Monkey Beach

by

Eden Robinson

Monkey Beach: Chapter 1: Love Like the Ocean Summary & Analysis

Summary
Analysis
Lisa wakes to the sound of crows outside her bedroom window. They seem to be saying la’es, which means “Go down to the bottom of the ocean” in Haisla. She feels groggy and confused; she drank too much coffee the previous evening, after the Coast Guard called to tell her family that The Queen of the North, the fishing boat her brother Jimmy works on, has been reported missing. She retrieves a cigarette and then stands by the window, looking out at the shore and the water beyond while she smokes. It’s a beautiful day.
The crows—harbingers of good and bad luck—speak to Lisa in the traditional language of her people, gesturing towards the long history of Indigenous Peoples in North America and offering Lisa a connection with her ancestors. This opening scene immediately puts the focus on the specter of loss, since being lost at sea usually leads to death.
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Lisa describes the traditional territory of the Haisla in what’s now British Columbia, Canada. It runs roughly north and east up the mainland from its western edge on Princess Royal Island, following the path of the Douglas Channel. Its main city, Kitamaat, lies at the end of the channel. Kitamaat received its name from Hudson Bay explorers, who borrowed the name the neighboring Tsimshian people (who provided local guides to the explorers) used to designate the Haisla. It gets more confusing: the Alcan Aluminum company established Kitimat the town in the 1950s, across the bay from Kitamaat, the traditional village overlooking the water where Lisa and her family live.
History layers and complicates the area’s geography, suggesting from the very beginning of the book that the present cannot be understood without looking at the relevant history—and that the relevant history of the Haisla community generally (and Lisa’s family specifically) includes abuses suffered at the hands of white explorers and colonists who wanted to subjugate the Haisla and other Indigenous Nations and claim their land.
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Quotes
When the Coast Guard called the night before, Mom answered the phone but became too distraught to answer their questions, so Lisa took over. They told her that Josh and Jimmy left port on Friday to head to fishing grounds where they were supposed to meet the rest of the crew. The crew arrived at the rendezvous point on Sunday, but Josh, Jimmy, and the Queen weren’t there. No one knows if they sank or are holed up somewhere. They made no distress call.
The mysterious circumstances surrounding Jimmy’s disappearance seem to have caught Lisa less by surprise than her mother. This suggests subtly that it isn’t  as much of a mystery as it first appears, but that it can be traced to events in the recent—and more distant—past. But readers have to wait for Lisa to relate these over the course the book.
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Since the family found out about Jimmy’s boat, they have been reminding one another that he’s a good swimmer, as if the words alone will keep him safe. No one has such high hopes for Josh, the boat’s owner, who is in debt and recently refused to pay his employees. Gossip says he might have sunk the boat for insurance purposes. Going downstairs, Lisa finds her mom and dad in the kitchen, listening to the marine emergency channel on their high-frequency radio. It crackles to life and broadcasts a woman describing another overdue fishing vessel. Lisa reflects on the fact that, at any given moment, there are 2,000 storms at sea.
Lisa and her family intuitively acknowledge Jimmy’s death, although none of them want to accept the loss yet. Yet their fear and concern bring them close together, both physically in the kitchen, and emotionally. The coast guard’s report—and Lisa’s reflection on ever-present storms, implying suffering and distress—reminds them all that life involves loss and suffering. And their gossip provides an early indication of Josh’s shifty, unstable character.
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Lisa’s parents are going to Namu—Josh and Jimmy’s last known location—to be closer to the search area. Lisa regrets telling them about the crows, but at least she didn’t tell them about her Sunday night dream, in which she saw Jimmy standing on the misty shores of Monkey Beach. According to stories passed down from Lisa’s Ba-ba-oo through her dad, the b’gwus—sasquatches—live near Monkey Beach. In Jimmy’s favorite story, two trappers in the mountains near Monkey Beach separate at a fork in the trail. One, fleeing from what he thinks is a bear, stumbles into a group of wild, hairy man-beasts. When they corner him, he shoots their leader and escapes in the ensuring confusion. After spending a sleepless night anchored in a boat offshore, he returns in the morning to find his partner bludgeoned to death.
Early in the book, Lisa reveals her connection to the spiritual world through dreams and visions. Like most messages from the spirit world, her dream of Jimmy doesn’t offer a clear warning or promise of hope; on its face, it could be either. Likewise, the b’gwus or sasquatches are equivocal figures. The stories present them as scary bogeymen, yet in this instance, it’s the humans who fire first. This suggests that dangers aren’t always obvious, and that sometimes it's hard to draw a line between victims and oppressors.
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Quotes
Lisa recalls her paternal grandmother, Ma-ma-oo, criticizing Dad’s version of the story for being too gory. But she and Jimmy like the scary version, especially when Dad makes sound effects and puts on his sasquatch mask—allegedly modeled after the surviving trapper’s description.
Lisa grows up with stories full of magic and monsters that quietly teach her to face the myriad terrors and trials of life. This lesson, in turn, informs her ongoing struggle to come to terms with loss in the book.
