based in Montreal, Quebec. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Social Sciences and Politics from Concordia University, completed in 1977 — a foundation that has shaped almost half a century of reading, thinking and writing about the country he calls home.
His debut book, History of Canada, is the result of years spent following the threads that connect leadership decisions, national identity, and the everyday economics of Canadian life. It is a book written for the curious general reader: someone who wants to understand not just what happened, but why it mattered — and why it still matters.
My hope is simple. That a reader closes the last page knowing this country a little better than when they opened the first.
Steven writes from a uniquely Canadian vantage point — bilingual Montreal, where French and English histories meet, where Quebec's politics and Ottawa's policies are felt in the same conversation. That perspective threads through every chapter of History of Canada, from the early years of the federation to the prime ministers of the late twentieth century.
When he is not writing, you will find him reading widely — history, biography, market analysis — and, like any good Canadian, keeping an eye on the hockey scores.
Graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in Social Sciences and Politics — the academic grounding for everything that followed.
Decades of reading, archival work and quiet research into the political and economic forces shaping Canada.
Steven sits down to commit a lifetime of notes, conversations and convictions to the page.
Published by ARC Research, Montreal. A debut twenty years in the making.
History is what we choose to remember. Writing it down is how we decide what stays.— Steven Cashman
Bring home the story of a nation. Choose the edition that's right for you — every copy is a thank-you to the readers who make the writing possible.
The standard paperback edition. Perfect for everyday reading and the bookshelf at home.
A premium hardcover edition signed by the author. A limited print run for collectors and gifts.
Read anywhere, anytime. The full book in clean digital formatting for Kindle, iPad and ePub readers.
The best of both worlds — a physical paperback for the shelf and a digital copy for travel. Save when you bundle.
Whether you grew up here or are simply curious about how this country works, History of Canada reads less like a textbook and more like a long, patient conversation with someone who has been paying attention for fifty years.
Essays, reflections and behind-the-pages thoughts on Canada, history, and the long arc of leadership.
Lester B. Pearson was never the loudest voice in Ottawa, but the years between 1963 and 1968 quietly drew the outline of the country we live in today.
Read ArticleFew prime ministers split opinion quite like Pierre Elliott Trudeau. A look at how the same man led the country in two very different chapters of its life.
Read ArticleThe story of Canada's housing market is, in many ways, the story of how interest rates and buyer behaviour have rewritten opportunity for an entire generation.
Read ArticleCanada has always been a country of two official tongues and many quiet ones. A reflection on how that conversation has shaped the national character.
Read ArticleWhen Brian Mulroney signed the free-trade deal in 1988, he wagered the country's economic future on integration. Forty years later, was it the right bet?
Read ArticleFrom Vimy Ridge to Juno Beach, Canada walked into the twentieth century as a colony and walked out a country. The wars were the crucible.
Read ArticleNotes from a fifty-year reading list, a Concordia degree, and the slow conviction that this country deserved a book written for the curious general reader.
Read ArticleWhat does a country sound, taste and feel like? A short tour of the everyday Canadian icons that show up in chapter after chapter of our history.
Read ArticleThree majority governments, a referendum, a balanced budget — and a quiet steadiness at the helm. Reassessing the Chrétien years from twenty years on.
Read ArticleFor media, speaking engagements, signed-copy requests, or simply to say hello — I'd love to hear from you.
I read every message personally. Whether you're a reader, a journalist, a school librarian, or a fellow Canadian with a question — please write.
Interview requests, podcasts, op-eds and review copies. Please mention your outlet.
Book clubs, libraries, universities and historical societies — I love a good Q&A.
Schools, libraries and retailers — discounts available for orders of 25 or more copies.
Questions, corrections, kind words — every letter is read and most are answered.
A reader's letter is the only honest review a writer ever needs.— Steven Cashman