Praise for Big Men Fear Me
Bourrie's book positively sings ... [it] is thoroughly researched and the prose is clean and engaging ... McCullagh deserves to be known ... He made The Globe the dominant voice in English Canadian journalism. Bourrie's biography does him full justice.
-Globe and Mail
There are many threads to untangle here and Bourrie-journalist, academic, and lawyer-unpicks them all. Spanning the first half of 20th-century Ontario, [George] McCullagh's life and times become an engrossing tale of ambition, politics and bipolar illness-it's like little else we're likely to read this year ... It was a tumultuous life, and Bourrie tells it with wit and humour.
-Toronto Star
Mark Bourrie's remarkable-and long overdue-biography of one of the most consequential and least remembered Canadians of the past century ... Bourrie toiled for years to resurrect [George McCullagh], but, I'm glad to say, he did not wipe away the carbuncles, boils, and blisters. His portrait of a man who once was among Canada's most powerful figures is, to choose two apt terms, both melancholy and masterly.
-Literary Review of Canada
If you love Mad Men and Netflix biopics about ruthless tie-wearing maniacs, if you're wanting the fourth wall to come crashing down on a discussion about class and poverty ... you'll probably need to pick up [Big Men Fear Me].
-Miramichi Reader
Mark Bourrie revives the life of George McCullagh-a charismatic high-school dropout, a self-made millionaire, the creator and owner of the Globe and Mail, and a man with great political potential-whose fall in the mid-20th century would be as steep as his rise to prominence.
-Quill & Quire
Nineteen years in the making, Big Men Fear Me shows us what we come from: a Canada run by drunks, mystics, dreamers, gold miners and gold diggers, the horse crazy and the power mad. It's a great story, well told.
-Elaine Dewar, author of The Handover: How Bigwigs and Bureaucrats Transferred Canada's Best Publisher and the Best Part of Our Literary Heritage to a Foreign Multinational
What a character! Bourrie's deeply-researched biography of George McCullagh is both a gripping encounter with a powerful yet unstable press baron and also a fascinating account of early twentieth century Ontario. Written with wit and passion, Big Men Fear Me brings back to life a man who tried to upend Canadian democracy, yet has been almost erased from our history.
-Charlotte Gray, author of Murdered Midas: A Millionaire, His Gold Mine, and a Strange Death on an Island Paradise
Praise for Bush Runner
Mark Bourrie beautifully describes Radisson as the 'Forrest Gump of his time' ... well-written ... compelling.
-Washington Times
A dark adventure story that sweeps the reader through a world filled with surprises. The book is compelling, authoritative, not a little disturbing-and a significant contribution to the history of 17th-century North America.
-Ken McGoogan, Globe and Mail
A remarkable biography of an even more remarkable 17th-century individual ... Beautifully written and endlessly thought-provoking.
-Maclean's
Highly entertaining reading ... fascinating ... an engaging achievement.
-Winnipeg Free Press
Bourrie's writing is grounded in a strong sense of place, partly because of his own extensive knowledge of the land and partly because of Radisson's descriptive storytelling abilities ... a valuable and rare glimpse into 17th-century North America.
-Canadian Geographic