Sandra Rollings-Magnusson is an Associate Professor of Sociology at MacEwan University. She has studied western Canadian homesteaders for over thirty years. Since receiving a Master's Degree from the University of Regina and a PhD from the University of Alberta, she has written numerous academic journal articles on homesteading life and lectured on a number of homesteading topics. She has also written three books: Tales from the Homestead: A History of Prairie Pioneers, 1867-1914 (finalist, Wilfrid Eggleston Award for Nonfiction); Heavy Burdens on Small Shoulders: The Labour of Pioneer Children on the Canadian Prairies; and The Homesteaders.
""Engaging, thoroughly documented, and well written, Folklife and Superstition is a significant contribution to the history and folklore of the Prairie west. Offering rare insights into pioneer life on the Prairies, and culled from hundreds of pioneer reminiscences, it addresses facets of frontier life often overlooked in documentary histories."" --John C. Lehr PhD, author of Community and Frontier: A Ukrainian Settlement in the Canadian Parkland ""Settlers who came to western Canada in the 19th and early 20th centuries overcame unpredictable weather, mud, profound isolation, and much more in making lives for themselves. Drawing on archival memoirs from across the prairies, Rollings-Magnusson offers an engaging and well-documented account of their experiences, thoughts, and actions."" --Gordon Goldsborough, author of the best-selling Abandoned Manitoba series ""The delightful and often humorous accounts of pioneer settlers in the Canadian West unearthed by Rollings-Magnusson's diligent research are further enhanced by the author's wonderful selection of charming archival photographs. Along with their most essential worldly goods, these intrepid newcomers arrived with trunk loads full of stick-to-itiveness, innovation and eccentricity."" --David Laurence Jones, award-winning author of New World Dreams: Canadian Pacific Railway and the Golden Northwest