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The narrative flashes back to the summer Jimmy is eight or nine. He’s so impressed with the sasquatch story that he buys a camera and then begs Dad to take them to Monkey Beach so he can get a picture of the b’gwus and sell it to a tabloid for $30,000. The family sets out in Dad’s ancient and slow-moving fishing boat one Sunday morning with Uncle Geordie and Aunt Edith in tow. Edith brings fresh bread—she’s the acknowledged master in the family and won’t let anyone, least of all Lisa’s mom, call her skills into question.
The sasquatch stories create continuity between Haisla history and modern life. Additionally, the trip to Monkey Beach demonstrates the importance of family. Everyone gets on board—to some extent or other—with Jimmy’s hare-brained scheme. Despite the squabbles that arise—like the one in which Aunt Edith thinks Mom has insulted her baking skills—everyone sticks together and finds ways to smooth over their differences in the end.
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Uncle Geordie and Dad let Lisa steer the ancient, slow-moving boat. Jimmy stays at the front of the boat the whole trip (except when Mom forces him to eat lunch), camera at the ready. When they arrive, he grows frantically impatient waiting to be ferried onto the beach. Then, as soon as he sets foot on the shore, he takes off running for the tree line. Lisa catches him, and Mom orders her to keep an eye on him on the beach for the rest of the day. But when the family wakes up the next morning, they can’t find Jimmy. Mom, Dad, Geordie, and Edith search up and down the beach. Lisa follows the sound of a snapping twig into the woods, chasing glimpses of Jimmy’s brown shirt through the foliage.
Jimmy’s behavior shows how he’s taken the sasquatch stories at face value, in part because he lives in a place and a culture where the lines between the waking world and the supernatural world are thin and permeable. In this vein, readers should note that only Lisa goes into the woods; no one else heard the noises she did. In contrast, the not-so-magically-sensitive Mom, Dad, Geordie, and Edith search in a logical if incorrect direction, assuming the water, rather than the woods, drew Jimmy’s attention.
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Suddenly Lisa feels like someone is watching her. The woods become very quiet. Turning around slowly, she catches a glimpse of a tall, furry man. When he smiles—amiably—she sees his pointy teeth. She screams, and Jimmy—wearing a grey sweatshirt—crashes into the clearing, snapping photos. He wants to know which way the sasquatch went, but Lisa, already beginning to doubt what she saw, points back toward camp. Jimmy gets spanked, Lisa gets a lecture, and their parents make them sleep on the boat that night.
When Lisa encounters the sasquatch, she—and readers—suddenly realize that she’s been following it, and not Jimmy, all along. He may have been in the woods looking for it, but he only sees it after her screams alert him to its presence. This confirms something that the book has already established: Lisa’s ability to see things in the spirit world that others cannot. Yet, in this moment, she chooses to deny her vision—it’s unclear why. 
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In the present, Lisa shakes herself. She doesn’t know what dreaming about Monkey Beach means—maybe she regrets missed opportunities or feels guilty about holding secrets, or maybe it’s a warning from the spirit world about Jimmy’s death. She doesn’t understand the crows’ message either: it could mean that Jimmy’s boat sank, or that her parents shouldn’t go on a boat, or even that she should try to find Jimmy herself. Out of habit, Lisa goes out to the back porch to smoke, grateful for the buzz the cigarettes give her.
Lisa muses about the equivocal and enigmatic nature of messages from the spirit world. Determining the truth remains difficult, at least without the benefit of hindsight. This suggests how much of life lies outside of a person’s control and points towards the book’s message that power comes not from knowing what will happen, but learning to deal with events as they arise.
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In a memory, or maybe a dream, Lisa stands by a ditch in which lies a filthy, injured brown-and-white spotted dog. She hears a sound and looks up to see a red-headed little man. He shakes his head when she asks if it’s his dog, but then Mom calls her from the house for lunch. Afterward, when she takes Mom to see the dog, it has died. Suddenly, in the present, real world, Dad opens the back door and Lisa jerks awake. He offers her one of his cigarettes.
This flashback to Lisa’s early childhood interrupts the narrative as if it’s imposing itself on her stream of consciousness while she sits on the porch smoking. It introduces the little man, a messenger from the spirit world who visited Lisa frequently in her childhood to warn her when big changes were about to happen in her life. This first experience connects him firmly with suffering and death—the dog dies—but his role will expand and change as the story goes on.
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Lisa’s mom has always (incorrectly) blamed Uncle Mick for introducing her to smoking. She looks at Dad and wishes she could talk with him about her dreams. She knows they have meaning, especially when she sees the little man. She remembers that his first appearance, the time she saw the dog in the ditch, happened the day before the tidal wave. The second time, when she was about six, was the night before Uncle Mick returned.
Smoking a cigarette on the porch quickly sucks Lisa into a chain of memories centering around her Uncle Mick. In her worry over Jimmy, her subconscious calls up memories of another beloved family member who seems to be gone, suggesting that deep down she already believes that Jimmy is dead. The little man’s role expands here—it seems that he doesn’t just warn her about impending danger but also about happier upheavals, like the return of the long-lost Mick. 
