
Beatrice Culleton Mosionier
Author of In Search of April Raintree
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Gut wrenchingly hard but a worthwhile read. Two young girls lives as they live through the foster card system in Manitoba and the pieces they are left to pick up from their life before, during, and after. Set starting in the 1950s and ending in the mid-70s, not much has changed in 2024 other than there finally being a voice for First Nations in our history classes and schools. But I read the other day that yes, Canada no longer has residential schools where First nations and metis children show more are stripped of culture, family, and love and forced to assimilate to white society; however, they they have not closed, just evolved into the lopsided, amount of First Nations and Metis children in Foster care. Just as First Nations make up a higher percentage in prisons, they also make up the vast majority of foster care placements. Especially in Saskatchewan but other Canadian provinces as well. show less
I downloaded this book on Hoopla simply because it was fiction read by Michaela Washburn. I really enjoyed her reading of [book:The Break|29220494].
It turns out that this book is from 1983, and is very well known in Canada--I am in the US and had never heard of it. Even though this book reads at a very YA level, the content is very much adult--and there is an edited YA version.
This novel follows two Metis sisters, April and Cheryl Raintree, from their early childhood with their parents, show more through being split up and put into different foster homes (good and bad, 1 Metis), family meetings with their parents, schools, and then their experiences as young adults. These different experiences--and their different ages, Cheryl being younger has fewer memories of their parents than April--lead them to very different attitudes. April can pass as white if she chooses, and is ashamed of her Metis heritage. Cheryl could never pass as white and embraces her Metis heritage and plans to be a social worker. Both attitudes fail them as adults; just as April struggles to appreciate her culture, Cheryl cannot accept the problems her people have.
Mosionier is herself Metis and grew up in foster care. I wonder if any of the foster families depicted represent ones she lived with? How is this book viewed in the Metis community today, almost 40 years after it was first written?
Lots of trigger warnings on this one (the unedited version). show less
It turns out that this book is from 1983, and is very well known in Canada--I am in the US and had never heard of it. Even though this book reads at a very YA level, the content is very much adult--and there is an edited YA version.
This novel follows two Metis sisters, April and Cheryl Raintree, from their early childhood with their parents, show more through being split up and put into different foster homes (good and bad, 1 Metis), family meetings with their parents, schools, and then their experiences as young adults. These different experiences--and their different ages, Cheryl being younger has fewer memories of their parents than April--lead them to very different attitudes. April can pass as white if she chooses, and is ashamed of her Metis heritage. Cheryl could never pass as white and embraces her Metis heritage and plans to be a social worker. Both attitudes fail them as adults; just as April struggles to appreciate her culture, Cheryl cannot accept the problems her people have.
Mosionier is herself Metis and grew up in foster care. I wonder if any of the foster families depicted represent ones she lived with? How is this book viewed in the Metis community today, almost 40 years after it was first written?
Lots of trigger warnings on this one (the unedited version). show less
I thought this was a powerful book and a very good choice for the reading challenge. It is written in quite a simple style so it is easy to read but the issues are complex and important. April Raintree and her sister Cheryl were removed from their parents by Children's Aid Society. The girls were put into separate foster homes. They are Metis but April looks white and always looked down on natives. Cheryl, on the other hand, looked Indian and was very proud of being Metis. The book follows show more April and Cheryl as they grow up.
The foster home system was one theme that was explored fully. I found it very realistic and this realism was explained when I read at the end of the book that the author grew up in foster homes. I was glad to read that her experiences with foster homes were mainly positive but I know that many children were placed in less positive homes.
The problems of urban natives was also very thoroughly explored. I'm afraid that not much has changed on that front since this book was written. One thing that has changed in my observation is how many people are proud to say they are Metis. At work a few years ago I was in a training session where everyone was asked to introduce themselves and say something about their ancestral background. In a room of about 30 people at least 5 mentioned that they had some Metis heritage and they were proud of it. Maybe the vision Louis Riel had all those years ago is finally coming to fruition. show less
The foster home system was one theme that was explored fully. I found it very realistic and this realism was explained when I read at the end of the book that the author grew up in foster homes. I was glad to read that her experiences with foster homes were mainly positive but I know that many children were placed in less positive homes.
The problems of urban natives was also very thoroughly explored. I'm afraid that not much has changed on that front since this book was written. One thing that has changed in my observation is how many people are proud to say they are Metis. At work a few years ago I was in a training session where everyone was asked to introduce themselves and say something about their ancestral background. In a room of about 30 people at least 5 mentioned that they had some Metis heritage and they were proud of it. Maybe the vision Louis Riel had all those years ago is finally coming to fruition. show less
Metis sisters April and Cheryl Raintree are just kids (in the 1950s?) when they are taken from their “sick” (alcoholic, but the girls are too young to understand) parents to live in foster homes. They are together for part of their growing up years, but mostly separate, though they do get visits (also with their parents). April appears white whereas Cheryl looks Indigenous. The story continues as they reach adulthood and go their own ways, while (mostly) staying in touch.
Audio. This was show more very good. It did move quickly through their lives. Have to admit, although I liked her as a child, I sure didn’t like Cheryl much as an adult. The author’s note was interesting to learn that not only is she Metis, she also grew up in foster homes. Warning that there is a graphic rape scene in the book. The audio was done well, and I rarely lost focus. show less
Audio. This was show more very good. It did move quickly through their lives. Have to admit, although I liked her as a child, I sure didn’t like Cheryl much as an adult. The author’s note was interesting to learn that not only is she Metis, she also grew up in foster homes. Warning that there is a graphic rape scene in the book. The audio was done well, and I rarely lost focus. show less
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