Soft as bones A memoir

Chyana Marie Sage

Book - 2025

"A poetic memoir as intricately woven as a dreamcatcher about overcoming the pain of generational trauma with the power of traditional healing. In her deeply affecting memoir, Soft as Bones, Chyana Marie Sage shares the pain of growing up with her father: a crack dealer who went to prison for molesting her older sister. She details the shame and guilt she carried for years after her family's trauma as she went from one dysfunctional relationship to another, from one illegal drug to another. In revisiting her family's history and weaving in the perspectives of her mother and sisters, Chyana examines the legacy of generational abuse, which began with her father's father, who was forcibly removed from his family by the resi...dential schools and Sixties Scoops programs. Yet hers is also a story of hope, as it was the traditions of her people that saved her life. In candid, incisive, and delicate prose, Chyana braids personal narrative with Cree stories and ceremonies, all as a means of healing one small piece of the mosaic that makes up the dark past of colonialism shared by Indigenous people throughout Turtle Island."--

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BIOGRAPHY/Sage, Chyana Marie
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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
[Toronto, Ontario] : House of Anansi Press, Inc 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Chyana Marie Sage (author)
Physical Description
xi, 280 pages : genealogical table ; 22 cm
Issued also in electronic format
ISBN
9781487013028
  • Family Tree
  • Astamispihk: Before That Time, Before Then and Now
  • Part I. Ayahciniwew: She Covers Somebody with Earth
  • Part II. Pinikanew: Her Bones Ache Right Through to the Marrow
  • Part III. Pâstâsow: She Breaks Bones for Marrow
  • Part IV. Nîswahpitam: She Ties Bones Together as Two
  • Âsteyakamin: After a Big Wind and the Water Is Calm
  • Acknowledgements
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Essayist Sage debuts with a harrowing account of her poverty-stricken childhood in Edmonton, Alberta. Sage's father, a descendant of the Woodland Cree tribe, dealt drugs and began molesting Sage's older sister, Orleane, when she was a teenager. When Sage's father got Orleane pregnant, the girls' Métis mother uprooted the family and began moving from place to place. Sage searched for someone to "save" her during her unstable adolescence, entering a string of fraught, codependent relationships and attempting suicide before briefly living with an aunt on the West Coast, entering therapy, and beginning to write. Throughout, Sage buttresses her story with snatches of Indigenous stories (much of which she learned from her parents) and research into Canada's 20th-century child welfare policies, which called for the removal of Indigenous children from their homes so they could be integrated into "mainstream" society, but led to be widespread abuse by host families and government officials. She toggles effortlessly between the roles of diarist, poet, and journalist, linking her personal history to a pattern of intergenerational violence, all without snuffing out hope for healing. Readers will be as inspired as they are horrified. (May)Correction: A previous version of this review incorrectly stated that the author's father molested her. The review also mischaracterized the details of the author's stay with her aunt and when she entered therapy.

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