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In a flashback, Lisa remembers the day Mick returned. It was Mom’s birthday. Midmorning, a tall, tanned man with long, braided hair and a fringed, buckskin leather jacket knocks on the door. His sudden appearance shocks Mom and Dad, and alarms Lisa, who begins to attack him by kicking his shins. When he kneels and introduces himself as Uncle Mick, she retorts that Uncle Mick is in jail. As he breaks into a resonant laugh, Mom invites him inside. Lisa refuses to apologize for kicking Mick. This stubbornness and rebellion, her parents dryly note, makes her like him. When Dad explains that the family believed Mick was in jail because his friends called and told them that he had been shot and taken away by the FBI, Mick laughs so hard coffee burbles out his nose.
Perhaps because of her dream involving the little man, Lisa initially takes Mick’s reappearance as a threat to her family. Yet after overcoming their initial shock, Mom and Dad invite him in—to the house, literally, and back into the fold of the family figuratively—with open arms. This meeting also establishes the affinity between Mick and Lisa, both fierce fighters. Lisa shows herself to be a valiant protector of her family here, but also demonstrates the lack of discernment that will render much of her fighting impotent and painful in future years.
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Lisa fears going to sleep that night, lest the little man return. She lies awake listening to the sounds of the family reunion going on below: Aunt Trudy shrieking and crying, Mick’s deep laughter. In the present, with the benefit of hindsight, she can see the disturbing pattern of the little man’s appearances. But when she was little, they had no meaning. She thinks about riding with Dad over the mountain to town (Kitimat) the morning after Uncle Mick’s return. Built in the 1960s, the twisting mountain road allows people from the village to visit town without having to cross the channel by boat. The people who use it regularly speed along it despite its dangers.
The danger of the road and the casual way locals speed along it suggest the power in the Haisla’s ancestral lands and the sea which nourished them, neither of which can be tamed. The people draw their own bravery and strength from these sources. The road thus emerges as a metaphor in the book’s exploration of the ways in which white settler colonialism and government policies designed to control Indigenous Peoples failed to achieve their ends, despite traumatizing and abusing generations of people.
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Quotes
Dad and Lisa stop at the bank first, where Dad discovers that Mick made a large deposit into his account. He withdraws the money and drives to Mick’s apartment where he tries to return it. Mick refuses to invest it anywhere other than the “Bank of [his brother] Al.”  Within a few days, Mick finds work at the logging camp. The family visits and brings dishes as a housewarming present while Dad helps Mick with his back taxes. Mick insists he owes nothing since the entire country was built on stolen “Indian land.”
Mick seems to represent a trickster—a supernatural figure in Indigenous Peoples’ traditions that often protects humanity but also frequently indulges in rule-breaking—in the way he oscillates between stability and counter-cultural defiance. The taxes Mick refuses to pay point bluntly towards the history of abuse and trauma visited by white settler colonists and later by the Canadian government on Indigenous Peoples. Mick’s individual protest against the government aligns with his involvement in bigger activist organizations like the A.I.M., as will be seen later.
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Before Mick and Dad can start arguing, Mom insists that Dad tell Mick the story of the dishes. It happened when Lisa was very young, but she still remembers the late-July day when a tsunami warning triggered an evacuation order, and her parents rushed to pack up their car. When Mom sent Dad back in for her special Royal Doulton dishes, Lisa escaped from the car. She wanted to ride out the tsunami using her umbrella as a boat, like people did in her picture books. Uncle Geordie, on his way to the docks to save his boat, happened to intercept her and he chased her up a tree. When he reunited her with her parents at the town hall, they were furious at her; she was mad at them for ruining her plans. The tsunami destroyed Geordie’s boat.
Lisa’s nested memories suggest the deep and intertwined ways events in a person’s life unfold. Her wild insistence on conquering the tsunami as a child relates to her later attempts to fight her way out of grief and trauma, and points towards the current moment, in which she realizes (subconsciously at least) that she’s about to face the test of another loss—Jimmy. The tsunami itself offers a reminder of how many things lie outside of a person’s control. Maturity involves learning to accept one’s limits and to weather the storms of life in a way that doesn’t cause more damage and destruction than necessary.
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The spring of Uncle Mick’s return is warm and sunny. Dad starts a garden, with Mom’s permission but not her participation. He has an incredibly green thumb, and everything he plants—even delicate plants unsuitable for the climate—thrives. One day, he comes home with a large cardboard box of chicks and a sheepish grin. Uncle Mick howls with laughter over this latest development and sings the theme song to Green Acres until Mom becomes furious enough to chase him out of the house with a broom. He never knows when to stop. Sometime later, while Mick babysits Lisa and Jimmy, they think they hear a chicken on the roof. Rushing outside, they find a crow imitating the chickens and making a sound like laughter. The next day, hawks attack the coop and kill the chickens.
The interactions between Mom, Dad, and Mick show the importance of a loving and supportive family—and demonstrate the ways in which love doesn’t always prevent disagreement or strife. At first, Lisa’s memories associate Mick with happiness, sunshine, and the fertility of Dad’s garden, but soon chaos and disorder descend and the hawks kill all the chicks. This foreshadows the brevity of Mick’s time in Lisa’s—and the family’s—life. It also offers a pointed lesson that no one person’s efforts, no matter how conscientious, can offset or prevent suffering and death. Life involves both happiness and sadness, each in its own season. In this memory, the crows predict death and destruction, further cementing their ability to warn about bad news in the story.
