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She Holds Up the Stars

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"This compelling novel will introduce young readers to the complexities of modern indigeneity and resilience."—Eden Robinson, author of Monkey Beach and Son of Trickster.

A young Indigenous girl searching for a sense of home finds strength and courage in her gifts, her deepening connection to the land, and her own cultural awakening in this moving coming-of-age story.

The last thing that twelve-year old Misko wants to do is to move away from the city to spend time on the rez with her grandmother. And yet she feels strangely compelled to go, drawn by a pull that she feels in her dreams. Maybe she can finally find out what happened to her mother, who mysteriously disappeared when Misko was four years old.

Misko's relationship to the rez shifts when she encounters a spirited horse named Mishtadim. But Mishtadim is being violently broken by the rancher next door and his son Thomas. Misko and Thomas clash at first, only to find themselves drawn together by the wild horse. As Misko slowly discovers her unique bond with Mishtadim, she feels a sense of belonging and comes to understand the beauty of the world all around her.

She Holds Up the Stars is a powerful story of reconciliation and the interwoven threads that tie us to family, to the land, and to our own sense of self.

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    • Kirkus

      Starred review from October 1, 2022
      A 12-year-old Ojibway girl has come back to the rez for the summer, hoping to finally find out what happened to her mother. What she doesn't anticipate is how much she'll learn about herself. After a scary experience in Winnipeg, where she lives with her aunt, Misko goes to the rez to spend the summer with her grandmother and family. Misko's mother disappeared when she was just 4 years old, and as much as she would like to know what happened, all she gets are half answers. At the rez, she reconnects with her grandmother and cousins and with her Ojibway roots. She also meets a horse she names Mishtadim and Thomas, a White boy who, along with his rancher father, is viciously "breaking" the horse's spirit. Drawing parallels between the brutal breaking of horses and the ways in which Indigenous children--including her own family--were forcibly taken to residential schools, Misko knows she must do something to stop the violence. This heartfelt story of self-discovery and personal strength is told in language filled with evocative imagery and Anishinaabemowin sprinkled throughout. Readers will find themselves rooting for Misko in a situation where so much seems stacked against her. A tale of strength and determination rooted in the ancestral pull of home and family. (Fiction. 9-13)

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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