Showing posts with label First Nations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label First Nations. Show all posts

#IMWAYR October 14, 2019

#IMWAYR time again, when readers share what they have been reading and find out what others have been up to in the past week. Kathryn hosts the adult version of this meme at Book Date. Jen at Teach Mentor Texts and Kellee and Ricki at Unleashing Readers host the kidlit rendition. Whatever you are looking forward to in your next great read, these are fabulous places to start your search.

Happy Thanksgiving everyone!  I'm writing this on Sunday from Oliver, B.C., where we are happily looking forward to having dinner with friends this evening. I just have to prepare and bring some stuffed mushrooms as an appetizer. I tested the recipe yesterday on company we had over. They were delicious!

By the way, this coming October 19th, is #IReadCanadian day. Of course some of us read Canadian all the time, but it's nice to have a special day to acknowledge how much talent our country has. I hope all of you, even if you are not Canadian, will take time to read something from one of our authors next Saturday.





Titles with a 🍁indicate this is a Canadian Author.
Clicking on the title of the book will take you to the Goodreads page of the book.

RECENT BLOG POSTS

The Very, Very Far North by Dan Bar-el & Kelly Pousette (Illustrator) πŸ

Beverly, Right Here (Three Rancheros #3) by Kate DiCamillo

PICTURE BOOKS


5 stars
A Carnival of Cats by Charles Ghigna & Kristi Bridgeman (Illustrator)

We have read this board book a gazillion times I think. My two year old granddaughter can now name the different kinds of 'kitties.' Much thanks to Charles Ghigna for another kid pleasing board book.




5 stars
You Made Me a Dad by Laurenne Sala & Mike Malbrough (Illustrations)

Heartwarming, tender and poignant are words to describe this book. It fills my heart up to overflowing. I love this father's perspective of what it means to be a parent. Alas, my library does not have, You Made me a Mother, by the same author.


5 stars
A Normal Pig by K-Fai Steele

Oh wow! Pip, the pig considers herself normal until a bully moves in and makes her aware of her differences. When her parents find out they take her to the city. There Pip is exposed to many languages and all kinds of different looking people. Upon her return home, Pip has regained her confidence in being herself.
I'm a person with one foot in a small, predominantly white, town, and another in a vibrant multicultural city. This book seems to showcase both of these realities.
This book has so much potential for profound classroom conversations. I'm itching to share it with a group of students!


3.5 stars
Turtle Pond by James Gladstone & Karen Reczuch (Illustrator) 🍁

Karen Reczuch's illustrations are drop dead gorgeous. I enjoyed the repetition in James Gladstone's poetry. Readers visit a pond across a year and discover interesting details about turtles. I appreciated the author's note in the back matter that provides additional information.


3 stars
The Little Guys by Vera Brosgol

I admire a lot about this book. Brosgol's art is gorgeous. I nearly swooned at the first page that begins,
"You are looking at the strongest guys in the whole forest.
Down here.
On this island."
These words take us from the top of the page, to the middle, and finally to the bottom where what we see looks like a deserted island.
I'm not sure if making a connection between these little creatures and the Wee Free Men of Terry Pratchett's novels is a good or bad thing. I loved Pratchett's creatures but these Little Guys here aren't nearly so endearing.


5 stars
Birdsong by Julie Flett 🍁

This book is so wonderful. In the spring a young girl and her mother leave their home by the ocean and move to the country. Agnes, an elderly artist is their neighbour. Across the year the girl connects with Agnes.
This book made me shiver. As an aging person myself, I’m coming more and more to understand the importance of cross generation friendships.


4 stars
A Piglet Named Mercy by Kate DiCamillo & Chris Van Dusen (Illustrator)

Mercy’s origin story is just as awesome as I could have imagined!

NOVELS


4 stars
The Very, Very Far North by Dan Bar-el & Kelly Pousette (Illustrator) 🍁

If you are looking for a story that leaves you with a warm fuzzy feeling of contentment, and a deeper understanding of how friendship works, look no further. It's sure to appeal to fans of Frog and Toad, Winnie the Pooh and Wind in the Willows. You can read my full review here.


