<p>An admirable book. Jean makes us feel the loss experienced by Quebec’s Innu community through a highly personal story … <em>Kukum</em> serves as a reminder to listen to your elders, heed the lessons of the past, and question what is done in the name of progress.</p>
Montreal Review of Books
<p>There is no escaping the history of this country, but that does not make this story a tragedy. It is first and foremost a celebration of a life well-lived.</p>
Winnipeg Free Press
Finalist, Governor General's Literary Award in the Translation Category
A Quebec bestseller based on the life of Michel Jean’s great-grandmother that delivers an empathetic portrait of drastic change in an Innu community.
Kukum recounts the story of Almanda Siméon, an orphan raised by her aunt and uncle, who falls in love with a young Innu man despite their cultural differences and goes on to share her life with the Pekuakami Innu community. They accept her as one of their own: Almanda learns their language, how to live a nomadic existence, and begins to break down the barriers imposed on Indigenous women. Unfolding over the course of a century, the novel details the end of traditional ways of life for the Innu, as Almanda and her family face the loss of their land and confinement to reserves, and the enduring violence of residential schools.
Kukum intimately expresses the importance of Innu ancestral values and the need for freedom nomadic peoples feel to this day.
Les mer
An admirable book. Jean makes us feel the loss experienced by Quebec’s Innu community through a highly personal story … Kukum serves as a reminder to listen to your elders, heed the lessons of the past, and question what is done in the name of progress.
Les mer
Winner of the 2020 Prix France-Québec; winner of the 2021 Combat nationale des livres (“Battle of the Books,” the French-language equivalent of Canada Reads); winner of the 2020 VLEEL Award; shortlisted for the 2020 Jacques La Carrière Award.Kukum was a bestseller in French-language Canada in 2020 and has sold over 100,000 copies. Author is Innu from Mashteuiatsh. His work has strongly focused on his own family history, as well as supporting other Indigenous writers with the two anthologies he has edited. Anansi is using the beautifully illustrated cover from the Quebec edition, with details used for interior illustrations.
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
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House of Anansi Press Ltd ,Canada
Biographical note
Michel Jean is an award-winning writer, news anchor and investigative journalist, much appreciated by the Quebec public. After graduating, he worked at Radio-Canada and, since 2005, at TVA. He has written twelve books with sales of nearly 475,000 copies in Quebec. In addition to participating in several collectives, he has edited two short story collections featuring Indigenous voices: Amun, released in fall 2016, and Wapke, published in May 2021, both of which have been sold in English (Exile Editions) and German (Wieser Verlag). In his book Atuk, elle et nous, reissued in 2021, he talks for the first time about his native roots. Released in Quebec in 2019 and in France in 2020, Kukum, a tribute to his great-grandmother, was the best-selling novel in Quebec in 2021 and second in 2020. Qimmik was the best-selling Quebec novel in Quebec in 2023.
Michel Jean is Innu from Mashteuiatsh, and his native origins resonate in many of his writings.
SUSAN OURIOU is an award-winning fiction writer and literary translator with over sixty translations and co-translations of fiction, non-fiction, children’s and young-adult literature to her credit. She has won the Governor General’s Literary Award for Translation. Jane, the Fox and Me, co-translated with Christelle Morelli, was named to IBBY’s Honour List. She has also published Nathan, a novel for young readers. Susan lives in Calgary, Alberta.