Anzel, a widow in her sixties, lives quietly on her small farm with her ninety-eight-year-old grandfather, a Carrier elder from Northern BC. Grandpère and Anzel pass the time playing fierce cribbage games, cutting firewood and tending the vegetable garden.
As the days pass Grandpère tells Anzel his life story, sharing heartbreaking memories: the death of his family in a devastating epidemic, growing up alone within a white community, his son's murder at the hands of a horse thief, and his battle with and eventual triumph over alcoholism. When their extended family comes to visit on holidays and weekends, Grandpère, with the tenderness of an elder, tells the children of the Carrier traditions and values. Their days together are simple and happy, and when Anzel meets Jim, a caretaker at the local pensioners' home, life seems complete.
But one day a taxi arrives from town. Its passenger is Angel, a frightened thirteen-year-old stranger who claims to be Anzel's granddaughter. Her father, she says, was Anzel's youngest son Ben, who was killed in a car crash fourteen years prior. Angel's mother, alone and pregnant with Ben's child, ran away to the city to raise the child far from the disapproving eyes of her family. But after years of poverty and loneliness, she succumbed to the streets of Vancouver. Angel, neglected and abused at the hands of her mother's new boyfriend, followed the trail to her father's family. When Anzel takes in this unknown granddaughter, she and her family must act quickly to protect her.
Romain's first novel, Grandpère is a tender story of determination, loss and family love.
Grandpère is a marvel to read and woven with such beauty and tenderness. Romain’s writing is a tribute to the power of family, love’s blessings and time’s healing ways. I never wanted it to end … An instant classic.
Romain’s novel intersects the lives of five generations of a First Nation/Métis family in Northern BC. It highlights the tragedies and heartbreaks of the First Nations people over the last 100 years: loss of land, language, culture, and senseless deaths from disease, accidents and alcohol. Anzel, a self-sufficient widow, lives on a small farm with her feisty 98-year old grandfather. As they carry out the daily chores, Grandpère tells Anzel his life story, which she records for her family. One day Angel, the 13-year-old daughter of Anzel’s deceased son Ben arrives, abandoned by her drug-addicted mother. With the love of Anzel and extended family, Angel flourishes. The happy ending for everyone includes a description of Grandpère’s passing into the spirit world, when and how he wished.
Romain is Métis.
Caution: Includes references to drugs, alcohol and rape.
Source: The Association of Book Publishers of BC. Canadian Aboriginal Books for Schools. 2011-2012.
Romain’s novel intersects the lives of five generations of a First Nation/Métis family in Northern BC. It highlights the tragedies and heartbreaks of the First Nations people over the last 100 years: loss of land, language, culture, and senseless deaths from disease, accidents and alcohol. Anzel, a self-sufficient widow, lives on a small farm with her feisty 98-year-old grandfather. As they carry out the daily chores, Grandpère tells Anzel his life story, which she records for her family. One day Angel, the 13-year-old daughter of Anzel’s deceased son Ben arrives, abandoned by her drug-addicted mother. With the love of Anzel and extended family, Angel flourishes. The happy ending for everyone includes a description of Grandpère’s passing into the spirit world, when and how he wished.
Romain is Métis.
Caution: Includes references to drugs, alcohol and rape.
Source: The Association of Book Publishers of BC. BC Books for BC Schools. 2011-2012.