Nēhiyawēwin: paskwāwi-pīkiskwēwin/Cree: Language of the Plainsby Jean L. OkimasisPublished by University of Regina PressReviewed by Madonna Hamel$24.95 ISBN 9780889778856 This new edition of Okimasis’ lab workbook is an indispensable companion to the recorded language labs available through the University of Regina Open Textbook program (https://www.uregina.ca/oer-publishing/). As an eager learner of the Cree language I appreciate how this workbook works as a clear visual map to bridge the rich aural world of the historic language of the plains, reinforcing the fact that Cree is indeed alive and integral to both people and place. You begin to speak Cree and Cree begins to speak you, a great teacher once said, and it is true. Using this workbook, I see how my inherited languages of English and French are constructed in a less storied and inter-connective manner than the nehiyawewin way. It gives me a door into the opportunity to be spoken “by” Cree. So much of a student’s ability to enter new territory lies in the efficacy and abilities of the teacher. Jean Okimasis is without a doubt the woman for the job of sharing this whole other world of Cree with the rest of us. Her books and CDs are used…
A Fondness for the Reckless: A Ten Past Midnight Storyby Jennifer Jacoby-SmithPublished by Your Nickel’s Worth PublishingReview by Toby A. Welch $24.95 ISBN 9781778690488 Life is busy and reading time often gets squeezed between laundry cycles and those last minutes before sleep takes a hold of me. That’s my reality, even as a book nerd. But all that – my day job, the house chores, even my gym classes – came to a screeching halt when I picked up A Fondness for the Reckless. I couldn’t put this entertaining book down! You don’t have to be interested in the music industry – I’m not – to fall into Indie’s fascinating world. The book follows him from a boy with big dreams of being a music star to someone actually living the life: recording, performing, navigating the personalities of a boy band, and figuring out who he is and what he wants. The details of the journey are crisp and surprisingly addictive. A Fondness for the Reckless jumps all over the place in terms of timelines. We meet present-day Indie in 2016 as he jets off to secure a music deal. We rewind to 2009 and 2010, when he is a teen sneaking into…
The Ecological Buffalo: On the Trail of a Keystone Speciesby Wes Olson and Johane Janelle Published by University of Regina Press Review by Madonna Hamel$39.95 ISBN 9780889778719 As a child Wes Olson knew he would dedicate his life to learning everything he could about the buffalo and as an adult there is no bison-related question you can throw at him to stump him. I’ve tried. He carries his childhood glee for his subject into every project he approaches, and never is that more evident than in The Ecological Buffalo: On The Trail of a Keystone Species. As he writes in the introduction: “For more than thirty years, Johane and I have been captivated by all things buffalo.” The Ecological Buffalo is a look at the animals and species with whom the bison share their space and time. The term “keystone” refers to the integral role bison play in keeping others species alive. Take for example, bison poop. Once bison digest grass they deposit buffalo chips that contain insects and those insects feed a variety of birds like woodpeckers who in turn create cavities in trees for creatures like squirrels who create dung for beetles and so on. This book not only celebrates…
Gabrielle Rougeby Maureen UlrichPublished by Flatlands PressReview by Sally Meadows$21.99 ISBN 9781778296505 Full confession: alternate historical fantasy novels for young adults is not a genre I typically reach for. But when the opportunity came up to review Maureen Ulrich’s Gabrielle Rouge (Book 2 in the Winds of Change series), I jumped at it after reviewing and enjoying her middle years’ book Kimeto’s Journey, about an 11-year-old African boy who has an extraordinary adventure. The fact that Ulrich has published in multiple genres, for different age groups, attests to her skills as a writer, and I, as a reader, am all in on her writing journey. At the beginning of Gabrielle Rouge, 16-year-old, flame-haired Gabrielle is returning home from the riots in Andwarf. Accompanied by Thomas, the young blacksmith who has pledged to serve her as the prospective incoming leader of the town of Lille after the untimely death of her war-hero father, and with her brother out of the picture, Gabrielle will need all the support she can get. It doesn’t take long for our female protagonist to declare her intentions to the townspeople; and just as quickly, she is met with both quiet and outright opposition. The remainder of…
The Dark Unicornby Edward WillettPublished by Endless Sky BooksReview by Toby A. Welch $19.99 ISBN 9781989398951 I wasn’t surprised to learn that The Dark Unicorn was a finalist in the Children’s Literature category in the 1999 Saskatchewan Book Awards. This fantastical story about a young man’s quest to save the world from destruction is hard to put down! While some readers may consider this book a bit dark, I was uplifted by the underlying thread of hope that runs through it. The story focuses on Nels, a flutist in a theatre group who is gifted a carved unicorn with a magical power – the ability to save the Wall, the only barrier standing between him and an enemy bent on wiping out life as he knows it. His journey with the unicorn is an intriguing one. My favourite character in the story is a scrappy young pickpocket named Dart. He and Nels team up in the mission to protect their world and he is the perfect sidekick. Dart has a huge secret, takes risks without hesitation, and gives as good as he gets while defending his people. For readers, Dart is a gift for our imaginations as his story arc is fascinating. While The…
