The incisive and vital first poetry collection from Mi'kmaw
spoken-word poet and former poet laureate of Kjipuktuk (Halifax), Nova
Scotia.
We remember tomorrow and a thousand years ago.
From eel weirs to the buffalo.
We remember petroglyphs and Instagram photos.
See, we remember our history,
Without statues, money, or pictures of the Queen.
In Mi'kmaw, three similarly shaped words have drastically different
meanings: kesalul means "I love you"; kesa'lul means "I hurt you";
and ke'sa'lul means "I put you into the fire." In spoken-word artist
and critically acclaimed author (I'm Finding My Talk) Rebecca Thomas's
first poetry collection, readers will feel Thomas's deep love, pain, and
frustration as she holds us all to task, along the way mourning the loss
of her childhood magic, exploring the realities of growing up off
reserve, and offering up a new Creation Story for Canada.
Diverse and probing, I place you into the fire is at once a meditation
on navigating life and love as a second-generation Residential School
survivor, a lesson in unlearning, and a rallying cry for Indigenous
justice, empathy, and equality. A searing collection that embodies the
vitality and ferocity of spoken-word poetry.