Synopses & Reviews
In her first idiom-shattering book of poetry, Wanda John-Kehewin combines Aboriginal oral tradition with dramatic narrative to address the effects of colonization, alcohol addiction, familial abandonment, religious authority, sexual abuse, and the pain of mourning. She admonishes humanity for its seeming lack of conscience in poems journeying from turmoil on the Gaza Strip to rapidly dissolving ice floes.
Cree poet Wanda John-Kehewin has studied criminology, sociology, Aboriginal studies, and creative writing while attending Simon Fraser University's The Writer's Studio writing program. She uses writing as a therapeutic medium for understanding and responding to the near decimation of Native culture, language, and tradition.
Review
Between the body and the utterance is the meaning. Read these poems aloud as if your life depended upon it for it does. Wanda John-Kehewin unstops our ears with her unflinching evocation of the colonial pesticide” now threatening all forms of life.”Betsy Warland, Breathing the Page Reading the Act of Writing
Synopsis
Emotive, yet wryly unsentimental poems give voice to the many forms of suffering Aboriginal people have endured.
Synopsis
In her first idiom-shattering book of poetry, Wanda John-Kehewin endeavours to "speak her truth," combining elements of First Nations oral tradition with a style of dramatic narrative that originates from the earliest traditions of cultural storytelling and also keeps pace with the rhythmical undulations of Canadian poets such as James Reaney and E.J. Pratt.
However, in a contemporary setting, the magniloquent narrative of nation-building has given way to fragmentary and reflexive self- examination that is inextricably bound to a history of colonization, the residual effects of which are buried deep within silent sufferers. Divided into four aspects of the Medicine Wheel - one of many stone structures scattered across the Alberta Plains - this collection calls for us to acknowledge the blatant neglect of quality of life on Native reserves and to explore ameliorative processes of restorative justice.
In emotive and yet wryly unsentimental tones, John-Kehewin lends her voice to many forms of suffering that surround enforced loss of culture, addressing topics such as alcohol addiction, familial abandonment, religious authority, sexual abuse, and the pain of mourning for loved ones. John-Kehewin does not spare herself when relating her own stories, even as she tells the stories of others that are so like her own, admonishing humanity for its lack of conscience in poems that journey from the turmoil of the Gaza Strip to rapidly dissolving ice floes ...
Wanda John-Kehewin is, as she describes herself, "a First Nations woman searching for the truth and a way to be set free from the past" - shoving aside that lingering sense of shame and stigma - taking the reader on a healing journey that reveals language to be an elusive creature indeed and one that gives new definition to what being "in the dog house" could be, if we as human beings listen carefully and learn to remedy our misunderstandings.
About the Author
Cree poet
Wanda John-Kehewin has studied criminology, sociology, Aboriginal studies, and creative writing while attending Simon Fraser Universitys TWS Writing Program. She uses writing as a therapeutic medium for understanding and responding to the near decimation of Native culture, language, and tradition.
John-Kehewin has been published in Quills Poetry, Salish Seas, UBCs Aboriginal Anthology, SFUs Emerge anthology. She has shared her writing on Co-op Radio and performed at numerous readings throughout Vancouver's lower mainland, including for the Writers Union Guild of Canada.