What Fills Your House Like Smoke
Thistledown Press / 30 August 2024

What Fills Your House Like Smokeby E. McGregorPublished by Thistledown PressReview by Shelley A. Leedahl$19.95 ISBN 9781771872522 I must admit, the title of E. (Erin) McGregor’s debut poetry collection—What Fills Your House Like Smoke—greatly piqued my interest. I’m partial to similes and metaphors, and McGregor’s title was a poetic hook—what, exactly, does fill this Winnipeg poet’s house with metaphorical smoke? I guessed that butterflies and sweet peas wouldn’t be at the heart of it. McGregor holds a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing from the University of British Columbia, and the sheer variety of poetic forms—prose poems; free verse; quatrains; couplets; concrete; and experimental, sound-oriented pieces—in the book is consistent with the range I’ve seen in other first books by creative writing students. What differentiates McGregor’s poetry, however, is its nearly singular focus on the theme of personal identity; often, first books “free range” across themes and subjects. McGregor’s poems weave pain into a story. McGregor is a “Euro-Settler/Métis,” and in her piece “Weeds”—another metaphor—she begins: “Don’t judge me too harshly/for not understanding the small things/that come with your blood”. In that same poem: “[white people] have me by the roots/it’s confusing”. The poet contends with her lineage, and,…

Brand of Brotherhood, The
Shadowpaw Press / 30 August 2024

The Brand of Brotherhoodby T. D. ZummackPublished by Endless Sky BooksReview by Toby A. Welch  $24.99 ISBN 9781989398784 The Brand of Brotherhood starts off with a literal bang. In the brief first chapter, the Warner family experiences a lifetime of struggle. William Warner moves his wife and two young sons west to Nebraska to forge a better life. But drought, poverty, and illness hit hard. The family will never be the same again. Giving up the unachieved dream of a great life in Nebraska, the Warners – who now number three instead of four – head further west to California. But William doesn’t survive the journey, making orphans of twelve-year-old Colt and ten-year-old Brick. Undeterred, the boys continue the trek to Sacramento as their father had planned to start their new lives.  Jim Borden, a retired gunfighter, takes the boys into his care as they travel westward by train. Borden sets the boys up with a solid, routine life – school, work, home, bed – and they flourish. Until they don’t. Brick turns to the outlaw life while Colt is a law-abiding citizen. Brick becomes a successful stagecoach robber, joining a gang of thieves called The Brotherhood, while Colt becomes a landowner. On…

Good Walk, The
University of Regina Press / 30 August 2024

The Good Walk: Creating New Paths on Traditional Prairie Trailsby Matthew R. AndersonPublished by University of Regina PressReview by Shelley A. Leedahl$27.95 ISBN 9780889779655 Uncanny timing. I recently completed a pilgrimage walk—the 300-kilometer Camino de Santiago (Portuguese Coastal Route)—and not a week after my return from Europe I was reviewing a book about a very different—but much closer to home—set of pilgrimages. The Good Walk: Creating New Paths on Traditional Prairie Trails, by Swift Current-born and raised educator, author and Lutheran minister, Matthew Anderson (who’s also walked the Camino de Santiago), is compelling, exceedingly well-written and researched nonfiction concerning three ambitious Saskatchewan pilgrimages across Treaty 4 and 6 pastures, valleys, roads, ranches and farms, abandoned homesteads, brush belts, villages, First Nations’ reserves and more via the Traders’ Road/NWMP Patrol Trail (2015), the Battleford Trail (2017), and the Frenchman Trail (2018), and creating “healthy new stories” on the journey. “By walking,” Anderson writes, “our group was attempting to pay attention”. These “good walks” were undertaken by an eclectic assemblage—including clergy, writers, Elders, family members, a hydrologist, naturalist Trevor Herriot, and book dedicatee and Saskatchewan History and Folklore Society president Hugh Henry—to connect to the land and its stories while respecting the…