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About The Book
Description
Author
<p>We sing songs about birds. &nbsp;They can't understand them. &nbsp;There's a song about us we can't understand. &nbsp;Some of us hear it. &nbsp;To each it's a different song and a different singer. &nbsp;I hear a bird that can't sing. &nbsp;I hear the raven.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>Josephine Littletree a mixed-race aboriginal grows up in British Columbia in the 1930s. &nbsp;At a residential school priests and nuns try to &quot;kill the Indian&quot; in her. &nbsp;She escapes and lives for years in her people's hunting grounds but when she leaves faces prejudice again from white society. &nbsp;Her early relationships fall victim to it. &nbsp;Sometimes it's a wild ride through a world of bootlegging battering prostitutes bank robbery and the paranormal. &nbsp;Overcoming her addiction to alcohol she takes her grandmother's advice and gathers together the myths of her people in a book and becomes a storyteller. &nbsp;During World War II she meets a white man who falls in love with her. &nbsp;She lives with him in his shack on the waterfront. &nbsp;They are both outsiders but with a difference that dooms their relationship. &nbsp;Returning to her reserve to take care of her sick grandmother she contracts tuberculosis and retuses to see him any more. &nbsp;His letters go unanswered. &nbsp;In a sanatorium she meets with prejudice for the last time. &nbsp;In a final gesture of defiance and accetptance she goes back to her reserve. &nbsp;She writes about her life with acid humour bitterness and regret. &nbsp;When the love between and man and a woman isn't equal there's a reason. &nbsp;The man she rejects has chosen to be an outsider. &nbsp;She was born one.</p>