‘A Barber’s Collection’ a love letter to North Battleford
In the mid-1950’s, a British psychiatrist took part in a ceremony with members of Red Pheasant Cree Nation; a followup to work being done further south in Saskatchewan that saw the creation of a term that would come to define a generation: psychedelic.
Humphry Osmond, working out of the Souris Valley Mental Hospital in Weyburn coined the word that is synonymous with ‘60s’ counter-culture in 1956 but, well before the hippie movement took off in the United States, Osmond and others gathered at the Native American Church of Canada’s Peyotism ceremony in Cando.
A new chapter was written in Saskatchewan’s psychology history then and many more chapters are now being added with ‘The Barber’s Collection’.
North Battleford writer R. Conrad Speer celebrated the release of his novel with friends, family and a Madhouse Mead yesterday.