Up Ghost River
By Edmund Metatawabin and Alexandra Shimo
By Edmund Metatawabin and Alexandra Shimo
By Edmund Metatawabin and Alexandra Shimo
By Edmund Metatawabin and Alexandra Shimo
Category: Biography & Memoir | North American World History
Category: Biography & Memoir | North American World History
-
$21.00
May 26, 2015 | ISBN 9780307399885
-
Aug 26, 2014 | ISBN 9780307399908
-
$21.00
May 26, 2015 | ISBN 9780307399885
-
Aug 26, 2014 | ISBN 9780307399908
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
Praise
NATIONAL BESTSELLER
Finalist for the Governor Generalâs Literary Award for Non-Fiction
Winner of the CBC Bookie Award for Canadian Non-Fiction
A CBC Best Book of the Year
A Hill Times Best Book of the Year
A Quill & Quire Book of the Year
âEdmund Metatawabinâs voice is clear, brave and full of the grace of his Cree homeland. Up Ghost River is a powerful and unsettling read, full of heartbreaking truth-telling, resistance and Metatawabinâs uncompromising love of land, his people, his language and his culture. These stories are full of the real lived violence of colonialism and of the beautiful tiny moments that our Elders and storytellers wrap around our children to teach them, protect them and nurture them. Metatawabin is a gift to all who are lucky enough to read him, and the key to reading Metatawabin is a willingness to simply allow these stories to transform you.â âLeanne Betasamosake Simpson, author of Noopiming
âA shocking, sadly revealing Canadian story. Cree elder Edmund Metatawabin has the courage to tell how âwhite learningâ stripped him of his name and systematically brutalized himâincluding strapping him into a school-built electric chair and electrocuting himâtraumatizing him throughout his childhood, youth and adulthood, until he could finally let it all âpass throughâ him and find himself as a human being. âWe are still here,â he asserts, and âour forefathers . . . are still here, all around us, guiding those who listen.â Every Canadian needs to hear this story.â âRudy Wiebe, author of The Temptations of Big Bear
âThanks to the efforts of survivors like Edmund the federal government can no longer hide the shocking truth behind this terrible chapter in history, and survivors of St. Anneâs and other residential schools may finally receive the justice they rightly deserve. Edmundâs effort to document this abuse is as courageous as his dedication to healing himself and others from their experiences.â âNishnawbe Aski Nation (NAN) Deputy Grand Chief Alvin Fiddler, NationTalk
âWith unsparing honesty, humility and disarming humour, Edmund Metatawabin reveals the darkness at the heart of Canadian history. A painful yet engaging narrative of personal trauma and recovery, this inspiring book also heralds the cultural and spiritual redemption of a people.â âGabor MatĂ©, M.D., author of In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts: Close Encounters with Addiction
âA harrowing and redemptive story of a manâs personal battles with one of Canadaâs worst practices. Edmund Metatawabinâs tale of residential schools and government bureaucracy will leave you angry at the evils of colonization. Yet it will also show you a manâsâand a peopleâsâincredible ability to survive and seek justice. There are plenty of ghosts in this book, apportions
of shame and responsibility, but Metatawabinâs journey and destination on that river will definitely leave you full of hope and richer for it.â âDrew Hayden Taylor, author of Motorcycles & Sweetgrass
âMoving documentation, recollected tragedy and personal triumph, this book is a necessary first-hand account of being First Nations in contemporary Canada. From the atrocities of residential schools, to the present-day policy challenges, Up Ghost River will open your eyes to the all-too-recent history of Canadaâs First Peoples, through the experiences of a resilient individual and his family.â âThe Right Honourable Paul Martin, former Prime Minister of Canada
âUp Ghost River is a very difficult story to read, but a necessary one in the reckoning of Canadaâs abusive and exploitative relationship with its First Nations people. Edmund Metatawabinâs measured and honest account shows evidence of remarkable healing, and his story has much in common with the history of colonized Indigenous people around the world. . . . With Alexandra Shimo, Metatawabin writes about his life in a way that is both agonizing and redemptive, personal and political, gut-wrenching and level-headed; it will break your heart.â âChristine Pountney, author of Sweet Jesus
âThe word âcourageousâ is often tossed around without much thought, but in the case of Edmund Metatawabinâs residential school memoir, the label fits. . . . While the bookâs early chapters unearth horrific memories, Up Ghost River unfolds into an activistâs triumphant story of survival and resistance.â âQuill & Quire (Book of the Year)
âThe horror of Metatawabinâs account seem almost unbelievable, but it is all too factual, backed up with official documents. Nor can Canadians dismiss this as a tragedy from a now bygone era; Metatawabin argues that recent legislation from the Stephen Harper government is a continuation of oppression. This work is a harrowing but enthralling account of an aspect of Canadian history that the country would prefer to forget but which continues to haunt.â âPublishers Weekly (starred review)
âThe story of surviving the horrors of the residential school experience has been told by so many others. But Edmund Metatawabinâs Up Ghost River is told with such unsettling bravery, in plain, honest language, that this intimate portrait of his childhood resonates longer after the pages are closed.â âLiterary Review of Canada
âUp Ghost River arrives at an important time in the ongoing national debate over Canadaâs reconciliations with its native communities, adding personal perspective and emotional texture to a debate far too many of us get to see only through an ideological lens. . . . A book that has the potential to be a valuable cultural document. . . . Up Ghost River succeeds in turning one manâs personal account into a telling testament of an entire peopleâs trials.â âToronto Star
âA searing memoir about a young boy and the legacy of trauma inflicted on Canadaâs First Peoples by the residential school system. A gripping read.â âThe Globe and Mail
âThis aptly titled, well-crafted book is an especially poignant reminder of the harm [residential schools] caused. . . . By weaving together memoirs and Indigenous cultural practices, the case that [Metatawabin] makes for a louder voice in the countryâs political, economic and environmental decisions is cleverly strengthened.â âWinnipeg Free Press
âShocking, detailed and revealing. It is a story of profound courage, suffering, and an ongoing healing process. Despite the often dark and serious concepts discussed, a surprising humour is present as well. Read this book!â âThe Argus
Awards
Legislative Assembly of Ontario Speakerâs Book Award WINNER 2015
Governor Generalâs Literary Award â Nonfiction FINALIST 2014
Trillium Book Award FINALIST 2015