authors

katherena vermette

katherena vermette (she/her) is a Red River Métis (Michif) writer from Treaty 1 territory. Her father’s roots run deep in this land, dating back over two centuries, and her mother’s side is Mennonite. vermette received the Governor General’s Literary Award for Poetry for her first book, North End Love Songs, and wide acclaim for her second collection of poems, river woman. Her bestselling novels include The Break, which won the Amazon.ca First Novel Award,  The Strangers, and The Circle. vermette is a senior editor at Simon & Schuster Canada, where she focuses on titles celebrating Indigenous, 2SLGBTQ+ and other underserved communities. Born in Winnipeg, she lives with her family in a cranky old house within skipping distance of the temperamental Red River.

A Steady Brightness of Being: Truths, Wisdom, and Love From Celebrated Indigenous Voices

Bringing together voices from across Turtle Island, a groundbreaking collection of letters from Indigenous writers, activists, and thinkers—to their ancestors, to future generations, and to themselves.

Drawing on the wisdom and personal experience of its esteemed contributors, this first-of-its-kind anthology tackles complex questions of our times to provide a rich tapestry of Indigenous life, past, present, and future. The letters explore the histories that have brought us to this moment, the challenges and crises faced by present-day communities, and the visions that will lead us to a new architecture for thinking about Indigeneity. Taking its structure from the medicine bundle—tobacco, sage, cedar, and sweetgrass—it will stir and empower readers, as well as enrich an essential and ongoing conversation about what reconciliation looks like and what it means to be Indigenous today.

 

Contributors: Billy-Ray Belcourt, Cindy Blackstock, Cody Caetano, Warren Cariou, Norma Dunning, Kyle Edwards, Jennifer Grenz, Jon Hickey, Jessica Johns, Wab Kinew, Terese Marie Mailhot, Kent Monkman, Simon Moya-Smith, Pamela Palmater, Tamara Podemski, Waubgeshig Rice, David A. Robertson, Niigaan Sinclair, Miss Chief Eagle Testickle, Zoe Todd, David Treuer, Richard Van Camp, katherena vermette, Jesse Wente, Joshua Whitehead

Edited by Stephanie Sinclair and Sara Sinclair

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You Were Made for This World: Celebrated Indigenous Voices Speak to Young People

An inclusive must-buy for all upper elementary collections and for any institution serving an Indigenous community.” –School Library Journal

A joyful, proud and groundbreaking collection of letters and art for young people, You Were Made for This World brings together celebrated Indigenous voices from across Turtle Island.

Every young person deserves the chance to feel like they belong, that they are recognized, that they matter. In the spirit of A Velocity of Being: Letters to a Young Reader, You Were Made for This World brings together forty Indigenous writers, artists, activists, athletes, scholars and thinkers with a joint purpose: to celebrate the potential of young people, to share a sense of joy and pride in language, traditional and personal stories and teachings, and shared experiences, and to honor young people for who they are and what they dream of.

Including contributions from activist Autumn Peltier, singer/songwriter Tanya Tagaq, hockey player Ethan Bear, Governor General’s Award–winning author David A. Robertson, artists Chief Lady Bird and Christi Belcourt, illustrator Mangeshig Pawis-Steckley, and dozens of others, this beautifully collaborative collection urges readers to think about who they are, where they come from and where they’re going, with a warm familiarity that will inspire you to see yourself and your community with proud eyes.

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Procession

you are only here
to learn from those who came before
and make space
for those who come after

Procession: a line of people moving in the same direction; a formal ceremony or celebration, as in a wedding, a funeral, a religious parade. Bestseller and Governor General’s Award–winner Katherena Vermette’s third collection presents a series of poems reaching into what it means to be at once a descendant and a future ancestor, exploring the connections we have with one another and ourselves, amongst friends, and within families and Nations.

In frank, heartfelt poems that move through body sovereignty and ancestral dreams, and from ’80s childhood nostalgia to welcoming one’s own babies, Vermette unreels the story of a child, a parent, and soon, an elder, living in a prairie place that has always existed, though looks much different to her now. This book is about being one small part of a large genealogy. A lineage is a line, and the procession, whether in celebration or in mourning, is ongoing. Procession delves into what it means to make poems and to be an artist, to be born into a body, to carry it all, and, if you’re very lucky, age.

be a good ancestor
be a good kid

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Festival Shows

Hosted by David A. Robertson & Stephanie Sinclair. Starring Billy-Ray Belcourt, Cherie Dimaline, Jon Hickey & katherena vermette

Oct 18 @ 10 AM $25
DJD Dance Centre

Starring Souvankham Thammavongsa & katherena vermette
Hosted by David A. Robertson

Oct 18 @ 3 PM FREE
Memorial Park Library, Alexander Calhoun Salon, Main Floor

Starring Eliana Ramage. Hosted by katherena vermette

Oct 19 @ 3 PM FREE
Memorial Park Library, Alexander Calhoun Salon, Main Floor

Be Curiouser

  • A poetry collection about the passage of time and what it means to be an artist. –CBC Books
  • Getting Familiar with The Strangers: An Interview with katherena vermette. –FCSS-UBC 
  • katherena vermette on crafting a real story out of fakery. –Kobo

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