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In the present, Mom shakes Lisa out of her reverie about Uncle Mick and the chickens to say that she and Dad are leaving. Mom encourages Lisa to try to eat and sleep while they’re gone. She promises to call when their flight has landed and tells Lisa that Aunt Edith is coming over. When Aunt Edith arrives, she immediately begins making breakfast and cleaning, although Lisa is too tired, distraught, and nauseated to eat. The smell of frying bacon reminds her of Jimmy, who hates fried food. She doesn’t know why, exactly, he decided to become a fisherman. He told her it was to “make things right” without specifying which things he was talking about. He told their parents he was saving money for his wedding, yet he didn’t even tell his girlfriend he was leaving.
In this time of fear and confusion, Lisa finds herself surrounded by her loving, supportive family. Her memories have already showed readers how Aunt Edith (and Uncle Geordie) have protected her and helped her through other dangerous situations, implying that she will be able to survive this event too, no matter the results of the Coast Guard search. As Aunt Kate settles into housekeeping, Lisa’s unsettled thoughts turn to the mysterious circumstances around Jimmy’s disappearance. She knows more about what drove him to sea than she’s yet willing to admit to readers.
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Lisa decides it would be the worst possible irony if Jimmy—who’s never been afraid of the water—died by drowning. She thinks back to their childhood and how they would spend the whole summer in the calm waters of the bay on the other side of the village. Mom always made Lisa take Jimmy with her. Of all the summer days she and Jimmy spent at the bay, she remembers one—near the end of the season, about a year after Mick’s return—the best.
Lisa seems to be in denial as she tries to deploy Jimmy’s love for and comfort in the water as a reason why he can’t possibly have drowned. Her memories of their childhood at the bay show their early closeness and illustrate her protective feelings towards him.
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In a flashback, Lisa remembers waking up to find Jimmy downstairs, watching cartoons and eating his favorite breakfast, a box of Jell-O powder. They pack lunch, put on their bathing suits, and head for the beach. Jimmy belly-flops into the water immediately, while Lisa—much more mature at seven years old—sits on the dock with her cousins. Tabitha, known as “Tab,” is a wild child whom Lisa loves playing with. Their other cousin, Erica, is polished and beautiful, the queen of her group of friends. The girls sit on the docks listening to the radio until some of the boys approach and start roughhousing with them. To avoid being thrown into the water, Lisa jumps, though she hates the shock of cold water and prefers to enter little by little. When she dives under the water, she notices the way it changes the colors and sounds of things.
Lisa’s memory gives readers important insights into her character, specifically that she hates shocks and prefers to enter the cold water little by little. This memory provides a metaphor for the experience of death, which happens all at once and which irrevocably changes the world. Likewise, the world looks and sounds strange and alien to Lisa when she opens her eyes under the water. Writ large, the book illustrates Lisa’s attempts to resist the shock of her loved ones’ deaths and her attempt to experience her pain and suffering only a little bit at a time. But this only serves to draw out her suffering.
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Quotes
Sitting on the dock at noon, Lisa shares her Jell-O with Erica and Tab in exchange for Oreo cookies and Kool-Aid. She watches Jimmy and his friends swim out to the breakwater, climb up onto its posts, and run along its length, jumping from one log to another. She imagines Jimmy falling, and when he dives into the water, he stays beneath for so long she begins to worry. When he finally clambers back up on the dock and asks for half of her sandwich, she glares at him. An argument brews between the two of them until Jimmy suddenly freezes. Lisa looks over her shoulder to see Adelaine Jones (later given the nickname Karaoke), the unbelievably beautiful new girl in town, approaching.
Even when they squabble and disagree, Lisa feels protective of her little brother—family provides a safety net despite members’ differences. Jimmy shows his fearlessness in this moment, in contrast to Lisa’s concern. This memory also introduces Adelaine Jones, who eventually becomes Jimmy’s girlfriend and whom Lisa has already placed as somehow involved in his disappearance, if only because he claimed saving money for their wedding as the reason he decided to go fishing.
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The kids stay at the bay until dinnertime, when Lisa forces Jimmy to go home instead of letting him tag along to Erica’s house with her. When she goes home later that night, Mom waits for her in the living room, upset that Lisa barred Jimmy from Erica’s house. She warns Lisa that she’ll miss Jimmy when he stops wanting to hang out with her.
Mom tries to warn Lisa that she should appreciate the relationships and experiences in her life while they are happening, because one never knows when things will change suddenly. But as a child, Lisa remains too immature to fully understand and accept this lesson.
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In the present, Lisa stands by the window looking out at the dull grey-blue of the channel. It’s as deep and wide as a sea. And seas are all dangerous, greedy, unfriendly threats. Unlike her, Jimmy never feared the water. She remembers struggling with swimming lessons, while Jimmy effortlessly copied—then surpassed—her attempts to bob under the surface. One summer, she remembers, he decided he wanted to become an Olympic gold medalist in swimming. He made his own medal podium out of kitchen chairs and awarded himself gold chocolate coins as medals.
Lisa fears the wild and dangerous ocean. Readers should remember not just her earlier ruminations on the frequency of storms and shipwrecks but also the tsunami—even on land, the sea can wreak havoc and destruction. In a way, in this moment, the water metaphorically represents death and Lisa’s fear of it shows her fear of loss. In contrast, Jimmy draws his own sense of power and purpose from the water.
