There’s a Wolf In My Life

ISBN: 978-0-9810197-6-7-5
Pages: 207
Binding: Softcover
Publisher: Keshet Productions, 2010
Price: $25.00 CAD
There's a Wolf In My Life


synopsis

We live in a vast country, most of which our peoples do not know, or for which they have erroneous images.

Travel is almost universally limited to within miles of our southern border, and is almost always in an east-west, or west-east flow. Our population has settled to the Canada-USA border like sand settles to the river bottom.

Yet, most of our land and, I warrant, most of our riches are in the North. Much, if not most of our early history was also in, and tied to, the North. The oldest citizens of our great country live in the North: the Inuit and the Native Indians.

To all but a few Canadians the North and its peoples are unknown and misunderstood. This is a story of one man’s attempt to reconcile two very different cultures — a story of conflict, aspirations and hope.

excerpt

Paul was proud of his heritage.

He wasn’t clear in his own mind why his father felt he had to go south for an education. His forefathers hadn’t had formal education — they lived and learned and absorbed from their elders. Why couldn’t this be enough for him?

And there were those on the Reserve who felt this as well. In fact, the majority seemed to take pride in the fact that no child from this Reserve had ever progressed beyond Grade 8 — the last Grade available at the local school.

At one stage the Chief had even tried to talk Paul’s father out of the move by declaring that any child who went beyond the local school was to be considered White and something of a traitor to his people, and forever banned from the Reserve!

reviews

“I have just finished the book and found it extremely good reading…

It moved quickly, had more than a hint of realism, was emotional, and struck a chord of reality…

I had tears in my eyes when I read the Chapter concerning the killing of Charlie… well done…”

— G. Oliver
[Original book stack image © epitavi/Dollar Photo Club; Original feathered inkwell image © Stekloduv/Dollar Photo Club]