It looks like we've got a title for my book about pairs of places that have much in common, but diverge in significant ways: Borderline Behaviour, Why Places That Should Be Alike Aren't. The
University of Regina Press will be bringing it out in the run-up to the
2020 US presidential elections, since one of the ten pairs of places I
compare is the US and Canada.
Originally I had called it Unidentical Twins: Why Places That Should Alike Aren't Alike,
but Bruce Walsh, the wizard who runs the shop, said that bookstores
would shelve it with parenting books, and that's not at all what it was
about. I toyed with Different: Why Places That Should Alike Aren't Alike, but this week Sean Prpick, who does acquisitions, came up with this new one.
A winner, I think.
The
other pairs of places I'll be looking at are: the (formerly) two
Vietnams; Tunisia and Algeria; the Indian states of Kerala and Tamil
Nadu; Brazil and Spanish-speaking South America; Haiti and the Dominican
Republic; Burundi and Rwanda; Scotland and Ireland; Vermont and New
Hampshire; and Alberta and Saskatchewan. The photo is a Wikipedia shot
of Hai Van Pass which is the natural divide between north and south
Vietnam, and near where the country was split after the French colonial
war.
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