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This line of thought carries Lisa to the memory of learning to ride her bike. Despite being younger by a year and a half, Jimmy gets his first bike only three months after she gets hers. She hasn’t learned to ride yet, but she refuses to let him master riding first. She mounts her bike but can’t get going fast enough to find balance. Eventually, she realizes that she can cheat by getting a rolling start on a hill. But rather than starting on a small hill, she picks the steepest one in town to try. Halfway down, she’s going so fast that her handlebars start to shake. She slams on her brakes and flips off the bike, skinning her knee. But she ignores the pain and tries again.
The bike memory shows a young and immature Lisa causing herself pain by an inappropriate application of power. She has some of it right: power, the book argues, arises out of choosing one’s battles (she doesn’t want the shame of learning after her younger brother) and using one’s efforts to push towards the future. But unless one acknowledges the limits placed by reality and the external world on one’s own action—in this case, the force of gravity—one risks serious suffering and pain.
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The second time, Lisa makes it to the bottom of the hill, where she runs straight though the four-way stop, narrowly avoiding a collision with a truck. Terrified and excited, she starts to pedal. But the truck driver—Uncle Geordie—chases her down and drives her home. Her parents take her to the Emergency Room and confiscate her bike for two weeks. She is, nevertheless, triumphant. She learns to ride before Jimmy, who takes months to get off training wheels. She still has scars from the incident, but they’re only visible, as tiny white spots, when she gets tanned. 
This is the second time Uncle Geordie has saved Lisa from herself, illustrating the importance of a good family as a safety net for each of its members. Lisa still bears the scars of this incident, which offer a powerful reminder of the ways in which her experiences—perhaps the painful ones most powerfully of all—change and shape her as she grows up. The scars may fade but the lessons remain.
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Three days after learning to ride her bike, as soon as she’s ungrounded, Lisa remembers, she goes to Tab’s house. It looks dirty and run-down even though it’s fairly new. Aunt Trudy cares far less about housekeeping than Aunt Kate. Tab’s room—in the unfinished basement—usually provides complete privacy, so Lisa can bring forbidden reading material like her mother’s salacious True Stories. She and Tab read about a woman who married her kidnapper. Tab declares the woman a “horny slut,” astonishing Lisa. Her own mom never lets her “swear” like that.
Thus far, the book has shown readers examples of a loving, close-knit, and caring family; as Lisa’s memories extend towards her cousins, they begin to hint at trouble in other corners of her extended family. While Lisa clearly envies Tab for the greater freedoms Aunt Trudy allows her, she also seems to understand the ways in which this points towards Trudy’s general neglect of her parenting (and housekeeping) responsibilities.
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Soon afterward, Lisa recalls, her Mom and Dad—and pretty much everyone else in the village—goes to Terrace for a wedding. They drop off Lisa and Jimmy at Uncle Mick’s apartment for the evening. The large place is nearly empty, containing only a few ramshackle pieces of furniture and a new eight-track tape player on which Mick refuses to play anything but Elvis Presley. An accident at the logging camp has left Mick on workman’s compensation. He moves unusually slowly and spends most of the evening resting in his bedroom, poking his head out occasionally to make sure Jimmy and Lisa stay out of trouble. Lisa, growing bored of the TV, eventually knocks on his bedroom door and demands he tell her about getting shot.
The Hill family look out for each other despite their flaws and difficulties. Although in the moment young Lisa doesn’t seem to fully understand the import of this evening, it points towards Mick’s aimlessness and difficulty navigating normal elements of life, like holding down a job and caring for himself. Nevertheless, her parents trust Mick to care for her and Jimmy, and he follows through on that commitment despite his evident pain (and pain-medication-induced stupor).
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Uncle Mick asks Lisa to bring him some water first so he can swallow his big orange pills. Then he says that he was on a reserve called Rosebud with an old woman whom the Guardians of the Oglala Nation, or “Goons,” had been bothering. When she complained about the Goons to the police, the police ratted her out to the Goons, and they shot at her house in retaliation. Lisa asks why, and Mick answers that the world is a “fucked-up, amoral” place, and the Goons wanted to scare the woman. Before her parents return, Lisa shakes Mick awake. Dad notices Mick’s dingy bed—really just a mattress on the floor—and within a few days buys him a new one, courtesy of the “Bank of Al.”
Mick’s story refers to the Wounded Knee Occupation of 1973, a protest mounted by the A.I.M. and others against the U.S. government’s abuse and neglect of Indigenous Nations. He provides a history suitable for a child (barring a little profanity) that nevertheless graphically illustrates the ways in which historical mistreatment at the hands of government authorities continues to affect Indigenous people even in the present. When Dad comes in and sees Mick’s living situation, he intervenes to take care of his brother because family watch out for each other even—or especially—when things are going badly.
