{"id":15179,"date":"2024-09-08T09:39:05","date_gmt":"2024-09-08T15:39:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ivereadthis.com\/?p=15179"},"modified":"2024-09-08T09:39:07","modified_gmt":"2024-09-08T15:39:07","slug":"book-review-a-season-in-chezghun-by-darrel-j-mcleod","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ivereadthis.com\/2024\/09\/08\/book-review-a-season-in-chezghun-by-darrel-j-mcleod\/","title":{"rendered":"Book Review: A Season in Chezgh’un by Darrel J. McLeod"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
It was by luck alone that I found myself reading the debut novel by Indigenous Canadian author Darrel J.McLeod<\/a>, in the same small town his bio claimed he lived. * The picture above is taken in Sooke British Columbia, where I was vacationing with my family in August, which also happens to be the place McLeod called home. He was an award-winning writer, having won the Governor General’s award for non-fiction a few years ago for his memoir, but A Season in Chezgh’un<\/a><\/em> was his first foray into fiction. It’s a compelling story that illuminates a part of the world we don’t hear much about, but for those who follow this blog closely, it has a similar premise to that of another book I read earlier this year, The Morning Bell Brings the Broken Hearted<\/a><\/em>. Both detail outsiders coming into a remote northern community to teach, learning more about themselves than the community they are assigned to.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Plot Summary<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n It is the late 1980s, and protagonist James is living an exciting life in Vancouver with his long-term partner Franyo. They have a close group of friends and fulfilling careers, but James has always felt disconnected from his family where he was born, in Northern Alberta. The sadness from the death of his mother and his sister’s suicide have lingered, so when a job opportunity to become a principal in a Northern Indigenous community becomes available, James takes it in hopes he will be able to better connect with his own Indigenous Cree culture. Leaving behind a comfortable life and a dismayed lover, James is optimistic he can bring his specialized educational knowledge and intent to focus on cultural education to better the impoverished and addictions-stricken community of Chezgh’un. He quickly realizes that gossip, in-fighting, and politics are just as big of a challenge as systemic underfunding, so over the course of a year, James learns to navigate the complicated relationships with those invested in the community, plus those competing for the limited government funding that is afforded these remote places. His own trauma occasionally rises to the surface, making things even more difficult as he tries to enable the healing of the generational trauma that is running rampant in Chezgh’un, but the improvements he is able to make are a motivating factor for both him and the other teachers he leads.<\/p>\n\n\n\n