Book description
The Metis are the descendants of Cree and Assiniboine women who joined
with French and Scottish men to raise children and shape a hybrid
culture in the heart of Canada. In “Metis, Mixed Blood Stories,” four
generations of adolescents come of age during their sixteenth year.
Together their voices tell the story of one family and of a people.
Matriarch Angeline describes her ride on the last great buffalo hunt of
the 1860s and her relationship with charismatic Metis leader Louie Riel.
Her grandson, Gilles, relates his escape from a Chicago orphanage and
his fight to stay out of reservation school. Gilles's daughter,
Elisabeth, fights to protect the rights of native youth in the violent
1968 U. S. Democratic Convention. The novel closes with the vibrant
voice with which it begins, that of great-granddaughter Annie, whose
creativity as a young author and filmmaker will ensure that the legacy
of their culture lives on. LYNN PONTON is the author of two previous
books of nonfiction, “The Romance of Risk: Why Teenagers Do the Things
They Do” and “The Sex Lives of Teenagers: Revealing the Secret World of
Adolescent Boys and Girls.” She has been a columnist for Salon. com and
has published widely in numerous magazines, newspapers, and journals. A
practicing psychoanalyst, she is Professor of Psychiatry at the
University of California, San Francisco. This is her first work of
fiction.