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The 2010 Award

 

Through black spruce

 

Through Black Spruce

by Joseph Boyden

 

 

 

 

Nominated by:

  • Ottawa Public Library, Canada
  • Provincial Information & Library Resources Board, Gander, Canada
  • Saint John Free Public Library, New Brunswick, Canada
  • Halifax Public Libraries, Canada

Publisher of Nominated Edition:


Penguin Books, Canada

 

the complete A-Z listing of nominated authors
ABOUT THE BOOK

From internationally acclaimed author Joseph Boyden comes an astonishingly powerful novel of contemporary aboriginal life, full of the dangers and harsh beauty of both forest and city. When beautiful Suzanne Bird disappears, her sister Annie, a loner and hunter, is compelled to search for her, leaving behind their uncle Will, a man haunted by loss. While Annie travels from Toronto to New York, from modelling studios to A-list parties,Will encounters dire troubles at home. Both eventually come to painful discoveries about the inescapable ties of family. Through Black Spruce is an utterly unforgettable consideration of how we discover who we really are.

(From Publisher).
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Joseph Boyden is a Canadian with Irish, Scottish, and Métis roots. Three Day Road has received the Rogers Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize and the McNally Robinson Aboriginal Book of the Year Award and has also been shortlisted for the Governor General Award for Fiction and published in 10 languages. He divides his time between Northern Ontario and Louisiana, where he teaches writing at the University of New Orleans.He is the author of Born with a Tooth, a collection of stories that was shortlisted for the Upper Canada Writer’s Craft Award. His work has appeared in publications such as Potpourri, Cimarron Review, Blue Penny Quarterly, BlackWarrior, and The Panhandler.

LIBRARIANS' COMMENTS

A beautifully written, haunting story of a first nations family trying to reconcile life outside of their resources.

Outstanding reviews, highly recommended by staff and patrons.

Boyden’s 2nd novel captures the Canadian contemporary native life in both northern and urban settings, with haunting characterizations strongly bonded to family place written in strong mature prose.

Winner of 2008 Scotia bank Griller Prize, one of Canada’s most prestigious literary awards; favourable reviews using words such as “rich, complex characterization, stunning, epic, emotionally satisfying, powerful, triumphant and riveting” and also, an authentic representation of an often neglected segment of Canadian society by a man rooted in three of Canada’s earliest cultures.

 

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