14 books to read for National Indigenous History Month

News Room
By News Room 20 Min Read

June is National Indigenous History Month. This month, add these buzzworthy books by First Nations, Métis and Inuit authors to your reading list.

The Knowing is a book by Tanya Talaga. (HarperCollins, Nadya Kwandibens/Red Works Photography)

In her latest book, The Knowing, Tanya Talaga retells her family story to explore Canada’s history with an Indigenous lens. The Knowing starts with the life of Talaga’s great-great grandmother Annie Carpenter and charts the violence she and her family experienced for decades at the hands of the Church and the government. 

The Knowing, shares both a personal and well-researched account of the oppression of Indigenous people and its continued forms and reverberations.

Tanya Talaga is a writer and journalist of Anishinaabe and Polish descent. She is a member of Fort William First Nation. Her book Seven Fallen Feathers: Racism, Death and Hard Truths in a Northern City won the RBC Taylor Prize, the Shaughnessy Cohen Prize for Political Writing and the First Nation Communities Read: Young Adult/Adult Award. 

All Our Relations: Finding the Path Forward was the basis for the 2018 CBC Massey Lectures.

LISTEN | Tanya Talaga talks to Mattea Roach about uncovering her family history on Bookends:

Bookends with Mattea Roach54:12Tanya Talaga: Searching for her great-great grandmother — a story of family, truth and survival

A book cover of a person wearing regalia with short grey hair and glasses. A book cover of the same woman holding a drum. A woman with grey shoulder length hair and glasses.
Ma-Nee Chacaby, left, recounts her life and the hardships she faced throughout in her autobiography, A Two-Spirit Journey, written with Mary Louisa Plummer. (Ruth-Kivilahti/University of Manitoba Press/Yasmin Kudrati-Plummer)

In A Two-Spirit Journey, Ma-Nee Chacaby, an Ojibwa-Cree lesbian who grew up in a remote northern Ontario community, tells the story of how she overcame experiences with abuse and alcohol addiction to become a counsellor and lead Thunder Bay’s first gay pride parade.

The memoir was successfully championed by podcaster and wellness advocate Shayla Stonechild on Canada Reads in 2025.

Chacaby is a two-spirit Ojibwe-Cree writer, artist, storyteller and activist. She lives in Thunder Bay and was raised by her grandmother near Lake Nipigon, Ont.

Mary Louisa Plummer is a social scientist whose work focuses on public health and children’s rights.

LISTEN | Shayla Stonechild speaks about A Two-Spirit Journey on The Next Chapter: 

The Next Chapter25:09Shayla Stonechild shares an Ojibwa-Cree elder’s message of hope and healing with Canada Reads

 

A book cover that shows a tiger with a black head and striped body.
Small Ceremonies is a book by Kyle Edwards. (McClelland & Stewart)

In the city of Winnipeg, two Indigenous boys are on the cusp of adulthood, imagining a future filled with possibility and greatness. In Small Ceremonies, their stories are intertwined with others in the community, who are also searching for purpose, all of which ultimately leads to one fateful and tragic night. 

Kyle Edwards is an award-winning Anishinaabe journalist and writer from the Lake Manitoba First Nation and a member of the Ebb and Flow First Nation. His work has appeared in the BBC News World, CBC, Maclean’s, Native News Online and the Toronto Star.

He has won two National Magazine Awards in Canada, and he was recognized as an Emerging Indigenous Journalist by the Canadian Association of Journalists. A graduate of Ryerson University, he is currently a Provost Fellow at the University of Southern California, where he is pursuing a PhD in creative writing and literature.

LISTEN | Kyle Edwards tells Mattea Roach about how sports reflect society on Bookends:

Bookends with Mattea Roach20:46For Indigenous players, ice hockey is a ceremony of its own

A composite image of a book cover that shows Indigenous beaded designs and a headshot photo of Christian Allaire on the right.
From the Rez to the Runway is a book by Christian Allaire. (HarperCollins Canada, Hunter Abrams )

In From the Rez to the Runway, Christian Allaire shares his journey from growing up on the Nipissing First Nation reserve to breaking into the world of high fashion in New York City, navigating the challenges and realities of the industry. He shares the difficulty of balancing his ambitions with the often-inaccurate perceptions — including his own — of his culture’s place in the realm of fashion, offering a powerful story of staying true to yourself while pursuing your dreams.