5 stars
Beverly, Right Here (Three Rancheros #3) by Kate DiCamillo

Kate DiCamillo creates characters that crawl inside your heart and fill up empty places inside you that you didn't even know you had. You can read my full reviehere.


4 stars
Doll Bones by Holly Black & Eliza Wheeler (Illustrator)

I finally finished this book! I tried at least three times before, but was determined this time not to let it freak me out.
I read it while paying close attention to how Holly Black incites frissons of fear that cumulate and heighten the readers tension. I came away with even more appreciation for her brilliance.
Imagine a porcelain doll created from the bones of the maker’s daughter. Imagine he used her golden yellow ringlets for the doll's hair. Imagine her ashes are stored within the torso. Imagine this doll is haunting and threatening three 12 year old friends.
Yes it’s terrifying, but ultimately this is a coming of age tale. In the end, the biggest fear is that their friendship won’t survive their growing up.


4 stars
Tournament Trouble (Cross Ups #1) by Sylv Chiang 🍁

Jaden‘s mother has forbade him from playing video games because she thinks they will make him violent. Unbeknownst to her, he has been playing them for years and has become an expert in one specific game. When he receives an invitation to a tournament he hast to figure out how to make it happen.
I appreciated the authentic characters here. With the exception of the two bullies, they are all people you might meet. Jaden has solid parents. His mother has reasonable grounds for worrying when her background is revealed. He’s got two mostly supportive older siblings. I liked his relationship with Cali, the girl next door.

Gaming is integral to the plot and some game play is fairly detailed. This will intrigue some readers into opening up the book. Once into it, they will find themselves in the middle of a solid story with characters who learn and grow and become better human beings.


4 stars
Last of the Name by Rosanne Parry

I went searching for more of Parry's work after reading and falling in love with A Wolf Called Wander. I'm so glad to have discovered her work.
Daniel and his older sister, Kathleen, immigrate to New York during the time of the civil war. The destitute pair manage to find work in a fine house, but Daniel has to be disguised as a girl. In a bargain with one of their neighbours, he gets to be himself for a few hours a week doing her shopping while she takes on his laundry duties. While he is out he discovers his singing and dancing can earn him some money. Then he is noticed by someone planning on setting up a family theatre. He wishes he could take the man up on his offer, but knows Kathleen will have nothing to do with it. Everything changes when the New York City draft riots erupt.


4 stars
An Absolutely Remarkable Thing by Hank Green & Kristen Sieh (Narrator)

I went into this with no idea what it was about other than the author is brother to the other YA author with the same last name.
At first I wasn't sure if it was going to work, and then, Wham! I was hooked. While I wasn't infatuated with April, the narrator, at first. I did come to care about her and her connection to the Carls. While the situation with the Carls might be somewhat farfetched, April herself is an authentic character with all kinds of believable flaws.

CURRENTLY

I'm still enjoying The Creativity Project by Colby Sharp when I am work and The Dinner Party by Judy Chicago when I'm at home.  I kind of forgot about After Life; Ways We Think About Death by Merrie-Ellen Wilcox, but will get back to it. I'm listening to The Tree of Dreams by Laura Resau. I've just started reading a Netgalley title, What the Eagle Sees by Eldon Yellowhorn.

UP NEXT

I'm hoping to read Are You Ready to Hatch An Unusual Chicken? by Kelly Jones; A Royal Guide to Monster Slaying by Kelley Armstrong; and The Ghost Collector by Allison Mills.

PROGRESS ON MY READING GOALS

#MustReadIn2018 23/25

#MustReadNFIn2018 11/12 - one in progress

25 Books by Canadian Indigenous Authors 22/25 - one in progress

25 books by Canadian Authors 70/25 - two in progress

Big Book Reading Challenge 10/4

Goodreads Reading Challenge 327/333

#IMWAYR November 19, 2018

#IMWAYR time again, when readers share what they have been reading and find out what others have been up to in the past week. Kathryn hosts the adult version of this meme at Book Date. Jen at Teach Mentor Texts and Kellee and Ricki at Unleashing Readers host the kidlit rendition. Whatever you are looking forward to in your next great read, these are fabulous places to start your search.


