#1 NATIONAL BESTSELLER WINNER OF THE ATWOOD GIBSON WRITERS'' TRUST PRIZE FOR FICTION SHORTLISTED FOR THE 2022 MANITOBA BOOK AWARDS'' CAROL SHIELDS WINNIPEG BOOK AWARD, MARGARET LAURENCE AWARD FOR FICTION, AND MCNALLY ROBINSON BOOK OF THE YEAR AWARD LONGLISTED FOR THE 2021 SCOTIABANK GILLER PRIZE A GLOBE & MAIL BEST BOOK One of: Quill & Quire''s "2021 Best of Fall guide" CBC''s "65 Canadian Works of Fiction to Watch Out for in Fall 2021" Chatelaine''s "5 New Books to Read This Fall" Toronto Star''s "35 Books you need to know about in fall 2021" CBC''s "The most exciting Canadian books coming out in Fall 2021" Shedoesthecity''s "Fall Releases That Should Be On Your Radar" CBC''s "33 Canadian books coming out in September we can''t wait to read" NOW Magazine''s "15 best new books to read this fall" Elle''s "10 Books You''ll Want to Read This Fall" Praise for The Strangers : "Reminiscent of the hard-scrabble tales of the Métis in the Road Allowance days, Vermette offers up a beautiful, raw testament to those living on the margins. Brilliantly weaving the lives of the Strangers into stories within stories within stories, Vermette''s confident, understated prose walks the reader through the unforgiving reality of the descendants of those who stood with Riel and Dumont, grasping for survival in a world committed to a long-established campaign of dispossession. Cathartic and disturbing, The Strangers offers vital insight into the colonial brutality that still haunts the lives of the Métis." --2021 Atwood Gibson Writers'' Trust Fiction Prize Jury (Rebecca Fisseha, Michelle Good, and Steven Price) "Katherena Vermette''s The Strangers is a deeply moving story of how colonial institutions continue to bear down on and disrupt the lives of Indigenous women and girls. It is a powerful collective portrait of struggle and resistance, of what it''s like to be in an Indigenous body in twenty-first century Canada. In the end, it adds up to an engrossingly written ode to another kind of care, one against the grain of suffering. A brilliant follow-up!" --Billy-Ray Belcourt, bestselling author of A History of My Brief Body " The Strangers is a unique and essential triumph of a novel. It is revelatory in its artistry--in its constellating of family against violent separation, in its austere poetics of voice and consciousness.
Katherena Vermette has proven once again that she is among the most gifted and relevant writers of our time: someone with everything to teach us about the telling of necessary stories, about grieving the fallen, honouring survival, and revealing the fiercest beauty." --David Chariandy, award-winning author of Brother and I''ve Been Meaning to Tell You "With its relevant subject matter and poignant prose, Vermette''s second novel is poised to be as triumphant as her first. [In The Strangers ], the author crafts another strong, emotional portrait of Indigenous women." -- Canadian Living "Filled with vulnerability and loss. It''s an honest confrontation of Indigenous identity." Chatelaine "Vermette has a way of seeing light through the crack in the wall of a dark room." --NOW Magazine "A searing indictment of the pressures and travails placed on Indigenous women." -- Toronto Star "Quite simply, Vermette.
[is] writing for Indigenous people, as opposed to just about Indigenous people." -- CBC " The Strangers is a devastatingly beautiful dive deeper into. [Phoenix''s] story, and that of her family." --Quill & Quire (starred review) "This Writer''s Trust Prize-winning. piece is a potent, audacious intergenerational saga that explores race, class, inherited trauma and the strength of matrilineal bonds." --The Globe and Mail "Vermette has an uncanny ear for the rhythm and the cadences of all her characters'' voices. [F]rom its opening pages, The Strangers . speaks, starkly and eloquently, as if directly to the community of readers it creates.
" Winnipeg Free Press.