Victoria Jurgens

ALLi Author Member

Location: Canada

Genres: Biography, History, Children's general

Skills: Performance/Spoken Word, Press/Media Interview, Reading/Literary Event, Speaking Engagement/Lecture

Victoria Jurgens is a lifetime reader, voracious from an early age all the way through three degrees: a Bachelor of Arts (Honours) in Psychology, a Bachelor of Science in Nutrition and Dietetics, and a Master of Business Administration. She is a dietitian registered with the
Saskatchewan Dietitians Association and was a Saskatchewan Party Member of
the Legislative Assembly (MLA) of Saskatchewan from 2011 to 2016.
She wrote her first book—A Perfect 10—for her mother and siblings, of whom she has nine. Victoria has three children but more than 1,000 relatives who can be traced.
She has spent countless hours reading to her nine younger siblings, her own children, and now, to her grandchildren.

Victoria Jurgens' books

Silisia Dances Toward Her Dream

Silisia loves to dance but her dancing dreams may not come true as easily as she expected! Mistakes, difficult instructions, and name-calling from the other girls sure don’t make things any easier! But Dad’s donuts, practices with a friend, and her grandmother’s stories might just be enough to help Silisia dance closer toward her dream.

In this book, you will learn:
It takes practice to achieve your dreams.
Never give up , or, as my five year old grandson says "perseverance".
This is a must-read for children and parents who want to delve into self-esteem and lessons in achieving their dreams.

Plainfolk: Stories From the Farm about the Impact German-Russian Farmers had on Two Countries and Seven Generations

Plainfolk: Stories from the Farm and Planer Colonists is a wide-ranging cultural expedition into a unique diaspora of German-Russian farmers, told in the most personal voice.

Here is the tale of the Planer Colonists, of which the Fraesses and Kowalskys were prominent members, and the tremendous impact they had on their families and the communities they cultivated, both before and after their move from their Prussian homeland to their adopted home in rural Canada. Plainfolk traces the author’s ancestry back generations to the German-Russian diaspora that arose in the mid-1700s, yet became extinct in the early 1900s. It explores the reasons her ancestors left Prussia in 1818 and 1819, then left South Russia in 1904 and 1906. And it travels with its people to Canada, in pursuit of a different life, where they went on to play a significant role in developing the Canadian Prairies.

The author, who traces both sides of her ancestry to this special group of pioneers, enhances this deeply researched collection of family history with such personal touches as family trees, photos, illustrations, and recipes. The result is a comprehensive snapshot of a remarkable group of pioneers who, Jurgens says, may have been “plain folk,” but were always “extraordinary.”

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