I'm following the lead of Shaye at The Miller Memo, so if you clink on the title link for each book, it will take you to the GoodReads page for that book.




It was an intense reading week. It feels like I didn't finish much, but what I did read will stay with me for a very long time. Aside from that, I finished one pair of gloves for a daughter-in-law's Christmas gift and have started on another pair for the other one. (I swear that with all the pulling out and starting over I have knit at least 2 pairs already!) I have almost completed another baby quilt too!





PICTURE BOOKS

4 stars
The Remember Balloons by Jessie Oliveros & Dana Wulfekotte

This endearing picture books shows the impact of Alzheimer's Disease on a grandfather, his grandson and their family. The analogy of the balloons as keepers of memory is brilliantly done and will help other young people understand this debilitating illness.

4 stars
Hide and Sneak by Michael Arvaarluk Kusugak & Vladyana Krykorka (Illustrator)

Allashua is not very good at hiding. She loves to play hide and seek, but ends up getting distracted by butterflies, flowers, fish in ponds and all kinds of delights around her in her northern world.
Unfortunately, Ijiraqs are very good hiders. If they help a child hide, the child is never heard from again. Allashua can't believe the stories when she meets a cheerful Ijiraq and finds herself in serious trouble because of this. Luckily, Allashua is very smart and manages to save herself!

Allashua is also featured in A Promise is a Promise, a book this team worked on with Robert Munch. 

Vladyana Krykorka's illustrations in this and the other books she works on with Michael Arvaarluk Kusugak are stunningly gorgeous.

NONFICTION

5 stars
Seven Fallen Feathers: Racism, Death, and Hard Truths in a Northern City by Tanya Talaga & Michaela Washburn (Narrator)

Starting this title after finishing up Killers of the Flower Moon was probably not a good idea. It was a jump from historical racism into its modern day counterpart here in Canada. This is intense and not easy to read. 

It's going to be the most important book I've read this year. 

Tanya Talaga painstakingly takes the reader through a detailed chronicle of how the Canadian government explicitly attempted to destroy indigenous peoples. It begins with with the horrors of the residential school system, the death of Chanie Wenjak in 1966 and on into today with a federal government that still refuses to fund indigenous education at the same rates as the rest of the population.

She leads us through the lives and deaths of seven students from 2000 to 2011: Jethro Anderson, Curran Strang, Paul Panacheese, Robyn Harper, Reggie Bushie, Kyle Morrisseau and Jordan Wabasse. All were forced to leave their homes and cultures and travel to Thunder Bay, Ontario, to get a secondary education. Aside from numerous hate crimes and assaults, there have been at least 6 more suspicious deaths since an inquest into those deaths was held in 2012.

According to Robert Jago, from an article in The Walrus titled, The Deadly Racism of Thunder Bay, "First Nations lives are being lost at an alarming and disproportionate rate in Thunder Bay. While the city accounts for barely 5 percent of the Indigenous population in Ontario, it accounts for roughly 37 percent of the province’s Indigenous murder victims. Thunder Bay has more than three times as many First Nations murder victims than the entire province of Quebec, which has more than twelve times as many Indigenous people. In raw numbers, more Native people are murdered in Thunder Bay than in any Canadian city, save Winnipeg."

There are those who think a serial killer is on the loose. It's not hard to believe after reading the book. It is a damning revelation that highlights the institutionalized racism of the police, all levels of the justice system, as well as the provincial and federal governments. Citizens of the city don't come across very positively either.

5 stars
We Rise, We Resist, We Raise Our Voices by Wade Hudson, Cheryl Willis Hudson (Editors) & others.

Just WOW! This book, with writing and artwork from many talented creators, written to bring hope and inspiration to their children, ends up bringing it to all readers.
This quote From Drumbeat for Change by Kelly Starling Lyons has stuck with me, "The drumbeat of hope will always drown out howls of hate."

CURRENTLY

I'm halfway through listening to Transcription by Kate Atkinson. I'm reading nothing with my eyes. I've started and stopped about three different novels this week though I did read more of A Thousand Beginnings and Endings than anything else. I needed light and hopeful to contrast with my nonfiction reading and I don't have anything like that in the house.

