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What it is like to be A Stranger at Home

P.D. Workman
2 min readJun 14, 2022

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Looking for some books for Father’s Day? Books featuring strong father figures? Pop on over to my blog post for some of my books and some by other authors!

Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme. Read the rules and more teasers at The Purple Booker. Anyone can play along.

June is National Indigenous History Month and June 21 is National Indigenous Peoples Day in Canada, so my reading app gave me some suggestions of books by Indigenous authors. I picked up a short book, A Stranger at Home, by Christy Jordan-Fenton and Margaret-Olemaun Pokiak-Fenton, about Margaret-Olemaun’s experience returning home from residential school. This is the sequel to Fatty Legs, her experience at residential school, but I have not read that one yet. I’ll probably pick it up later on this month.

This heartfelt account describes Fenton’s heartache at returning to her family unable to speak their language or eat their food anymore, her mother not recognizing her, and her younger siblings not old enough to remember her. She is shunned by some of those in her Inuvialuit community who see her as an outsider, and it takes quite a while for her to recover her native tongue. A quick read, and an important one if you want to learn more about Canada’s history.

A Stranger at Home is categorized as a children’s book, and it does not “talk down” to readers. It can certainly be enjoyed by readers of all ages.

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P.D. Workman
P.D. Workman

Written by P.D. Workman

Writing riveting mystery, suspense, and young adult fiction about real life issues.

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