Christian Allaire is an Ojibway writer from Nipissing First Nation. He earned a Bachelor of Journalism from Ryerson University in 2014, and he has since written for publications such as Footwear News, Refinery29, Elle, Hazlitt, Mr. Porter and The National Post. Currently, he is the senior Fashion and Style Writer for Vogue. 

Allaire is also the author of The Power of Style, a YA nonfiction book that highlights the need for diversity and representation in fashion — and examines topics such as cosplay, make up, hijabs, and hair to show the intersection of style, culture and social justice over the years. Allaire won Canada Reads 2022, championing Five Little Indians by Michelle Good.

LISTEN | Christian Allaire talks about his new memoir on Q with Tom Power:

31:01He used to steal his mom’s copies of Vogue — now he works there

A composite image of a book cover with a background that shows water that is beaded and a photo of a woman shoulder-length black hair.
Theory of Water is a book by Leanne Betasamosake Simpson. (Knopf Canada, Zahra Siddiqi)

In Theory of Water, Leanne Betasamosake Simpson discovers, understands and traces the historical and cultural interactions of Indigenous peoples with water in all its forms. She presents water as a catalyst for radical transformation and how it has the potential to heal and reshape the world in response to environmental and social injustice. 

Betasamosake Simpson is a Michi Saagiig Nishnaabeg scholar, activist, musician, artist, author and member of Alderville First Nation. Her books include Islands of Decolonial LoveThis Accident of Being LostDancing on Our Turtle’s Back and As We Have Always Done.

Simpson was chosen by Thomas King for the 2014 RBC Taylor Emerging Writer Award. This Accident of Being Lost was shortlisted for the Rogers Writer’s Trust Fiction Prize in 2017 and the 2018 Trillium Book Award.

Her novel Noopiming: The Cure for White Ladies was shortlisted for the Governor General’s Literary Award for Fiction and the Dublin Literary Prize. Her most recent book, a collaboration with Robyn Maynard titled Rehearsals for Living, was shortlisted for the Governor General’s Literary Award for Nonfiction.

LISTEN | Leanne Betasamosake Simpson talks to Piya Chattopadhyay about protecting our water in a time of crisis:

The Sunday Magazine16:00Protecting our water in a time of crisis

A composite image of a book cover with an animal skull with antlers and a photo of a woman wearing a green dress against a pink backdrop.
Soft As Bones is a book by Chyana Marie Sage. (House of Anansi Press, Anneka Bunnag )

Chyana Marie Sage’s memoir, Soft As Bones, is her quest to better understand the childhood trauma and abuse that scarred her family. It’s also a tapestry of poetry, history, Cree language, traditional ceremony and folklore — and delves into her experiences and those of her family with compassion and strength.

Chyana Marie Sage is a Cree, Métis and Salish writer from Edmonton. Her journalism has appeared in the Toronto Star, Huff Post and the New Quarterly. She holds an MFA in creative nonfiction from Columbia University where she taught as an adjunct professor.

Sage won first place in the Edna Staebler Personal Essay Contest and silver in the National Magazine Awards for her essay Soar. She teaches Indigenous youth about cultivating self-love and healing through the Connected North program.

LISTEN | Chyana Marie Sage speaks about Indigenous traditions, healing and empathy on Bookends with Mattea Roach:

Bookends with Mattea Roach34:52Weaving a story of family trauma and celebrating the beauty in survival

An Indigenous woman with brown hair looks past the camera. A green book cover shows orange pine needles. A bald man leans on a railing.
When the Pine Needles Fall is a memoir by Katsi’tsakwas Ellen Gabriel, left, with Sean Carleton, right. (Alan Lissner, Between the Lines/ZG Stories)

When the Pine Needles Fall tells the story of Canada’s violent siege of Kanehsatà:ke and Kahnawà:ke in 1990 from the perspective of Katsi’tsakwas Ellen Gabriel who was the Kanien’kehá:ka spokesperson during that time. The book covers her experiences leading up to the siege and her work as an activist for her community since. 

Katsi’tsakwas Ellen Gabriel is a Kanien’kehá:ka, Wakeniáhton, artist, documentarian and Indigenous human rights and environmental rights activist. She lives in Kanehsatà:ke Kanien’kehá:ka Homelands.

Sean Carleton is a historian and professor in Indigenous studies at the University of Manitoba. 

