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Photo By: Christine Smith (McFarlane) |
Award Winning Metis
Author Inaugural Writer in Residence:
By: Christine Smith
(McFarlane)
The Toronto Public
Library has made huge strides in celebrating Aboriginal writers by appointing their 1st
inaugural Aboriginal writer in residence at North York Central Library.
In the first
appointment as a writer in residence, at the Toronto Public Library , awarding
winning Metis author Cherie Dimaline says "It’s such a great opportunity to be the inaugural
writer for the Aboriginal literature residency. I really see it as a tremendous
beginning for a partnership between the Aboriginal literary community and the
busiest library system in the world."
Cherie Dimaline is Metis
from the Georgian Bay area. Since 2007, she has written prolifically, with
three books under her belt and another collection of short stories called “A
Gentle Habit” being released in the fall of 2015. She is the founding editor of
FNH Magazine and Muskrat Magazine and is a rising star in the Aboriginal
literary field. Cherie’s second book, “The Girl Who Grew A Galaxy,” was recently
shortlisted for the 2014 Burt Award. and was named the 2014 Emerging Artist of
the Year, the Ontario Premier ‘s Awards for Excellence in the Arts.
Her appointment as
writer in residence runs from March 2015 until June 2015 and will involve the
reading of manuscripts, one on one appointments with emerging writers,
discussions and workshops.
Deborah Richardson,
the province’s first Indigenous female Deputy Minister who was at the event
said “Media often portrays First Nations, Inuit and Metis people in a negative
light and it’s really important to celebrate the successes of our people, and
that is one of the reasons why it is really exciting to see Cherie’s
appointment or residency here at the library. ”
Dimaline is excited
about her appointment and said "We
are the people of story and the library, in this context, is the keeper of
stories for the wider population. I think its a tremendous gift to the people
of Toronto for the library to dedicate a residency program where Lee Maracle,
Susan Blight, Giles Benaway and other incredible storytellers are involved. It
opens up the beauty and expertise of Indigenous story to a whole multicultural
city."
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