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In a flashback to another, earlier moment in her childhood, Lisa reminisces about the time one of Dad’s cousins died and the whole family went to the settlement feast. Dad and Jimmy mostly get out of it because Jimmy has a swim meet in another town. Lisa, forced into a frilly pink dress and too-tight patent leather shoes, sits with Mom and Aunt Trudy at a table in the corner of the rec center gym. Mick shows up in his fringed buckskin jacket, his A.I.M. T-shirt, and his “least-ratty” pair of jeans. Lisa sits on his lap and plays with the claw dangling from his bone choker. Mom wears—and buys for Lisa—dainty, conservative jewelry, but Lisa longs for dramatic things.
Lisa reflects on the differences between her mother’s taste for dainty, western clothes and Mick’s preference for items like the buckskin jacket, political T-shirt, and bone choker that loudly proclaim his Indigenous heritage. Mom and Mick share a Haisla heritage, but Mom’s fashion choices align more with the standards of white culture. Notably, the book doesn’t criticize Mom for her assimilation, but Lisa feels drawn from an early age towards Mick’s combative and political stance instead.
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Things at the table suddenly become tense when Ma-ma-oo arrives and sees Trudy there. Ma-ma-oo, Trudy, Lisa, and Mom sit through the feast in strained silence, punctuated by snappish comments about respecting one’s elders and about Trudy’s involvement with Josh. Lisa’s family brings Mick home for coffee after the feast, where he waits for Trudy to pick him up for a night on the town. Trudy drops off Tab for a sleepover and confides in Lisa that Ba-ba-oo used to beat Ma-ma-oo, and instead of sending him away, she sent Trudy and Mick to a residential school.
The book claims that histories of trauma and abuse inform the present, a dynamic Lisa sees in full force at the settlement feast, even if she doesn’t yet fully understand the implications. Trudy hates Ma-ma-oo because she feels that Ma-ma-oo chose the abusive Ba-ba-oo over her children. But their rift intensified after Trudy endured abuse and trauma in the government’s residential school system. The historical trauma layers on top of the personal trauma in such a way that Trudy’s life remains forever marked by her past.
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Lisa thinks about the stark differences between her dad and Uncle Mick. Dad went to college and became an accountant, eventually quitting and taking a job at the Alcan plant for more regular, better-paid work. Uncle Mick hated working for anyone; he held a series of odd jobs and barely used his apartment, preferring to camp out instead. When he was at home, he and Dad shared a fishing net, and Lisa remembers one time she went with Mick to check on it. Tiny, translucent jellyfish filled the water that year, and although they sting Lisa’s hands when she pulls them from the net, she refuses to show Mick that it hurts her.
Although the extent to which the differences between Mick and Dad arise from divergent personalities rather than experiences remains unclear, Mick’s history in residential school clearly affects the trajectory of his life. Unlike Dad, Mick resists authority and struggles to maintain a regular job. The jellyfish in the net yet again point towards the sea’s unfriendliness and danger. And Lisa’s unwillingness to acknowledge the pain they cause her so that she can impress Mick foreshadows the suffering she will later endure when she denies her pain after traumatic events.
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Mick babysits for Lisa and Jimmy more times that summer, taking them to the corner store for ice cream in hot weather. But one time, Mom drives the kids over only to find Mick raving in his living room, pulling apart his eight-track tapes, distraught because Elvis Presley has died. She calls Josh to come calm Mick down. Afterward, Mick takes off on a pilgrimage to Graceland without telling Mom, Dad, or anyone else. They list him as a missing person, and when he returns after a month, he laughs at them for their worry.
Mick’s complete and utter grief and rage over Elvis’s death suggests that, like Lisa later, he hasn’t yet accepted or dealt with other losses in his life. Thus, losing his musical hero reawakens the feelings of helplessness and rage he feels over other losses. His subsequent behavior—taking off without telling anyone—again suggests the difficulty he had with forging a successful and grounded adult life following his trauma in the residential school system.
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Lisa remembers another evening from that summer when she was playing hopscotch with Erica. Lisa tolerates Erica’s cheating so she can play with someone besides Jimmy. But Erica takes off running when the class bully, Frank, rides up on his bike accompanied by two of his friends. Frank and his cronies had cornered Erica the week before, pulling up her skirt and exposing her pink underwear, then they told everyone she wore diapers and gave her the nickname “Pissy-missy.” Determined to escape a similar fate, Lisa chooses to fight. She bites down on the closest body part she can find—Frank’s butt—until she tastes the blood through his shorts. The two tussle until Erica’s older brother J.J. breaks up the fight and brings Lisa home.
Even at a young age, Lisa has a warrior’s temperament like her Uncle Mick. She shows fearlessness even in the face of stacked odds—Frank shows up with his friends while Erica abandons Lisa. Yet familial obligation seems to inform this incident as well; Lisa wants to escape Erica’s fate, but also seems to relish seeking a little bit of revenge on Frank for harassing her cousin. This fight also demonstrates Lisa’s immature tendency to lash out indiscriminately when she feels pain or fear. And while she holds her own for a while, lashing out proves unsustainable and her cousin must still rescue her.
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Mom and Mick take Lisa to the Emergency Room, where Frank waits for treatment with his mother. Frank’s mother and Mom argue across the room, each blaming the other’s child. At one point, while Mom and Mick are distracted, Frank’s mom demands an apology from Lisa, who refuses. Frank’s mom calls her a monster and storms out. Mick comforts Lisa, telling her that Mom used to be a “holy terror” and promising that Lisa is his “favorite monster in the whole wide world.” Three days afterward, Josh—Frank’s uncle, as it turns out—shows up to tell Lisa that he has “taken care” of his nephew. Afterward, Lisa’s Mom and Dad try to convince Mick to move in with them instead of Josh.
