3 books by David A. Robertson among those nominated for First Nations Communities Read Awards | CBC Books - Action News
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3 books by David A. Robertson among those nominated for First Nations Communities Read Awards

The two $5000 prizes are awarded to the best Indigenous titles.

The two $5000 prizes are awarded to the best Indigenous titles

A man with glasses and a beard smiles at the camera.
Three of David A. Robertson's books were nominated for First Nations Communities Read Awards 2023-2024. (Tundra Books)

Swampy Cree writer and graphic novelist David A. Robertson has three books nominated for the 2023-2024 First Nation Communities Read Awards.

The First Nation Communities Read Awardsare comprisedof two $5,000 prizes that celebrate the best of Indigenous literature in Canada. The winning titles are distributed in libraries across Ontario.

A child lies next to a glowing stone. A squirrel and a woman comfort her.
(Puffin Canada)

There are two categories YA/adult and children's books with some 70titles on the longlists. The YA/adult list features Robertson's novels The Stone Child and The Theory of Crows and his graphic novel, Version Control.

The Stone Child is the third book in Robertson'sMisewa Saga, which isan Indigenous, Narnia-inspired, middle-grade fantasy series.

The Theory of Crows is a novel that follows the story of father and daughter Matthew and Holly as they search for a long-lost cabin on the family trapline.

Version Control is the second volume in the superhero YA graphic novel series, The Reckoner Rises. It is illustrated by Scott B. Henderson, Donovan Yaciuk and Andrew Thomas.

Based in Winnipeg, Robertson has published over 25 books and is a two-time winner of the Governor General's Literary Award.

LISTEN | David A. Robertsontalks about The Theory of Crows:
David A. Robertson talks to Shelagh Rogers about his novel, The Theory of Crows.

Robertson is not the only celebrated author on these lists they bring together some of the most prominent Indigenous writers from Turtle Island, including Harold R. Johnson, Jen Ferguson, Joshua Whitehead and Billy Ray Belcourt.

A teenage girl with her hair in a bun looks at the readers. There's a moon in the background.
(Heartdrum)

Johnson's The Power of Story: On Truth, the Trickster, and New Fictions for a New Erahighlights the importance of storytelling in every aspect of human life. Johnson, who died in 2022, was a member of the Montreal Lake Cree Nation, a lawyer and writer whose groundbreaking book Firewater: How Alcohol Is Killing My People (and Yours) was a finalist for the Governor General's Literary Award for non-fiction.

Ferguson's The Summer of Bitter and Sweet, which won the 2022 Governor General's Literary Award for young people's literature for text, is also on the longlist for YA/adult titles. The young adult novel follows the story of a Mtis girl living on the Canadian prairies. Ferguson is of Michif/Mtis and Canadian settler heritage and her work includes the 2016 novel Border Markers and the essay Off Balance.

Another book on the YA/Adult longlist is Whitehead's Making Love with the Land, a personal essay collection about exploring Indigeneity, queerness and identity. Whitehead is an Oji-nhiyaw, two-spirit writer, poet and Indigiqueer scholar from Peguis First Nation. His novel, Jonny Appleseed, won Canada Reads in 2021.

Book cover
(Hamish Hamilton)

Belcourt, a scholar and writer from Driftpile Cree Nation in Alberta, is nominated for A Minor Chorus. The novel follows an unnamed author as he returns to Alberta, abandoning his unfinished thesis, as he searches for what is missing in his life.

Belcourt won the 2018 Griffin Poetry Prize for This Wound is a World. The collection also won the 2018 Indigenous Voices Award for most significant work of poetry in English and was a finalist for the 2018 Governor General's Literary Award for poetry. Belcourt's second book, NDN Coping Mechanisms, uses poetry, prose and textual art to explore how Indigenous and queer communities are left out of mainstream media. It was on the Canada Reads 2020 longlist and was shortlisted for the 2020 Lambda Literary Awards.