UP NEXT

I'm planning on starting Lost Soul, Be at Peace by Maggie Thrash. My next nonfiction title will be something completely different from what I have been reading: Shark Lady: The True Story of How Eugenie Clark Became the Ocean's Most Fearless Scientist.

PROGRESS ON MY READING GOALS

Two of my goals have been reached!

#MustReadIn2018 23/25

#MustReadNFIn2018 12/12

25 Books by Canadian Indigenous Authors 24/25

Goodreads Reading Challenge 389/333

The Orange Shirt Story by Phyllis Webstad & Brock Nicol (Illustrator)


Come September 30, make sure you wear your orange shirt and be ready to explain why. 

On Saturday I went to Kidsbooks in Vancouver to pick up a copy of this book and get it signed by the author. I have family and friends who experienced residential schools and while standing in line reading this book, I couldn't help but make connections to their narratives. I was already feeling weepy by the time I got to the signing table. When I told Phyllis about one friend who had run away from a school at 13, she asked me if my friend was still with us. That's when I realized at an even deeper level, how traumatic these experiences were, and understood the full implications of them. That's when eyes filled with tears. 

When Phyllis Webstad was six years old she left the safety of her Granny's home to travel with other children to a residential school. The beautiful orange shirt purchased for this occasion was taken from her by the nuns and never returned. Life at the residence was harsh, but Phyllis and the other children were sent off to public schools during the day where her teacher was kind and helpful. She endured 300 days of hardship before returning home to her Granny. Phyllis never went back. 

She was one of the lucky ones. 

Phyllis' story in an important contribution to the collection of narratives about residential schools that let children and others understand what happened to indigenous children and their families here in Canada and the United States. Brock Nicol's art work in the illustrations is just stunning. 

The back matter consists of additional information about Phyllis Webstad, the Secwepemc (Shuswap) People, and the history of St. Josheph's Residential School. It also includes a glossary of terms used in the book and information about September 30 - Orange Shirt Day, the day we honour residential school survivors and their family. 

All school libraries should own multiple copies of this book. Every classroom should have at least one. 

#IMWAYR MARCH 12, 2018

#IMWAYR time again, when readers share what they have been reading and find out what others have been up to in the past week. Kathryn hosts the adult version of this meme at Book Date. Jen at Teach Mentor Texts and Kellee and Ricki at Unleashing Readers host the kidlit rendition. Whatever you are looking forward to in your next great read, these are fabulous places to start your search.



BOARD BOOKS
4 stars
Little Face Big Face: All Kinds of Wild Faces! by Bill Cotter

I read this with my granddaughter, Ada. I thought she would like it because of all the faces, even though they are not human. She was so, so with it until we got to the last page where there is a mirror. Her attention focused completely when she saw herself. She moved in so that her nose touched the mirror. She tried to grab at her reflection. Then she closed the book and immediately opened it to peer in at herself. This opening and closing business went on for a number of times until Daddy came and got her.
When I reread this with Ada, I realized that she kept turning that back page because she was looking for the rest of the person in the mirror!

4 stars
Guess What - Sweetie Time? by Yusuke Yonezu

Ada is now entertained by these lift the flap books. It helps that I say Peek a Boo! when we lift them. She likes to open and close them over and over and over.... This is like the other books in this series where something is transformed into an animal. In this case, some kind of sweet treat is changed when the flap is lifted.


PICTURE BOOKS
5 stars
Don't Call Me Grandma by Vaunda Micheaux Nelson, Elizabeth Zunon (Illustrations)

The title caught my eye and so, as a Grandma myself, I had to bring it home. I didn't realize until I looked more closely at the cover that is is written by the same person who wrote The Book Itch, another title I read this week. 
I ended up adoring this so much that I read it a few times. I am not much like the glamorous Great-Grandmother Nell. I'm more like my grannies who were round and soft and huggable. What they did do that Great-Grandmother Nell does, is tell stories about other times and love their grandchildren. Even though Nell isn't a huggable Grandma, what comes across in this book is how much love the narrator and her share.
Gorgeous illustrations accompany the text. I have a few favourite pages. The first is the one of Nell with her "short, stubby glass with a picture of a spider on one side" filled with something that looks like apple juice. Great-Grandmother Nell calls it "heart medicine" for a broken heart. On another page "She remembers the time her best friend said they couldn't be friends anymore because of her brown skin."
When the girl asks,
"Is that when your heart got broken, Grandmother?"
"She looks out the window and whispers, "The first time."
It's the two page spread with a collage of historical photographs, headlines, and watercolour images that gives us an understanding of who Great-Grandmother Nell is and what she has endured. This is the page that had me aching for my mother's mom, my Granny Alaric, who told stories of seeing Annie Oakley, Buffalo Bill's Wild West show, among many other tales of time long gone.

