Books at Bedtime: The Stories of Richard Van Camp

Monday, July 12th, 2010

Whats the Most Beautiful Thing You Know About HorsesA few weeks ago, I attended a reading by First Nations authors at the Truth and Reconciliation Commission session held in Winnipeg (which I also posted about recently) and was introduced to the stories of the engaging and entertaining First Nations writer, Richard Van Camp.  I immediately sought out his books at the library and came home with What’s the Most Beautiful Thing You Know About Horses, illustrated by George Littlechild (Children’s Book Press, 1998) and A Man Called Raven (Children’s Book Press, 1997).

As soon as I got these books, I read them to my daughter and she was completely taken in by them.  She was struck especially by the lesson conveyed in A Man Called Raven wherein a mysterious man teaches some boys not to be cruel to ravens. She also thought the books were very colorful and indeed, George Littlechild’s illustrations are very vibrant.  A week after we read the books together (and we’d been to the zoo and seen a crane which I pointed out to my daughter was the bird in the famous Japanese folktale, the Crane Wife), my daughter kept asking me for the ‘crane’ book.  What crane book?  I wondered.  The one we read before, she said.  I was puzzled until I finally clued in that she was referring to A Man Called Raven, except that she’d mixed up the birds!  That was a funny moment in mixing up symbols!  However culturally disparate, both stories do feature shape shifting birds.  I’ll not tell you anymore though; you can seek out the stories yourselves!

For more about Richard Van Camp, you can check the PaperTigers website here in Personal Views and here for an interview with Richard.

Truth and Reconciliation Commission

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

A while back, I wrote a Books at Bedtime  blog post about a book called Shin-chi’s Canoe by Nicola Campbell.  This book was about a young aboriginal boy who is taken away from his family to go to a residential school.  The history of residential schools in Canada is long and painful.  The impact of this education on young vulnerable aboriginal children was devastating and continues to affect many of the survivors today.  The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada was formed by the Canadian government to address the situation.  Its mandate is to learn about what happened in the residential schools and to inform all Canadians about the schools and their impact on aboriginals in Canada.

The Commission will enact its mandate through various national events, one of which has begun here in my hometown of Winnipeg.  Tonight, aboriginal authors and storytellers will gather to talk about the residential school experience in an evening of readings and discussion called “Writing Truth, Imagining Reconciliation.”  Although the event is not so much for children as about them under a particular and alienating system of education, it is of relevance to anyone who seeks to acknowledge and redress one of Canada’s historical wrongs.  For its part, PaperTigers has highlighted the Canadian First Nations community and its writings in its April-May 2010 issue.  Do check it out!