Other notable nominees includeCandy Palmater and Joseph Kakwinokanasum.

Writer, actor and comedian Candy Palmater is nominated for her posthumous memoir, Running Down a Dream, where she recounts the ups and downs of her life journey.

A band member of Ugpi'ganjig, a Mi'kmaw First Nation in northern New Brunswick, she became a lawyer but then took a government job so she could pursue comedy at night. And that she did Palmater hosted and created the award-winning The Candy Show on APTN, acted in TV shows, hosted The Candy Palmater Show on CBC Radio One and appeared as a panellist championing The Break by Katherena Vermette on Canada Reads 2017. She died in 2021.

Kakwinokanasum's My Indian Summer is on the YA/adult longlist as well. The novel, set in the summer of '79, follows 12-year-old Hunter Frank as he navigates the town of Red Rock essentially alone as a young entrepreneur. Kakwinokanasum, an author and member of James Smith Cree Nation, was shortlisted for the 2020 CBC Nonfiction Prize.

Also nominated is The Amajurjuk by Levi Illuitok which was illustrated by CBC Radio art director Ben Shannon.

The full list oftitles for the YA/adult category are:

The nominated titles for the children's category are:

  • Returning to the Yakoun River by Robert Davidson and Sara Davidson, illustrated by Janine Gibbons
  • Maakusi Loves Music by Chelsea June and Jaaji, illustrated by Tamara Campeau
  • Finding Moose by Sue Farrell Holler, illustrated by Jennifer Faria
  • Jordan and Mom by Jerleen Anderson Sullivan
  • Benny the Bananasaurus Rex by Sarabeth Holden, illustrated by Emma Pedersen
  • With Our Orange Hearts by Phyllis Webstead, illustrated by Emily Kewageshig
  • Dancing with Our Ancestors by Robert Davidson and Sara Davidson, illustrated by Janine Gibbons
  • Beautiful You Beautiful Me by Tasha Spillet Sumner, illustrated by Salini Perera
  • Drum from the Heart by Ren Louie, illustrated by Karlene Harvey
  • Animals Illustrated: Ringed Seal by William Flaherty, illustrated by Sara Ottersttter
  • Niitu and Chips by Babah Kalluk
  • Phoenix Gets Greater by Marty Wilson Trudeau, illustrated by Megan Kyak-Monteith, with Phoenix Wilson
  • Muinji'j Asks Why by Shanika and Breighlynn MacEachern, illustrated by Zeta Paul
  • Abalone Woman by Teoni Spathelfer, illustrated by Natassia Davies
  • The Raven Mother by Brett D. Huson, illustrated by Natasha Donovan
  • Am's Sapotawan by William Dumas, illustrated by Rhian Brynjolson
  • Oolichan Moon by Samantha Baynon, illustrated by Lucy Trimble
  • Ben the Sealion by Roy Henry Vickers
  • To My Panik: To My Daughter by Nadia Sammurtok, illustrated by Pelin Turgut
  • Sweetgrass by Theresa Meuse, illustrated by Jessica Jerome
  • Una Huna?: Ukpik Learns to Sew by Susan Aglukark, illustrated by Amiel Sandland & Rebecca Brook
  • Adventures of the Pugulatmu'j: Giju's Gift by Brandon Mitchell, illustrated by Veronika Barinova and Britt Wilson
  • k-ciwkicik / The Move by Don K. Philpot and Doris George, illustrated by Alyssa Koski
  • The Day I Became Number 54 by Lorre Gallant
  • Runs With the Stars by Darcy Whitecrow and Heather M. O'Connor, illustrated by Lenny Lishchenko
  • A Magical Sturgeon by Joseph Dandurand, illustrated by Elinor Atkins
  • I Can See You by Rosemarie Avrana Meyok, illustrated by Michelle Simpson

The winners will be announced during First Nation Public Library Week in October.

The First Nations Communities Read Awards are sponsored by the Periodical Marketers of Canada.

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