The name Frank’s mother gives Lisa, “Monster,” provides another connection between her and Mick, who earned the same nickname in his childhood. When Mick tells Lisa that her own mother used to have a wild side, he points to the cyclical nature of history: events in the present often replay or point towards moments in the past. And, yet again, Lisa’s memories offer a warning about Josh. Even in a book where Lisa regularly remembers being spanked by her parents, Josh’s words seem to imply he’s punished Frank with unusual or excessive violence.
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Lisa remembers going Christmas Tree hunting with Mick. Lisa loves being outdoors, the cold air, and the time with Mick. He plays mixtapes of Indian Rights protest songs in the car. This political education gets Lisa in trouble at school when she refuses to participate in reading aloud a book that depicts the indigenous peoples of British Columbia as cannibals and starts singing one of the songs, “Fuck the Oppressors,” instead. Mick has the teacher’s note framed and hangs it in his living room. Dad doesn’t mind Mick taking Lisa tree hunting because it means he doesn’t have to. He hates it because Ba-ba-oo used to force him. Meanwhile Mom thinks it’s silly, and Jimmy prefers the indoors. Mick always picks the scrawniest trees for himself because, Lisa thinks, he loves the underdog.
Mick introduces Lisa to the long history of oppression and violence Indigenous People suffered at the hands of white settlers and governments in North America. And her experience shows her that oppression did not end in the past; it continues in the whitewashed history taught at her school, which vilifies Indigenous Nations to justify the government’s attempts to indoctrinate them with Western languages, religions, and social norms. In response, she asserts the truth and establishes her role as a warrior fighting oppression, just like her Uncle Mick. And although readers have to wait to hear more about Ba-ba-oo’s personal history, the juxtaposition of Lisa’s memory of standing up in class with Dad’s unhappy memories of his own father point towards the connection between this systemic violence and the traumas of the Hill family specifically.
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Lisa remembers another day, when Dad dropped her and Jimmy off at Mick’s and Mick had a visitor. Barry is an old friend from Mick’s A.I.M. days, trying to convince him to join “another hopeless cause.” Mick reveals that he was married—tempestuously—to Barry’s sister. Dad feels uncomfortable because of their banter—and Barry’s imposing presence—so he offers to bring the kids another time, but Barry graciously leaves instead, reminding Mick to “stay out of trouble.” 
Barry connects Mick to the larger A.I.M. movement, which continued its work throughout the 70s (after Mick left) and into the present day. Dad and Mom, in contrast to Mick, are much more assimilated to white culture and far less political in their views. This seems to fuel Dad’s discomfort around Barry; not having suffered the same traumas as his older brother, he lacks interest in protest and fighting oppression.
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Lisa also remembers picking qoalh’m, or salmonberry shoots, with Mick in the spring. Qoalh’m are the first taste of spring, a welcome reprieve from the watery, imported vegetables that the store stocks in the winter. Their outer skin feels a little like a kiwi fruit, and the inner stalk tastes like fresh snow peas. Lisa remembers bringing some to Ma-ma-oo. She and Mick drink tea at the table of Ma-ma-oo’s tidy, spare house. She has an ancient, black and white TV, and the foil-wrapped rabbit-ear antennae sometimes pick up short-wave radio transmissions that interrupt her favorite soap operas. Later, when the salmonberries are ripe, Mick and Lisa bring a batch to Ma-ma-oo, too, then they spend the afternoon with her making salmonberry stew and watching soap operas.
The salmonberry memories place Lisa, Mick, and Ma-ma-oo together as an inseparable group; this triad gives Lisa her strongest sense of safety and belonging in her childhood—making its eventual loss especially painful. Importantly, they bond as much over novel family traditions—such as Ma-ma-oo’s soap opera obsession—as over Haisla traditions. In this way, the book suggests the importance of honoring Indigenous cultures without suggesting that they should be somehow lost in the past or cut off from modern society.
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Later one spring, on Ba-ba-oo’s birthday, Lisa remembers Ma-ma-oo taking her to the shore. They bring a bottle of whiskey, a pack of cigarettes, and a box of Twinkies. Ma-ma-oo makes a fire and speaks in Haisla to the spirit of her dead husband, offering him presents by putting them into the flames to burn. She has Lisa burn the Twinkies, reminding her to specify that they are for her Ba-ba-oo, lest some other ghost steals them. Lisa counts to 10—all the Haisla she knows—for her grandfather’s enjoyment, too. As they return to the village, Ma-ma-oo tells Lisa how Ba-ba-oo was the fastest canoe around. But then he slipped and hit his head on the bathtub and then drowned in the water.
This memory recounts one of the most important lessons Ma-ma-oo taught Lisa. Her ritual suggests that the living and the dead are separated by a thin, permeable line, and teaches Lisa that honoring the memory of the dead keeps them connected to the living. It suggests that ghosts exist almost everywhere—else Lisa wouldn’t need to specify that she intends the gifts for her Ba-ba-oo. And it allows Ma-ma-oo to express her love and pride in her husband, suggesting that they shared a history more nuanced than the simple story of domestic abuse that Tab earlier described.
