Drawing inspiration from her own family’s experiences, Duncan (Kehewin Cree/Taino) tells the story of an Indigenous girl who confronts hard truths one summer.
Twelve-year-old Summer, her brother, Sage, her mother, who’s Cree, and her father, who’s Apache, are visiting Summer’s maternal grandparents, who live on the Cree reservation in northern Alberta. Though Summer enjoys her time with her extended family—picking sweetgrass, fishing, listening to stories—she’s been having strange dreams about an Indigenous girl named Buffalo Dreamer fleeing in the night. Unmarked graves of children have been found at a nearby residential school, and many members of the community are grappling with the abuse they faced there—including Summer’s Mosom (grandfather), who rarely talks about the experience. Summer learns more about how Indigenous children were forced into residential schools by the Canadian government. Are her dreams connected to this painful history? At a community rally and, later, a powwow, survivors acknowledge their wounds and begin to help one another heal. Duncan shines a light on a devastating aspect of Indigenous history, never sugarcoating the topic yet leaving readers with hope. Her writing is seamless, tight, and immersive, making stellar use of sensory descriptions, and she braids important truths into her captivating narrative: “We are the living proof of our ancestors’ resilience and the strong spirit of our people.”
Compelling yet heartbreaking—and essential reading for all young people.
(glossary, author’s note) (Fiction. 10-14)