NATIONAL BESTSELLER One of CBC's "40 Canadian books to read this season" One of CBC Books "Best Fiction of 2023" Praise for The Circle : "Like Orange's There There , The Circle is a polyphonic masterpiece. Brutal at turns, and tender at others, it's about the tremendous impact one person can have on an entire community." --Erika T. Wurth, author of White Horse "Like its sisters in this trilogy, every page of The Circle is a steady and rhythmic observation of our humanity as Indigenous people. It asks what restitution and justice could possibly feel like when we, as Indigenous people, are all subjects of this unjust empire called Canada. This book is truth in all her fluid forms. It is an altar of love, hope, and grief amidst the relentless torment of settler colonialism. Katherena Vermette, in her distinctly elegant style, offers a glimpse into the devastating beauty of our people and our capacity to keep moving forward, one foot at a time, guided by the love and strength of our ancestors.
It reminds us that, in the end, all that's left is the stories we carry with the people we loved." --Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers, filmmaker and actor "A perfect companion to The Break and The Strangers , Katherena Vermette's The Circle draws us back into the lives of characters who we've come to know so intimately that their heartache is our heartache. With each new perspective as distinct and vivid as the last, The Circle acts as an unsettling reminder that the systems designed to help the most vulnerable too often end up betraying them. This is a stellar finale with an ending that will leave you both heartbroken and hopeful." --Amanda Peters, author of The Berry Pickers "What a gift we have been given. The Circle is a window into the lives of unforgettable characters, families, and community. The nuances, the crescendos, thrum like a heartbeat that hurts and heals, bends and breaks, that mends, always with care through prose that is as beautiful as it is raw and unflinching. Vermette has written a masterful work, one that challenges us with an intricate structure, as the circle forms and finally connects.
If this is the end of the story, the gift we have is to hold these characters, and live with them long after the last page has been turned." --David A. Robertson, author of The Theory of Crows.