Empty Spaces by Jordan Abel

A novel about land and legacy

Image | BOOK COVER: Empty Spaces by Jordan Abel

Caption: (Penguin Random House Canada)

Reimagining James Fenimore Cooper's nineteenth-century text The Last of the Mohicans from the contemporary perspective of an urban Nisga'a person whose relationship to land and traditional knowledge was severed by colonial violence, Jordan Abel explores what it means to be Indigenous without access to familial territory and complicates popular understandings about Indigenous storytelling.
Engaging the land through fiction and metaphor, the successive chapters of Empty Spaces move toward an eerie, looping, and atmospheric rendering of place that evolves despite the violent and reckless histories of North America. The result is a bold and profound new vision of history that decenters human perception and forgoes Westernized ways of seeing. (From Penguin Random House)
Abel is a Nisga'a writer from British Columbia. He is also the author of the poetry collections The Place of Scraps, Un/inhabited and Injun. In 2017, he won the Griffin Poetry Prize for Injun.

Interview with Jordan Abel

Media Audio | The Next Chapter : Jordan Abel’s debut novel Empty Spaces is a trippy, genre-bending subversion of The Last of the Mohicans.

Caption: <p>The acclaimed Edmonton-based writer dissects and disassembles the classic story and reframes it into a powerful Indigenous account of location, identity and agency.</p>

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