I realized after I posted my review last week that it was Indigenous Peoples Day, too late to post a review of one of the three books by indigenous authors I have in my review queue. But! We shall celebrate indigenous authors all year long, not just on Indigenous Peoples Day, starting with this multi-award winning book. This is from the teen section of my library.
The Marrow Thieves by Cherie Dimaline. Dancing Cat Books/Cormorant Books, 2017. 978-1770864863
In the not-too-distant, post-apocalyptic future, most people have stopped dreaming, and the lack of dreams makes them go absolutely crazy, to the point where society has fallen apart. Only Natives retain their ability to dream, and whites have found a way to harvest this ability from their bone marrow in a gruesome and deadly process. The need to escape this has profoundly shaped young Frenchie’s life. When the story opens, he is just remembering his brother giving himself up to save Frenchie, their parents having been lost long before.
As Frenchie – by this point a young teen – struggles to make his way to safety, he finds a band of young Aboriginals being led by one adult man, Miig, who serves as a father figure to them all (and tells them eventually about his lost husband), as well as the respected elder Nokomis Minerva. Together, the two adults teach the kids hunting and camping skills, as well as precious words of language. Gradually, we hear the difficult “coming-to” stories of all the members of the group, each character distinct and memorable from the young lovers to the adorable little girl. (Though I didn’t write them down, they are also from several different nations, even if they all share the same valuable ability to dream.) But even this precarious existence is under threat, as there are people who will do anything for the reward for finding more people whose marrow might be harvested.
This story moved with an unrelenting pacing and extreme emotional moments that reminded me of The Hunger Games. But though there is painful loss, there is also a hopeful ending, with a welcomed pregnancy and reunions. Try this original spin on post-apocalyptic survival and take your Native reading out of the historical with this compelling and thought-provoking book.
Cherie Dimaline is Métis and the Aboriginal Writer in Residence at the Toronto Public Library.
Pumpkinheads by Rainbow Rowell and Faith Erin Hicks. Color by Sarah Stern. First Second Books, 2019. ISBN 978-1250312853
Freedom Fire. Dactyl Hill Squad 2 by Daniel José Older. Arthur A. Levine/Scholastic, 2019. 978-1338268843
Spark by Sarah Beth Durst. Clarion Books/HMH, 2019. 978-1328973429
Juana & Lucas: Big Problemas by Juana Medina. Candlewick, 2019. 978-1536201314
Polly Diamond and the Magic Book by Alice Kuipers. Illustrated by Diana Toledano. Chronicle Books, 2018. 978-1452152325
Phoebe G. Green: Lunch Will Never Be the Same by Veera Hiranandani. Grosset & Dunlap/Penguin, 2014. 9780448466958
The Raven Tower by Ann Leckie. Orbit, 2019.
LaGuardia by Nnedi Okorafor, Tana Ford, and James Devlin. Berger Books/Dark Horse, 2019. 9781506710754
Self/Made volume 1 by Mat Groom, Eduardo Ferigato, and Marcelo Costa. Image, 2019. 978-1534312272
They Called Us Enemy by George Takei, Justin Eisinger and Steven Scott, with art by Harmony Becker.
Prince and the Dressmaker by Jen Wang. First Second Books, 2018.
Cheshire Crossing by Andy Weir and Sarah Andersen. Ten Speed Press, 2019. 978-0399582073
Sea Sirens: a Trot and Cap’n Bill Adventure by Amy Chu and Janet K. Lee. Viking, 2019. 978-0451480163.
Queen of the Sea by Dylan Meconis. Walker Books/Candlewick, 2019. 978-1536204988
Catwad: It’s Me by Jim Benton. Graphix, 2019. 978-1338326024


