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Freewheeling: The feuds, broods, and outrageous fortunes of the Billes family and Canada's favorite company

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The feuds, broods, and outrageous fortunes of the Billes family and Canada's favorite company.

Hardcover

First published January 1, 1989

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About the author

Ian Brown

211 books44 followers
A Canadian journalist and author.

He is currently the host of Human Edge and The View from Here on TVOntario, and has hosted programming for CBC Radio One, including Later the Same Day, Talking Books, and Sunday Morning.

He has also worked as a business writer at Maclean's and the Financial Post, a feature reporter for The Globe and Mail, and a freelance journalist for other magazines including Saturday Night.
Brown is also the editor of What I Meant to Say: The Private Lives of Men a 2006 collection of twenty-nine essays by prominent Canadian writers, including Greg Hollingshead, David MacFarlane, Don Gillmor, Bert Archer, and Brown himself, who asked his contributors to write on subjects that they'd like to discuss with women but had never been able to.

Brown has also published three books, Freewheeling (1989) about the Billes family, owners of Canadian Tire, and Man Overboard. He is an occasional contributor to the American public radio program This American Life. The Boy in the Moon, a book-length version of Brown's series of Globe and Mail features dealing with his son Walker's rare genetic disorder, Cardiofaciocutaneous Syndrome (CFC), was published in the fall of 2009.

In January 2010, Ian Brown won British Columbia's National Award for Canadian Non-Fiction for his book The Boy in the Moon: A Father's Search for His Disabled Son. The award is Canada's richest non-fiction prize and offers the winner a $40,000 prize. In February, 2010, the book won the Charles Taylor Prize, a $25,000 prize which recognizes excellence in literary non-fiction.

Brown is married to Globe and Mail film critic Johanna Schneller.

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Profile Image for Gaston G..
72 reviews1 follower
March 3, 2020
This was an interesting book about Canadian Tire, its birth, the founding fathers John Williams Billes (JW), his brother Alfred Jackson Billes (AJ), their children and the family feuds after the patriarchs died or ceded control.

Ian brown did a lot of work to get the story. His writing style was a little bit jumpy. going back and forth in the history as he told different parts of the history of the company. Still, I found it a quite interesting.
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