"A rollicking poem about the fiddle ('the first high call of the fiddle bids us dance/baits with its first pluck and saw of the bow/reels us, feet flick -- fins to its lure and line') becomes a statement of cultural pride and defiance -- much like The Pemmican Eaters as a whole." -- Toronto Star "Dumont's work is visual and evocative, highlighting recurring symbols and images of a natural world that will be familiar to any dweller of the Prairies . The Pemmican Eaters builds off the poet's earlier work and highlights a writer who has mastered both craft and voice." -- Quill & Quire "Dumont honours Métis traditions in music and beadwork in a number of lyrically driven poems. The Pemmican Eaters is a statement of cultural pride and defiance, much like Marilyn herself." -- CBC News Online "Marilyn Dumont uses both rhythmic and free verse to provide a brilliant and insightful look at Métis and Cree people." -- Scene Magazine "It's a book whose connections to the world are so multitudinous that you keep putting it down as you're reading to share something fascinating, and then when the book is done, you go out walking down the street, and the connections all come back to the other way." -- Pickle Me This.
The Pemmican Eaters