Powwow Summer

Nahanni Shingoose

Image | Powwow Summer by Nahanni Shingoose

(James Lorimer & Company)

Part Ojibwe and part white, River lives with her white mother and stepfather on a farm in Ontario. Teased about her Indigenous heritage as a young girl, she feels like she doesn't belong and struggles with her identity.
Now eighteen and just finished high school, River travels to Winnipeg to spend the summer with her Indigenous father and grandmother, where she sees firsthand what it means to be an "urban Indian."
On her family's nearby reserve, she learns more than she expects about the lives of Indigenous people, including the presence of Indigenous gangs and the multi-generational effects of the residential school system. But River also discovers a deep respect for and connection with the land and her cultural traditions. The highlight of her summer is attending the annual powwow with her new friends.
At the powwow after party, however, River drinks too much and posts photos online that anger people and she has her right to identify as an Indigenous person called into question.
Can River ever begin to resolve the complexities of her identity — Indigenous and not? (From Lorimer & Company)

From the book

People have always had a hard time figuring out my heritage when they first meet me. "What are you?" they ask.
I'm slightly brown, with freckles, My long, thick, black hair hangs to my waist. My clothes are always a little snug. I spent years in the centre of the back row in class pictures, looking down at my classmates. My cheekbones are high, and my eyes are dark brown.
This used to inspire the boys in grade give to skip past me while singing, "Her lips were pink, like a hound dog's dink, and her eyes were dog-shit brown!"
When I was ten years old, my mom and my teacher (who are both French) talked me into fancy shawl dancing at the school's talent show. "It will be fun," they said.

From Powwow Summer by Nahanni Shingoose ©2019. Published by Lorimer & Company.