The Knowing

Tanya Talaga
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The Knowing

Tanya Talaga
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Trouvé dans : Community & Culture, Indigenous Voices

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CHOIX DU PERSONNELCANADALIVRE À SUCCÈS GLOBE AND MAIL480 PAGESANGLAIS

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Overall rating: 4.4333334 / 5 from 30 reviews.

AI Generated Review Summary

Summary topics

Review topics: [book, read, truth, canada, peoples, leader, story, members, reconciliation, history].

Review highlights

Reviews

Must read for anyone with a heart

"Illuminating and heartbreaking. The journey this book takes you on, it's one that should not exist. You'll be thinking about this long after you've read the last page."

Alex (5/5)

Thoughts about ""The Knowing""

"This was historically a very interesting review of the Aboriginal people meeting the people who came to settle this new land. The Hudson Bay Company figures prominently. The story carries on through tribal wars, capturing Indian children, ostensibly to educate them, actually to make them into white children. The Roman Catholic Church abused them, and many died. Bodies are still being recovered. The Sixties Scoop was another way they were made "" Canadian"" - another bad mistake by the Canadian Government (albeit with the best of intentions). The book is well written, very long but worth reading."

Sharon W. (4/5)

The Knowing

"I purchased this to further my learning about the history of Indigenous peoples in Canada. It is a beautiful, hardcover bound book. I am looking forward to sinking my teeth into it."

Book W. (5/5)

Exceptional Read

"Great depth, good historical links, strong family storyline e."

Jack (5/5)

Auntie, A Journey Home.

"TanyaTalaga has a very easy style due to her reporter background. From her writing, now I know why it is so difficult to follow the path towards Reconciliation. The more I read her book, the more upset and angry I get at our government and their continued mistreatment of such magnificent people - our founding peoples. I recognize the times etc, but as I have read other books on the topic, I find that this one, from its personal search viewpoint, is fostering in me a need and desire and obligation to write to the next Minister of Indigenous Affairs, in Ottawa after the next election, and vent my concerns. And no file replies will I accept. I would highly recommend this book, not only to those interested in the topic, but especially to those who don't know of these struggles. It is a real eye and heart opener of a book. It is time to treat all with respect and love that they richly deserve. Try walking in their moccasins!"

Rev. P. (5/5)

THE TRUTH IS THE TRUTH Canadian History in Review

"Thank you TANYA TALAGA for sharing Annie’s life creating an opening for me to find my mother's story as well. My mother was tackled to the ground, wrangled in a straight jacket and placed in an ambulance in the summer of 1972 (I was 12yrs old) with all the neighbours on their front porches running to lock their doors in horror. We were new Italian immigrants of the mid 1960’s. My mother was been a vibrant beautiful member of our community, hosting parties at our house, giving to those less fortunate, going to church on Sundays — we had a “normal” life until then. Life forever changed in the summer of ‘72 when she was admitted to Lakeshore Mental institute where she would be administered rounds of “shock treatments” — diagnosed “manic depressive paranoid schizophrenic” and given a cocktails of lithium and other complementary drugs —my mother became a zombie. . . My mother remained in hospital approximately 3-4 months and my father and I were told she was “ward of the state” —I thought I had imagined this term until I read it in your book. This would be the first of many long term return stays that shattered our family forever. Today, I am on page 264 and wanted to reach out to the Tanya Tamala and say your book has opened up so much forgotten and repressed memory. I want to see my mother’s records from this hospital and document her life. Her life became a nightmare roller coaster of in and out between Lakeshore hospital and 999 Queen St Hospital with more shock treatments that ensued. THE KNOWING has left me staring to the sky, feeling a sadness for her life, shuttering to recall following doctors orders and forcing her to take her medicines. I have spent a lifetime of private withheld resentment, anger and forgiveness towards her. She recovered (somewhat) spending most days in bed needing quiet respite from the world. THE KNOWING has dug up repressed memory about my forgotten childhood visits to the Lakeshore hospital. She too was swallowed up by a system that asked no questions and administered deadly consequences to her and our entire family. Very enlightening read,"

Mara (5/5)

Powerfully important book

"This book has really affected me. The interweaving of history, fact and personal anecdote is compelling, emotional and really informative. I am rethinking my attitudes and trying to action my commitment to reconciliation in a way that really makes a difference."