4 stars
Alego by Ningeokuluk Teevee

A young girl goes out clam digging with her grandmother. She discovers many different kinds of sea life, but, after being sprayed by a clam, doesn't collect any.
I like the simplicity and ordinariness of this story and that it shows an inter generational relationship. It's bilingual with Inuit and English text on the same page. Inuit words are integrated into the English text and there is an illustrated glossary at the end of the book.
The endpapers are maps showing Cape Dorset, where the story is set.
I appreciated Ningekuluk Teevee's illustrations. I am always looking for samples of coloured pencil art to present as models for students and will add her work to the collection.
I recommend doing a google search to see the fabulous scope of her artwork.

5 stars
Flowers for Sarajevo by John McCutcheon & Kristy Caldwell (Illustrations)

So so beautiful.
I know the story of the cellist of Sarajevo, but this story highlights a young man who sold flowers in the market where twenty two people where killed while waiting in a bakery lineup. Through his eyes we see the increase in distrust and negativity that culminated in that bombing. We also see how Vedran Smailovic's cello playing, in homage to those twenty two victims, encouraged others to show kindness and care for each other again.
I didn't listen to the CD that accompanied the book, but I did go to watch and listen to John McCutcheon's music video of Streets of Sarajevo. If you haven't seen it, stop what you are doing now and watch it.




3 stars
At Night by Helga Bansch

I like the art in this one almost as much as I enjoyed Rosie the Raven. The book is organized in two parts. One half shows different animals at night. If you start from the back of the book, the title is ....But At Night Sometimes, and shows the same animals sleeping in very different places. It would be fun except that bats do not sleep in their caves at night! I know it's a picture book, but this misinformation drove me crazy!


4 stars
Love, Triangle by Marcie Colleen & Bob Shea (Illustrator)

I read this, sight unseen, to a group of third and fourth graders. We all enjoyed it and they mostly got the message of inclusion. I think many of them missed out on a lot of the geometry jokes, but they were all engaged. One of them had the courage to ask what double Dutch was...

NON FICTION PICTURE BOOKS

5 stars
The Book Itch: Freedom, Truth & Harlem's Greatest Bookstore by Vaunda Micheaux Nelson, R. Gregory Christie (Illustrations)

What a gorgeous, stunning picture book! A young boy tells the story of his father and the book store he established. Lewis Michaux was a unpublished poet and visionary. The National Memorial African Bookstore was a haven for black intellectuals, revolutionaries, and artists, but it was also an important place for ordinary everyday people. Michaux's passion for educating his peers through literacy is reflected in many of the slogans he created, especially this one,
KNOWLEDGE IS POWER.
YOU NEED IT EVERY HOUR.
READ A BOOK!
I'm heartbroken that this bookstore isn't still there to visit some day.

5 stars
I Am a Story by Dan Yaccarino

Just Wow!
The picture book traces the history and power of story telling from when tales were told around campfires by our ancient ancestors, to cave paintings and forward to today when stories are read digitally.
Terry Pratchett wrote, "People think that stories are shaped by people. In fact, it's the other way around." If he were still with us, I think he would love this book.
I used this book with a group of grade three/four students this week. We began with a discussion of the above quote, and then I read the book. There were all kinds of questions about why books were burned, what did censored and banned mean? 
This is a book every school library should own.


