cover image Waiting for the Long Night Moon

Waiting for the Long Night Moon

Amanda Peters. Catapult, $27 (256p) ISBN 978-1-64622-259-9

Canadian writer Peters (The Berry Pickers) delivers a skillful set of tales featuring Indigenous characters in contemporary and historical settings. The narrator of “(Winter Arrives)” describes the seasonal return of white colonists to her riverside land. Though her father assures her that the colonists’ stay will be short (“Each year they come, little one. They come and they leave”), the narrator has her doubts. “Tiny Birds and Terrorists” centers on an encampment of activists, who are called “terrorists” on the evening news for attempting to protect their natural resources. One of them, a 16-year-old girl who skips school to join the group, is later cautioned by her mother against becoming a “rez bum.” Peters draws on oral history with “The Story of the Crow (A Retelling),” which details how the crow became black and hoarse. “In the Name of God” chronicles a boy’s harrowing experience at a Catholic residential school, where a priest locks him in a cupboard for four days as punishment for insubordination. Peters casts an unflinching eye on the suffering of her characters, resulting in the heightened emotions of stories like “Three Billion Heartbeats,” in which a young woman leaves home for the city to score drugs and faces mortal danger. It’s an affecting and wide-ranging collection. Agent: Marilyn Biderman, Transatlantic Agency. (Feb.)