

Those stories were written by Dosanjh and turned into a book, Untold Stories: The South Asian Pioneer Experience in B.C., which was released in the spring, and has since been gaining popularity not just in the South Asian community but beyond – including local schools, she noted. – including her father-in-law, whose own father arrived in Canada in 1907. Her interest piqued, Dosanjh set out to interview and learn from a number of other South Asian pioneer families in B.C. “That’s where my love of documenting and preserving South Asian history started.” “He came to Canada in 1906 and was really instrumental in sponsoring other key members to come here, including my father,” Dosanjh said. when she realized the impact that his sacrifices, and those of others like him, had on her family. In 2006, Dosanjh and her family were celebrating the 100-year anniversary of her grandfather’s journey from Punjab, India to B.C. An angel named Michael Campbell, the brother of the man who broke her heart.A family celebration a century in the making spurred White Rock’s Karen Dosanjh to undertake an ambitious project – documenting the oft-forgotten stories of not just her own ancestors, but those of hundreds of other South Asian families in British Columbia. But a different kind of animal is threatening to disrupt her peace on earth. Soon she's knee-deep in parades, dealing with a cantankerous ass (the animal kind) and negotiating disputes with Santa's elves. But when her father has a health crisis, it falls to Noelle to save the family business and Christmas for the entire town. To escape the constant sympathy, she decides to leave town and start over in a new city. Instead, she's become the face of jilted brides in Covington Falls after her fiancé runs off with one of her bridesmaids on her wedding day. In this inspirational holiday romance, Noelle Joy Robinson should have been spending Christmas with her husband.

Tory is threatened when she keeps insisting she saw a man killed and the only one who believes her is her neighbor, Jordan Steele.

In this inspirational holiday romance, Tory Caldwell witnesses a hit-and-run, but when the dead victim disappears from the scene, police doubt a crime has been committed.
