The break / katherena vermette.
Record details
- ISBN: 9781487001117 (trade paperback) :
- Physical Description: 352 pages : genealogical table ; 21 cm
- Publisher: Toronto : House of Anansi Press, 2016.
- Copyright: ©2016.
Content descriptions
General Note: | "Trigger warning: This book is about recovering and healing from violence. Contains scenes of sexual and physical violence, and depictions of various trauma." |
Additional Physical Form available Note: | Issued also in electronic format. |
Awards Note: | Writers' Trust of Canada, finalist. Governor General's Literary Awards, Winner. Canada Reads 2017 selection. |
Search for related items by subject
Genre: | Canadian literature. |
Available copies
- 1 of 1 copy available at College of the Rockies.
Holds
- 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Circulation Modifier | Holdable? | Status | Due Date | Courses |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cranbrook Campus | PS 8643 .E74 B74 2016 (Text) | 31111000150621 | CRANBROOK | Volume hold | Available | - |
- Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2018 February #2
*Starred Review* Vermette (North End Love Songs, 2012) deserves the many accolades this novel about four generations of Métis women has earned since its first publication, in Canada in 2016. An apt trigger warning appears on the title page before the inciting incident: the sexual assault of teenage Emily. In the days immediately following the attack, the family's womenâand, to a lesser degree, its menâgather and support, which prompts them to contemplate their own life experiences and choices. Each of the women has scars, and a member of the second generation suffered an early, violent death. Police work to identify Emily's attackers, but Vermette wisely shifts the focus to powerful "why" questions that fold in culture and identity. Multiple narrators combine into a collective experience of being on the outside, being subjected to poverty and violence, and being seen as inferior. The family matriarch, Kookom, provides the gravitational pull grounding the family, but she's in decline. The Métis women in this novel survive, endure, and heal, but they also carry exceptionally heavy burdens and pay exceptionally heavy prices. This intimate and emotional look at their lives succeeds both as a novel and as a work of social justice. Copyright 2018 Booklist Reviews. - LJ Express Reviews : LJ Express Reviews
[DEBUT] In this arresting fiction debut from Métis poet Vermette, a multi-award winner in her native Canada, a young Métis woman named Stella summons the police when she sees a girl being assaulted on a nearby vacant lot she calls the Break. The young Métis officer is sympathetic, his older partner dismissive ("there's no evidence of anything other than a fight"), but we're chilled into immediate understanding by the next chapter, as 13-year-old Emily revels in her invitation to a party by handsome, older Clayton. Emily is the daughter of Stella's cousin Paulina ("Paul"), and the narrative unfolds not as an investigation of the rape but in multiple threads as the story of a close family beset by trouble. From Paul's sister Lou, bitter about live-in lover Gabe's infidelities, to their mother Cheryl's observation that "she thought she'd have it all together by her age," the women shown here (and it's mostly women) are caring and caringly portrayed yet also worn by life, with Stella the family outsider; the assault unflinchingly points us to young people dead-ended by crime, drugs, and a history of discrimination. Verdict In language that's quick and bruising, sharp-edged and relentless, Vermette limns one family and one community to show us something bigger.âBarbara Hoffert, Library Journal (c) Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted. - Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2018 January #5
Vermette's piercing debut novel (following the poetry collection
Copyright 2018 Publishers Weekly.North End Love Songs ) begins on a cold, snowy night, when Stella, a young Métis woman, looks out her window and witnesses an attack on a girl out on the Breakâa tract of isolated land in Winnipeg's North End. Frightened, she calls 911, but the girl and her attackers scatter into the night. The next day, the full weight of the situation is revealed: Emily, the 13-year-old daughter of Stella's cousin Pauline, has been viciously assaulted and raped with a beer bottle. This is not a typical crime story. It is instead a harrowing mosaic, the fragments of which reveal the stories of Emily and her extended family, a young Métis police officer working on the case, as well those of the girls who attacked Emily. The story paints a broad picture of a family separated and brought together again, in different capacities, by varying forms of griefâand of another family, that of the perpetrator, shattered in ways seemingly impossible to mend, by drugs, crime and violence. Vermette portrays a wide array of strong, complicated, absolutely believable women, and through them and their hardships offers readers sharp views of race and class issues. This is slice-of-life storytelling at its finest.Agent: Marilyn Biderman, Transatlantic. (Mar.)