A very digestible history of Canada - not just the last 150 years since New Brunswick and Nova Scotia joined Canada under a written constitution (the BNA Act 1867), but from the British conquest in the seven years war, after which France gave up Canada as a result of losing mastery of the seas. At that point Quebec and points west were dominated by French and aboriginal peoples. After the American revolution loyalists soon became a majority in Upper Canada, although most loyalists went to the Maritimes or Britain. Peace with aboriginal people and Canadiens (French) was essential to the defense of British North America, so neither were subjugated under British rule - French law, religion, language and traditions continued in Quebec, and treaties were made with Indian nations. Only later, after the anglophone population became dominant and aboriginal populations were reduced by diseases, were aboriginal peoples increasingly treated as conquered peoples, although they never were conquered. Since Lord Durham recommended a merger of Upper and Lower Canada in the 1840s in a failed attempt to swamp French Canadians in a mostly anglophone province, Canada has mainly been a story of the relationship between the French Catholic majority in Lower Canada/Quebec with the anglo Protestant majority in the rest of the country, at least until recently. Since the human rights revolution following world war 2, and the charter of rights and freedoms of 1982, the relationship between Canada and aboriginal nations has been increasingly important.
Quibbles: p.44 The Mohawk river flows east to not west from Albany
p.204 The 1912 extension of the Manitoba-Ontario boundary was to Hudson Bay, but never to the sixtieth parallel
p. 256 2 mentions of "East Asian" should be "South Asian"
p. 450 While it is true that "skewed outcomes have persuaded most parliamentary democracies
in the Western world and the Commonwealth to use electoral systems that provide a fair degree of proportionality", there is no need to include the "parliamentary" restriction - most democracies use some sort of proportional representation
p. 452 "popular government" is a misnomer when such a government is elected by a minority of votes cast.