LISTEN | Katsi’tsakwas Ellen Gabriel speaks about her art with Nantali Indongo on The Bridge:

The Bridge54:00Before the summer of 1990, Katsi’tsakwas Ellen Gabriel wanted to open an art school

A book cover that shows a woman with long black hair and has a red piece of fabric wrapped around her.
REDress is a book edited by Jaime Black-Morsette. (Highwater Press, jaimeblackartist.com)

REDress is a powerful anthology that brings together the voices of Indigenous women, elders, activists, artists, academics and families affected by the tragedy of missing and murdered Indigenous women, girls and two-spirit people from across Turtle Island.

Through personal stories and reflections on the REDress Project — an art installation featuring red dresses placed in public spaces as a call for justice — the book emphasizes the ongoing call for action and honours the vital role of Indigenous women as keepers and protectors of land, culture and community.

Jaime Black-Morsette is a Red River Métis artist and activist. Founder of The REDress project in 2010, Jaime has used their art to foster community and drive change against the epidemic of violence against Indigenous women and girls across Turtle Island for over a decade.

Their interdisciplinary art practice spans immersive film, video, installation, photography, and performance, exploring themes of memory, identity, place, and resistance.

LISTEN | Jaime Black-Morsette speaks with Faith Fundal on Saskatchewan Weekend about why they started the REDress anthology:

Up To Speed7:06REDdress: Art, Action and the Power of Presence

A composite image of a light turquoise book cover with the title in black, with white and red stripes drawn on the cover and the author photo which is a man with black hair and glasses wearing a black t-shirt and with his arms crossed
All Wrong Horses on Fire that Go Away in the Rain is a poetry collection by Sarain Frank Soonias. (NeWest Press, submitted by Sarain Frank Soonias)

All Wrong Horses on Fire that Go Away in the Rain is a collection of poems that searches through family history and sheds light on intergenerational trauma and how it impacts Indigenous voices. Bringing together fragmented memories, All Wrong Horses on Fire that Go Away in the Rain invites strength, beauty and intensity.

Sarain Frank Soonias is a Cree/Ojibwe writer and artist. His work has appeared in ARC Poetry Magazine, Canadian Literature Review, Carousel, Carte Blanche and Filling Station, among others. All Wrong Horses on Fire that Go Away in the Rain is Soonias’s debut poetry book. He currently lives in Red Deer, Alta.

A composite image of a book cover with green plants and on the right is a photo of the author.
Born Sacred is a book of poetry by Smokii Sumac. (Fernwood Publishing, Brendan Coulter/CBC News)

Through 100 poems, Born Sacred reflects on colonial violence past and present through honouring the shared histories of Indigenous peoples of North America and of the people in Palestine.

Smokii Sumac is a Ktunaxa two-spirit poet and emerging playwright. Their debut poetry collection you are enough: love poems for the end of the world won the Indigenous Voices Award, and they hosted The ʔasqanaki Podcast, interviewing Indigenous musicians and writers. They reside in their home territories of ʔamakʔis Ktunaxa, near the Kootenay River in B.C.

WATCH | Smokii Sumac reflects on the wisdom and strength of bereaved mothers:

There Are Hierarchies of Grief | How to Lose Everything – Episode 4

A book cover of a landscape with the river and the sun in the sky. A woman with dark brown hair and dangly purple earrings.
real ones is a novel by katherena vermette. (Hamish Hamilton, Vanda Fleury)

Following two Michif sisters, lyn and June, real ones examines what happens when their estranged and white mother gets called out as a pretendian. Going by the name Raven Bearclaw, she’s seen success for her art that draws on Indigenous style.

As the media hones in on the story, the sisters, whose childhood trauma manifests in different ways, are pulled into their mother’s web of lies and the painful past resurfaces. real ones was on the longlist for the 2024 Giller Prize.

vermette is a Métis writer from Winnipeg. Her books include the poetry collections North End Love Songs and river woman and the four-book graphic novel series A Girl Called Echo. Her novels are The Break, The StrangersThe Circle

LISTEN | katherena vermette speaks to David Common on The Sunday Magazine about the tension at the centre of her latest novel:

The Sunday Magazine21:29Métis author katherena vermette on how “pretendians” damage Indigenous communities

A book cover of a man with grey hair. A photo of the same man wearing a fur hat and Indigenous regalia.
Who We Are is a memoir by Murray Sinclair, pictured. (McClelland & Stewart)

Murray Sinclair made his mark on Canadian society as a judge, activist, senator, the chief commissioner of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and the co-chair of the Aboriginal Justice Inquiry — and now he writes all about it in his memoir Who We Are

The book answers the four guiding questions of Sinclair’s life — Where do I come from? Where am I going? Why am I here? Who am I? — through stories about his remarkable career and trailblazing advocacy for Indigenous peoples’ rights and freedoms. 

