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A Matter of Conscience

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A novel of love and betrayal dealing with the biggest issues facing Canada's Indigenous peoples today.
In the summer of 1972, a float plane carrying a team of child welfare officials lands on a river flowing through the Yellow Dog Indian reserve. Their mission is to seize the twin babies of an Indigenous couple as part of an illegal scheme cooked up by the federal government to adopt out tens of thousands of Native children to white families. The baby girl, Brenda, is adopted and raised by a white family in Orillia.
Meanwhile, that same summer, a baby boy named Greg is born to a white middle-class family. At the age of eighteen, Greg leaves home for the first time to earn money to help pay for his university expenses. He drinks heavily and becomes embroiled in the murder of a female student from a residential school.
The destinies of Brenda and Greg intersect in this novel of passion, confronting the murder and disappearance of Indigenous women and the infamous Sixties Scoop.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 28, 2018
      Bartleman (As Long as the River Flows), a former lieutenant governor of Ontario and a member of the Chippewas of Rama First Nation, uses this novel to delve into the disturbing reasons why an estimated 4,000 indigenous women in Canada have been murdered or gone missing in recent decades. He opens the story in 1972 as Brenda, an infant born on a northern Ontario reserve, is—like thousands of other indigenous babies—taken away from parents who are deemed unfit by government officials and adopted by a white family. As an adult, she learns about her origins and struggles to find meaning and belonging. She meets and marries Greg, a man who is hiding a dark secret about his involvement in the murder of a young First Nations girl in northern Manitoba. Their marriage plays out the complications of their past: her lack of identity, his guilt and anger. The text can be didactic, but Bartleman clearly intends it to be a teaching tool; the second half of the book is resource documents about the “Sixties Scoop” of indigenous children taken from their own families and adopted by white ones, missing and murdered indigenous women, and Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Bartleman’s strength as a writer is his compassion. He respects each of his characters and sets the stage for real-world discussions of Canada’s past, present, and future.

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  • English

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