CHAPTER BOOKS

4 stars
Jasmine Toguchi, Mochi Queen by Debbi Michiko Florence & Elizabet Vukovic (Illustrator)

This is a charming little story about a young girl who wants to help her family make mochi, a Japanese sweet. Traditionally in her family you have to be ten years old to participate. Unfortunately Jasmine is only eight. Not only does Jasmine want to help, she wants to pound mochi with her father, a traditionally a male job. I leave it for you to read and find out if she gets what she wants. You will find out that Jasmine is strong in all kinds of ways!


MIDDLE GRADE NOVELS

5 stars
Wish by Barbara O'Connor

Charlie Reese is a character I won't forget any time soon. She's got fiery spunk, maybe even a bit too much of it. In spite of having a mother who never gets out of bed, a father who's in a correctional facility, and a sister living far away, she manages to make a wish everyday. At first Charlie isn't happy having to stay with her Aunt Bertha and Uncle Gus. What changes things for her is being surrounded by their love, her friendship with Howard Odum and his family, and getting her own dog who adores her.
I admit to getting all teary eyed more than once while reading this.
This book is on par with The Great Gilly Hopkins by Katherine Patterson and One for the Murphys by Lynda Mullaly Hunt.

4 stars
Sammy Keyes and the Wild Things by Wendelin Van Draanen & Tara Sands (Narrator)

I listened to this while waiting for other audiobooks to become available. I enjoy that Sammy grows up a bit in each of her adventures. I also enjoy that Van Draanen embeds social issues into each of these novels. In this one, we are introduced to new characters and learn about the efforts to save the California condor from extinction.


ADULT AND YA
4 stars
The Furthest Station (Peter Grant #5.5) by Ben Aaronovitch

I enjoyed this book well enough. The mystery, encounters with ghosts, talking foxes, river gods and goddesses, and magic is what I have come to anticipate and love from this series. My problem is that I have listened to almost all of the other books in the series. Without Kobna Holdbrook-Smith narration, Peter Grant's character just didn't feel real.

5 stars
Celia's Song by Lee Maracle

This beautifully written book, if you are able to let go of your own conceptions of reality, will show you that there is more than one way to know the world.
The characters in this novel inhabit a landscape where past, present and future, and physical and spiritual realms exist simultaneously. It is historical in scope; from the beginnings of time for this group of indigenous people, through to the disasters of first contact with white people and on to residential schools, and the fallout in the present from all that.  A two headed snake is out to devour the people. Mink, the transforming witness, views the world from a first person perspective while the rest of the story is told in 3rd person. Celia is a seer and it is primarily through her eyes, those of Mink’s, and eventually, Celia's nephew Jacob, that these other ways of understanding the world are revealed.
It’s a matrilineal world. Celia, her mother, and sisters become empowered as they learn who they are and accept themselves. At first, Steve, the white doctor who is involved with one of these women, doesn’t grasp their power or intelligence. The sad truth is revealed in one of the male character’s reflections on white men, “What Ned thinks is even scarier is that they don’t think their own women are very smart on the other side of the bridge, and so they cannot imagine the women in this village being smart either.” 
At one point the family talk about how the vote silenced and destroyed them. Voting destroyed a cultural model for decision-making that had worked to build consensus. When there was an issue, conversations would take place between all the different members of the community. By the time a meeting was held, each family sent a representative, and everyone already knew what they would do and what each person’s role would be.
This is a book about catastrophic loss, healing, justice and survival. Something terrible happens in the middle of this book, but this action of evil becomes a catalyst for deep change that is predicated on indigenous knowing of the world.
After I read this book I read reviews on Goodreads. Many people mentioned that this book made them aware of their own whiteness. This is a good thing.

CURRENTLY

I'm back to reading The Book Scavenger and more of This Accident of Being Lost: Songs and Stories by Leanne Betasamosake Simpson.
I've just started listening to Thud! by Terry Pratchett.

UP NEXT

I plan to start Insignificant Events in the Life of a Cactus by Dusti Bowling and then read Thousand Star Hotel by Bao Phi. I'll listen to Shadowshaper by Daniel JosΓ© Older next. I also need to read We Should All Be Feminists by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, for book club.

PROGRESS ON MY READING GOALS

#MustReadIn2018 7/25 1 in process

#MustReadNFIn2018 2/12

25 Books by Canadian Indigenous Authors 4/25 1 in process

Goodreads Reading Challenge 87/333

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