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Book Review: The Orenda by Joseph Boyden

There are so many reasons I wanted to like The Orenda. It was released last September to great acclaim. I enjoyed Joseph Boyden’s recounting of where and how he wrote the first 20+ pages; his passion and excitement is quite infectious. My own relationship with nature means I’m receptive to the idea of the orenda – the life force that belongs to everything in the natural world, not just to humans. I generally enjoy historical fiction.

But no matter how hard I tried, I never really warmed to the story, which follows the lives of Snow Falls (a Haudenosaunee girl), Bird (a Wendat chief) and Christophe (a Jesuit missionary) and the complex relationships between them over the course of many years beginning in 1630.

After much thought, I’ve identified two things that really took away from my enjoyment of The Orenda:

Personal feelings aside, I believe The Orenda is an important book, for a several reasons:

Wab Kinew will defend The Orenda in Canada Reads 2014. In a recent CBC interview, he explains: “This book is asking us to consider ‘What is the spirit of this land? What is the content of the character of Canada?'” He goes on to describe how The Orenda highlights two great issues facing Canadians: reconciliation with First Nations/social justice and environmental consideration/respect for the land. It’s clear from reading The Orenda that these issues have been around for 400 years.

I DON’T KNOW WHAT TO RATING TO ASSIGN THIS BOOK! I finished reading this book over a month ago, but I still don’t know what rating to assign because I don’t know how to reconcile the fact that I didn’t really like it with the fact that I think it’s significant. For me, this discrepancy makes The Orenda stand apart from the other Canada Reads 2014 finalists.

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