Murray Sinclair was a former judge and senator. Anishinaabe and a member of the Peguis First Nation, Sinclair was the first Indigenous judge appointed in Manitoba and the second appointed in Canada. He served as Co-Chair of the Aboriginal Justice Inquiry in Manitoba and as Chief Commissioner of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. He won awards including the National Aboriginal Achievement Award, the Manitoba Bar Association’s Equality Award and its Distinguished Service Award (2016) and received Honorary Doctorates from 14 Canadian universities.

Sara Sinclair is an oral historian of Cree-Ojibwa and mixed settler descent. She teaches at Columbia University and is currently co-editing two anthologies of Indigenous letters. 

Niigaan Sinclair is a writer, editor, activist and the head of the Department of Native Studies at the University of Manitoba. He is the co-editor of Manitowapow: Aboriginal Writings from the Land of Water and Centering Anishinaabeg Studies: Understanding the World Through Stories. He won the 2019 Peace Educator of the Year award in 2019

LISTEN | The lasting legacy of Murray Sinclair:

Front Burner29:00Encore: How Murray Sinclair changed Canada

A book cover shows beaded stitching over a red canvas. An Indigenous woman with short black hair looks at the camera.
Finding Otipemisiwak is a memoir by Andrea Currie, pictured. (Arsenal Pulp Press, Ken Woroner)

Finding Otipemisiwak is the story of Sixties Scoop survivor Andrea Currie and her journey to finding her Métis roots and reuniting with her birth family. It’s a tale of survival, identity, family and culture in the face of colonial practices and Indigenous erasure. 

Andrea Currie is a writer, healer and activist. She lives in Cape Breton where she works as a psychotherapist in Indigenous mental health.

LISTEN | Andrea Currie talks about her book on The Next Chapter:

The Next Chapter11:41Andrea Currie on Finding Otipemisiwak: The People Who Own Themselves

Black and white photo of the author: an Indigenous woman with long hear and wearing a hat looking to the side, the book cover with an illustration of a human heart and a black and white photo of the translator: a man with short hair and a mustache
The Liturgy of Savage No. 82 is a poetry collection by Maya Cousineau Mollen (left), translated by Adam Haiun (right). (Caitlin Press)

As an Innu woman Maya Cousineau-Mollen grew up outside of the Ekuanitshit (Mingan) community she was born in. In her poetry collection The Liturgy of Savage No. 82, Cousineau-Mollen reflects on connecting with her biological family and culture after being adopted into another family as part of the Sixties Scoop.

From childhood and onwards, Cousineau-Mollen’s poems bring attention to the complex realities of Indigenous women in Canada and the Indigenous homeless population in Montreal as she draws on her own relationships to identity and systemic racism.

Maya Cousineau Mollen is an Innu poet based in Quebec. Her poetry collection Bréviaire du matricule 082 won the Indigenous Voices Award for French Poetry. Cousineau Mollen also served as an executive assistant to the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.

Adam Haiun is a writer and poet from Montreal. Haiun’s work was a finalist for the Malahat Review’s Open Season Award for fiction and for the Far Horizons Contest for poetry in 2020.

The book cover: an illustration of an Indigenous woman floating on water and the side portrait of the author wearing round earrings
She Falls Again is a poetry collection by Rosanna Deerchild. (Coach House Books)

She Falls Again follows the voice of a poet attempting to survive as an Indigenous person in Winnipeg when so many are disappearing. Riddled with uncertainties, like if the crow she speaks to is a trickster, the poet hears the message of the Sky Woman who is set on dismantling the patriarchy.

Through short poems and prose this collection calls for reclamation and matriarchal power.

Rosanna Deerchild has been storytelling for more than twenty years, currently as host of CBC’s Unreserved. Deerchild also developed and hosted This Place, a podcast series for CBC Books around the Indigenous anthology This Place: 150 Years Retold. Her book, calling down the sky, is her mother’s Residential School survivor story. Deerchild is currently based in Winnipeg.

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