The Chorus Beneath Our Feetby Melanie SchnellPublished by Radiant PressReview by Shelley A. Leedahl$25.00 ISBN 9781998926329 Regina writer Melanie Schnell’s debut novel, While the Sun is Above Us, earned her the Saskatchewan First Book Award and The City of Regina Award at the 2013 Saskatchewan Book Awards, and I expect her recently released second novel, The Chorus Beneath Our Feet, will also garner attention, particularly for its ambitious plot. Schnell’s braided several surprisingly disparate elements and parallelled the relationships between two sets of siblings in this crime story set in “Ravenwood,” Alberta. The first brother and sister were among the 100,000 Barnardo’s Homes’ children shipped from England to Canada to labour on farms between 1869 – 1948. These 100,000 “home children” were ripped from their families and treated extremely poorly in Canada. Ravenwood rumours suggest that the bodies of these separated siblings are buried beneath the massive oak tree (the “Harron Tree”) in the city’s central park. A local construction company is razing the tree for the construction of a mall, and protesters are rallying around the stately oak. The second set of siblings are Jes, an army Sargeant who’s returned home after eight years in Afghanistan—he’s accompanying his fellow…
Elephants in the Roomby Betty Jane HegeratPublished by Shadowpaw PressReview by Sally Meadows$22.99 ISBN 9781998273485 The best–or at least most satisfying–single-author anthologies have a common thread woven throughout the stories. In Betty Jane Hegerat’s new short story collection Elephants in the Room, published by Shadowpaw Press, readers don’t have to dig deep to identify the connecting theme: it’s right there in the title. Hegerat has taken eight of her previously published stories and fleshed out her overarching idea of topics that are avoided because they’re uncomfortable to discuss, with six new tales including the capstone story “Elephants” that literally includes elephants–lots of elephants–in the room. With deft precision, she fearlessly exposes the things we often keep to ourselves: secrets and lies, regrets and beliefs, fears and hopes, all mixed in with glimmers of love, grace, and compassion. Hegerat’s prose is both straightforward and complex as she adroitly exposes human foibles–especially as they surface in imperfect family relationships–with a dose of humour and/or affection. Her characters are finely drawn, inherently flawed, and more relatable than we might be willing to admit: the begrudging son who receives praise when he least expects it; a daughter-in-law’s final act of love for her husband’s…
Something for the Darkby Randy LundyPublished by University of Regina PressReview by Shelley A. Leedahl$19.95 ISBN 9781779400888 I’ve reviewed four of Randy Lundy’s transcendent poetry collections, and each time I’ve come away thinking surely this is as good as he gets. Then a new title’s released … and the ceiling rises again. Something for the Dark, Lundy’s latest, follows Field Notes for the Self (2020) and Blackbird Song (2018) in a trilogy of meditative books that address the whole of it: life and meaning; connections with people and place (he’s often “on the back deck” with cigarettes and coffee, and his poems surreptitiously venerate the prairies he long resided on); seasons; his beloved creatures (particularly dogs and birds); nothingness and silence; and writing poetry (“These lines are getting the/discussion nowhere”). I built a fire in the woodstove, lifted the old dog up onto the couch, and, in silence and solitude, let the words nourish me. Lundy possesses the artist’s gift of seeing, certainly, but he also exhibits the rare ability to render images and experiences into something other, something that borders on the holy—a crow feasting on the rib of a “road-killed deer” holds “a strip of meat/in its beak,…
On the Hunt for William Hallett: Discovering a Forgotten Métis Leaderby Audrhea LandePublished by Your Nickel’s Worth PublishingReview by Toby A. Welch $29.95 ISBN 9781778690525 A nearly forgotten figure from Métis history has come alive! On the Hunt for William Hallett drew me in initially because of its beautiful cover: a man galloping across the plains on horseback, a rifle in one hand, a buffalo running alongside. The image pulled me in but the vivid writing and fascinating storyline kept me hooked. I had never heard of William Hallett, but I assumed that he was an interesting fellow if someone penned a book about him; after all he has been dead over a century. A sworn enemy of Louis Riel, Hallett called himself “a loyal half-breed of the Red River settlement.” He was born in 1811 to a mother of the Blood (Kainai) tribe, which was part of the Blackfoot Confederacy. He went on to do unforgettable things. Author Audrhea Lande summed Hallett up better than I could: “A man who loved the wild prairies and knew them intimately. A man connected to the original people of the plains. A man who spoke up for justice and fair treatment. A man of great stamina and endurance….
Into the D/arkby David EliasPublished by Radiant PressReview by Shelley A. Leedahl$22.00 ISBN 9781998926381 Into the D/ark is the dream-like and aptly-titled new novel by veteran Winnipeg writer David Elias, as all is not well for blacksmith/artist Clarence; his wife, Rose; and their fire-disfigured sons in rural Manitoba circa 1963. Indeed, Rose’s best friend, Martha—who inadvertently photographs JFK’s assassination while on holiday—and her fanatical, ark-building brother, Abe, are also battling demons. Like the snow-whipped landscape, the characters are driven toward a frenzy with their disparate obsessions: Rose’s love of women’s magazines; her self-exiled sons’ non-stop watching of American TV programs (their panacea in the rough shack they’ve named “Bachelor’s Paradise);” Martha’s black and white photography, and her secret love for Rose; Abe’s ark project; and Clarence’s shift from welding farm implements to creating nonsensical metal monsters. The key to this original book’s success is manyfold. Firstly, the distinct characterizations and the author’s ability to credibly portray madness are remarkable: an entire, almost fantastical chapter is dedicated to Clarence’s unravelling, which coincides with the removal of his welding mask: … he now bathed in glorious unending light, all because he kept his naked eyes fixed on the dazzling blaze of metallic…