NJ H. (5/5)

Essential title

"Gripping couldn’t put it down definitely a book for anyone looking to understand why reconciliation is so important"

BreF (5/5)

The knowing is well written and eye opening!

"This book is a must read, gives us a deeper understanding of residential schools and the devastating circumstances these children and parents had to endure."

Sharon R. (5/5)

Reads Like a Newspaper Article

"I enjoyed learning the Canadian history of Indigenous Peoples and was appalled at the atrocities that befell them."

Penny L. (2/5)

Q&A

  • Date de publication : Aug 27, 2024
  • Langue : anglais
  • Nombre de pages : 480
  • Éditeur : HarperCollins Canada
  • ISBN : 9781443467506
  • Dimensions : 6.12" W x 1.56" L x 9.25" H

“The story of one woman gone missing becomes the story of all the children who never came home. Tanya Talaga fearlessly takes on Canadian History and presents it through the lens of indigenous experience – an absolute prerequisite to understanding how we got here from there and how we must move forward....The Knowing, written in beautiful, often heartbreaking prose, is a handbook for reaching beneath the myths of Canadian history and finding the truth of a Canadian genocide as horrific as any other.” - Michelle Good, bestselling author of Five Little Indians

"Weaving skillful reporting with rich personal narrative, Talaga connects the broader history of the cultural disconnection that many Indigenous people experience to her own history as an Indigenous woman with European settler heritage who was raised apart from her culture… Talaga is a gifted storyteller.” - Brittany Penner, nationally bestselling author of Children Like Us, for Oprah Daily

The Knowing is a masterwork by one of our most essential storytellers. Tanya Talaga once again bears witness to the truth and shares it with searing clarity and a deep compassion. She exposes history denied and compels a new understanding of the Canadian story. The Knowing is deeply researched and urgent storytelling at its finest. At a time when journalism is in crisis, Tanya Talaga shows us the power of rigorous and thorough reportage and in doing so honors the survivors and their descendants with the gift of truth. This may be my favorite book ever.” - Jesse Wente, author of Unreconciled

“Any attempts to eliminate or literally bury any evidence of the Indigenous concentration camps’ malicious architecture are no match for the mighty Tanya Talaga. In The Knowing, we witness one of the most significant Truth Sayers of our time embark on an epic, generations-long quest to find the unmarked grave of her ancestor. Talaga employs both her keen investigative eye and her tender author’s heart to transform the political into the personal; cryptic paperwork into the details of precious lives lost; this country’s shame into a call to action.” - Catherine Hernandez, author and screenwriter of Scarborough the book and film

The Knowing is a deeply personal account of Talaga’s search for her missing and disappeared family members. By sharing her family’s story, she is helping to address what the Truth and Reconciliation Commission identified as an urgent need – to create historically literate citizens. We find and feel Annie’s spirit with every turn of the page, despite the government’s efforts to disappear her. This book teaches us all that knowing our ancestors, is knowing ourselves.” - Kimberly R. Murray, Independent Special Interlocutor for Missing Children and Unmarked Graves

“As Tanya Talaga investigates the story of her great-great grandmother's fate, she lays bare the dark history of a nation. This is about a Canada that you do not know, but one we all must confront. The Knowing is harrowing, illuminating and necessary reading.” - Carol Off, author of At a Loss for Words

The Knowing is everything we’ve come to expect from a Tanya Talaga book – meticulous research, impassioned advocacy, searing prose. But this is her most personal story yet, an epic re-telling of one family’s story that illuminates both the repugnant history of Indian residential schools in Canada and the inspiring reclamation of Indigenous identities.” - Duncan McCue, author of Decolonizing Journalism: A Guide to Reporting in Indigenous Communities

“Through the lens of our nation’s most prescient truthteller, an unspeakable hurt is painstakingly excavated. This is the story of Tanya Talaga’s lineage, an eighty-year search to unravel the mysteries that shroud her great-great-grandmother’s fate. This is, also, the story of how Canada came to be. These pages give voice to generations of abducted and discarded souls, a land stolen, a way of life eradicated. Tanya’s profound empathy and unwavering determination to discover their truth honours their resilience and spirit. This book is a path forward.” - Mark Sakamoto, author of Forgiveness

“Tanya Talaga is one of the greatest storytellers out there, and has done incredible work sharing Indigenous and Canadian history in accessible and impactful ways.” - She Does the City

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