How a people die

by Alan Fry

Paper Book, 1970

Status

Available

Call number

FIC FRY

Call number

FIC FRY

Local notes

Shelved in Aboriginal Collection

Description

It's Saturday morning on the Kwasi Reserve. The citizens are red-eyed and bleary, their shabby houses littered with empty bottles. But this Saturday is different. Last night while her parents partied, a baby girl died in her crib, her body crusted with filth and sores. RCMP Corporal Thompson stirs up a hornet's nest when he charges the infant's parents with criminal neglest. But who, or what, really killed Annette Joseph? "Tell us how a people die," one character says, "and we can tell you how a people live." When How a People Die appeared in 1970, its chilling picture of a culture mired in squalor caused an international sensation. Now, as a plague of substance abuse and suicide sweeps Canadian reserves, it is more timely than ever. In a new introduction, author Alan Fry offers alternatives to the bleak future he envisioned in How a People Die. ". . .required reading for anyone who is seriously concerned about the [present] social turmoil." -Vine Deloria, author of Custer Died For Your Sins and God is Red "Come on Indians, dammit yes, read this book and get angry." -David Monture, Indian News… (more)

Publication

Toronto : Garden City, N.Y. : Doubleday Canada ; Doubleday, 1970., 167 pages

Language

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