Indians of North America -- Fiction

  • What's my superpower?

    Creator

    Johnston, Aviaq

    Abstract

    Nalvana feels like all of her friends have some type of superpower. She has friends with super speed (who always beat her in races), friends with super strength (who can dangle from the monkey bars for hours), and friends who are better than she is at a million other things. Nalvana thinks she must be the only kid in town without a superpower. But then her mom shows Nalvana that she is unique and special--and that her superpower was right in front of her all along.

    Audience
    Juvenile**
    Publisher (Source)

    Iqaluit, Nunavut, Toronto, Ontario, Inhabit Media Inc.

    Not specified
  • Scattered bones

    Creator

    Siggins, Maggie

    Abstract

    Scattered Bones is a story of the complicated, fragile and sometimes fatal relations between Indigenous people and settlers in Northern Saskatchewan in the 1920s. Aboriginal spiritual traditions are beginning to cross paths with the construction of a residential school, and ancient acts of violent vengeance are shaping the trajectory of events in the town 200 years later.

    Audience
    Adult**
    Publisher (Source)

    Regina, Saskatchewan, Coteau Books

    Not specified
  • Kiss of the fur queen

    Creator

    Highway, Tomson

    Abstract

    In the 1950s, Abraham Okimasis becomes the first Indian ever to win the Trapper's Festival Dog Sled Race and, as tradition dictates, he is kissed by the festival's beautiful Fur Queen. Nine months afterward, Abraham's wife Mariesis gives birth to their son, Champion, in a tent on a trapline in snowy northern Manitoba. Later, three-year-old Champion watches his brother Ooneemeetoo come into the world in the same tent. The boys grow up in a magical Cree Garden of Eden: stars, fish and caribou are their playmates; canoes and dogsleds transport their nomadic family.

    Audience
    General**
    Not specified