Red River Resistance

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Average Rating
Publisher
Portage & Main Press
Publication Date
2019
Language
English

Description

Echo Desjardins is adjusting to her new home, finding friends, and learning about Métis history. She just can’t stop slipping back and forth in time. One ordinary afternoon in class, Echo finds herself transported to the banks of the Red River in the summer of 1869. All is not well in the territory as Canadian surveyors have arrived to change the face of territory, and Métis families, who have lived there for generations, are losing access to their land. As the Resistance takes hold, Echo fears for her friends and the future of her people in the Red River Valley.

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ISBN
9781553797654

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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

The story of Echo, a Métis teen who can travel back and forth in time, continues in this informative and captivating sequel to Pemmican Wars (2018). Winner of a Governor General's Award, author Vermette seamlessly brings readers back into Echo's time-traveling adventures as the teen travels to some of the most tumultuous moments in Canadian Indigenous history. Métis families are being forced from their land, and the resistance is growing in opposition to settlers and surveyors encroaching on the Indigenous people in the Red River Colony. All the while, Echo is still adjusting to her new life in Manitoba while also worrying for her friends in another time. The illustrations are beautiful, showing a mix of intricate tight shots of people as well as open-air shots of landscapes and vivid full-page scenes. The coloring brings life to the people and places that Echo visits and remains wonderfully detailed throughout. An engaging and interesting story that features diversity and will educate readers about a very important part of Canadian history.--Traci Glass Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Kirkus Book Review

A sequel offers a teenager's further adventures through Mtis history.In Vermette's (Pemmican Wars, 2018, etc.) graphic novel, Mtis teen Echo Desjardins is starting to fit in a little better at Winnipeg Middle School, making friends and getting involved in the Indigenous Students Leadership group. But she still spends most of her time listening to music on her cellphone and getting swept up in the lectures that her teacher gives on the history of the Mtis people. This volume covers the 1869 Red River Rebellionor Red River Resistance, as Echo's back-in-time friend Benjamin calls it, because "there will be no violence." After the Hudson Bay Company sells the land on which the Mtis people live to the government of Canada, Mtis leaders Louis Riel and Ambroise Lpine attempt to halt the inevitable flood of settlers. They establish a provisional Mtis government for the Northwest Province. Though the Mtis take great pains to negotiate peacefully with the incoming Canadian government, troublemakers both inside and outside of their territoryincluding the anti-Roman Catholic, anti-French, anti-Indigenous Orangemenmay make the violence that Benjamin promised would never occur impossible to stop. As Echo witnesses one of the great what-ifs of North American history fall apart, the tragedy is reflected in the pain she feels in her personal life back in the 21st century. As in the previous volume, the story is accompanied by beautiful, full-color artwork by the team of Henderson and Yaciuk (Pemmican Wars, 2018, etc.). This book has less of Echo's own life in it than the first novel, and the historical portions, with their many bearded 19th-century leaders, feel perhaps more didactic and less dramatic than the author's account of the Pemmican Wars. Even so, this underexplored portion of North American history should prove intriguing and affecting for readers, particularly those living in the United States, where the struggles of the Mtis people are largely unknown. By contrasting these historical events side by side with Echo's story, this installment does a wonderful job showing how the ripples of past policies have shaped the current day, and how political decisions always have a personal cost.A visually stimulating and emotionally gripping graphic novel about the Mtis people. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

The story of Echo, a Métis teen who can travel back and forth in time, continues in this informative and captivating sequel to Pemmican Wars (2018). Winner of a Governor General's Award, author Vermette seamlessly brings readers back into Echo's time-traveling adventures as the teen travels to some of the most tumultuous moments in Canadian Indigenous history. Métis families are being forced from their land, and the resistance is growing in opposition to settlers and surveyors encroaching on the Indigenous people in the Red River Colony. All the while, Echo is still adjusting to her new life in Manitoba while also worrying for her friends in another time. The illustrations are beautiful, showing a mix of intricate tight shots of people as well as open-air shots of landscapes and vivid full-page scenes. The coloring brings life to the people and places that Echo visits and remains wonderfully detailed throughout. An engaging and interesting story that features diversity and will educate readers about a very important part of Canadian history. Grades 8-12. Copyright 2019 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2019 Booklist Reviews.
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