EBOOK

About
Shirley is only five years old when she is taken away by the Indian agent to live at a residential school.
She loves learning, but she is not there by choice. From the first day walking up the long, lonely stone steps of the school building, life is hard and full of rules. Separated from her brothers and sisters, she is truly on her own.
Shirley is very brave, but there is no one she loves to hold her at night when she is afraid. No one to tuck her in and comfort her. Shirley keeps going despite the sadness. She makes friends and has adventures. And most of all, she looks ahead to summertime, when she will be able to return to her family and the happiness of home.
A true story.
The true story of Shirley (Fletcher) Horn's experience of resilience and survival at the Shingwauk Indian Residential School.
The inspiring story of a young girl's resilience and survival at residential school. ★ "Short, often poetic, chapters cover different key memories from Shirley Fletcher Horn's experience. Each chapter has a correlating mixed media image of photography and hand-drawn illustration…. This work is a collaboration between two First Nation women: the titular Shirley Fletcher Horn, former Chief of the Missanabie Cree First Nation, and Robertson, Atikameksheng Anishnawbek First Nation. The book melds both of their backgrounds in art and activism. They took great care in tailoring the difficult and generationally traumatic subject of residential schools in an appropriate and respectful format for school age children. VERDICT This biography is an honest depiction of the cruelty in Canada's First Nation residential schools from the perspective of a survivor. An important addition to every library's juvenile biography section and classroom."
"Horn maintains a mischievous sense of humor that helps the subject and her peers survive: 'Daring each other to feel alive, we made our own joy,' unadorned text states, recounting time spent swinging on barn ropes or hiding snakes in a pocket. Saturated cartoon illustrations portraying key moments are superimposed over historical b&w photographs of Horn's journey, culminating in a somber tribute to both the pain and joy she experienced throughout her youth."
"Short vignettes offer poignant snapshots of Horn's childhood, from being separated from her siblings and enduring illness without appropriate care to the cutting of her hair for disobedience and forbidding elders from using the Cree language around her. Balancing these cruel and painful memories are moments of joyful resistance and survival, such as building camaraderie during chores, proudly defending her tiny self from bigger would-be bullies, and, when dared by a friend, pretending to faint during church to the delight of her classmates. Illustrations using historical photographs and digital overlays reinforce these experiences of mixed emotions and reconciliation."
"Shirley's story is painful yet triumphant.... Robertson's uniquely powerful illustrations place cartoony, defined figures against often black-and-white photos, prioritizing the children's humanity with firm and uncompromising lines and shapes that dominate the dreadful reality of the backgrounds."
"Through powerful words and illustrations, this book honors Shirley's lived experiences at residential school while also highlighting her advocacy in ensuring that residential school histories are remembered and taught. Shirley offers an accessible entry point into a complex topic while centering Survivor voices. This book is a moving resource for educators and families committed to truth-telling and learning."
Key Selling Points:
• Joanne Robertson is the writer/illustrator of the multiple-award winning and best-selling (over 70,000 copies in print) children's book The Water Walker (also published in dual language Anishinaabemowin/ English edition Nibi Emosaawdang). Joanne is AnishinaabeKwe (Ojibwe) and a member of Atikame
She loves learning, but she is not there by choice. From the first day walking up the long, lonely stone steps of the school building, life is hard and full of rules. Separated from her brothers and sisters, she is truly on her own.
Shirley is very brave, but there is no one she loves to hold her at night when she is afraid. No one to tuck her in and comfort her. Shirley keeps going despite the sadness. She makes friends and has adventures. And most of all, she looks ahead to summertime, when she will be able to return to her family and the happiness of home.
A true story.
The true story of Shirley (Fletcher) Horn's experience of resilience and survival at the Shingwauk Indian Residential School.
The inspiring story of a young girl's resilience and survival at residential school. ★ "Short, often poetic, chapters cover different key memories from Shirley Fletcher Horn's experience. Each chapter has a correlating mixed media image of photography and hand-drawn illustration…. This work is a collaboration between two First Nation women: the titular Shirley Fletcher Horn, former Chief of the Missanabie Cree First Nation, and Robertson, Atikameksheng Anishnawbek First Nation. The book melds both of their backgrounds in art and activism. They took great care in tailoring the difficult and generationally traumatic subject of residential schools in an appropriate and respectful format for school age children. VERDICT This biography is an honest depiction of the cruelty in Canada's First Nation residential schools from the perspective of a survivor. An important addition to every library's juvenile biography section and classroom."
"Horn maintains a mischievous sense of humor that helps the subject and her peers survive: 'Daring each other to feel alive, we made our own joy,' unadorned text states, recounting time spent swinging on barn ropes or hiding snakes in a pocket. Saturated cartoon illustrations portraying key moments are superimposed over historical b&w photographs of Horn's journey, culminating in a somber tribute to both the pain and joy she experienced throughout her youth."
"Short vignettes offer poignant snapshots of Horn's childhood, from being separated from her siblings and enduring illness without appropriate care to the cutting of her hair for disobedience and forbidding elders from using the Cree language around her. Balancing these cruel and painful memories are moments of joyful resistance and survival, such as building camaraderie during chores, proudly defending her tiny self from bigger would-be bullies, and, when dared by a friend, pretending to faint during church to the delight of her classmates. Illustrations using historical photographs and digital overlays reinforce these experiences of mixed emotions and reconciliation."
"Shirley's story is painful yet triumphant.... Robertson's uniquely powerful illustrations place cartoony, defined figures against often black-and-white photos, prioritizing the children's humanity with firm and uncompromising lines and shapes that dominate the dreadful reality of the backgrounds."
"Through powerful words and illustrations, this book honors Shirley's lived experiences at residential school while also highlighting her advocacy in ensuring that residential school histories are remembered and taught. Shirley offers an accessible entry point into a complex topic while centering Survivor voices. This book is a moving resource for educators and families committed to truth-telling and learning."
Key Selling Points:
• Joanne Robertson is the writer/illustrator of the multiple-award winning and best-selling (over 70,000 copies in print) children's book The Water Walker (also published in dual language Anishinaabemowin/ English edition Nibi Emosaawdang). Joanne is AnishinaabeKwe (Ojibwe) and a member of Atikame