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Remembering the birthday ritual leads Lisa to explain some of what she eventually pieced together about Ba-ba-oo from discussions with Mick and others. Ba-ba-oo lost an arm in World War II, and after he came home, he couldn’t find work. The Veterans’ Affairs Department didn’t pay his benefits because they said he was covered by the Bureau of Indian Affairs; meanwhile, the Bureau of Indian Affairs encouraged him to move off the reservation to get his full veteran’s benefits. But he couldn’t move without losing his home, and he and Ma-ma-oo were raising four children. Ba-ba-oo felt ashamed and useless now that he could no longer support his family.
No one denies that Ba-ba-oo beat Ma-ma-oo, and later in the book, Lisa will confirm Tab’s assertion. And while the book refuses to condone his actions, it does place them in the context of a broader history of abuse and trauma. Ba-ba-oo serves the country of Canada honorably during WWII, but when he returns, the country refuses to repay his services as long as he remains on the Haisla reservation. This suggests a general disregard for the rights and identities of Indigenous people that added to the trauma of Ba-ba-oo’s disability by making it impossible for him to support his family.
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Thinking about Ba-ba-oo’s grave leads Lisa’s memories to the graveyard at the nearby settlement of Kemano, which she describes in detail. Its moss-covered trees block out the daylight, leaving the understory in perpetual twilight. Waves crash on the nearby beach. Instead of neat rows of manicured headstones, hand-carved animals mark graves scattered randomly through the woods; some memorialize whole families that died and were buried together. If you’re hungry, you can pick wild blueberries, but you must realize the plumpest ones grow over the graves.
Kemano, as the book later reveals, is an older settlement which the Haisla abandoned decades earlier, following disease and famine. It’s also close to another Alcan site, suggesting the connection between the expanding footprint of Canadian government and enterprise in the Haisla’s traditional territory and the decline of Indigenous culture and traditions. This description points towards the mutual ways in which the dead and the living nourish and support each other. The living keep the dead alive in memory, while the dead connect the living to the past.
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In the present, Lisa comes inside from the porch and finds that Aunt Edith has cleaned the whole house and filled the fridge with food. Mom and Dad call, their conversation filled with awkward pauses and aggressive cheerfulness. After Lisa hangs up, Aunt Edith makes her a cup of tea and a dinner of boiled, half-smoked salmon, potatoes, and oolichan grease. Oolichans are tiny, silvery smelt fish. Making oolichan grease—a great delicacy among the Haisla and their neighbors—involves a lengthy and precise aging and cooking process. People use the grease for everything from adding flavor to their meals, to moisturizing skin, to preserving foods. Aunt Edith still makes it, but Mom doesn’t know how, and Lisa didn’t have the heart to learn this year.
The issue of oolichan grease points towards the precarious existence of Indigenous traditions following systematic attempts to destroy Indigenous culture through the residential schools and other programs. People of Lisa’s grandparents’ generation—Ma-ma-oo, Edith, and Geordie—possess knowledge that people of her parents’ generation—Mom and Dad—lack though their assimilation to Western cultural norms. And while Lisa indicates an interest in learning traditional knowledge, the circumstances of modern life also make it difficult for her to do so.
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After thanking Aunt Edith for the meal, Lisa goes upstairs and into Jimmy’s compulsively neat bedroom. She looks at his favorite picture of Karaoke, his girlfriend, picking fireweed. She’s surprised by the sentimentality Jimmy’s having the photo conveys, since Jimmy’s life has been so focused and utilitarian up until recently. Lisa doesn’t even know how Jimmy met Karaoke. Karaoke’s picture rests in a spot where some of Jimmy’s swimming trophies used to sit. He boxed them up and packed them away over the summer. His window faces away from the water, toward the mountains. Lisa can see the canoe-shaped depression that Ma-ma-oo uses to track the passing seasons. When the sun touches the canoe’s bow, spring—and oolichan season—have arrived.
Lisa begins to admit how little she knows about Jimmy’s life at this point; something interrupted their childhood familiarity, and although she will eventually admit that some of this had to do with her, for the moment she only reveals hints of recent changes in Jimmy’s life, specifically the loss of his swimming career. It seems that she isn’t the only person to have to contend with painful losses. Standing in Jimmy’s room, Lisa cannot disconnect from her musings on the oolichan grease. Looking at the mountain reminds her of Ma-ma-oo and the ways she preserved and taught Lisa and Jimmy traditional knowledge.
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Lisa remembers fishing for oolichans one year. She and Uncle Mick travel to the family’s fishing spot by speedboat, planning to meet Uncle Geordie, Aunt Edith, and Mom there. Dad stays home to take Jimmy to a swim meet. They leave on a spring day which starts in snow but ends in sunshine. Lisa’s excitement prevents her from sleeping and Mom takes her to the docks to meet Mick at 4:30 a.m. Afraid of her ire—he told Lisa that Mom’s childhood nickname was “Miss Bossy Pants”—he leaves the docks slowly but guns the engine as soon as they lose sight of Mom. Rounding the Kildala Valley, Lisa sees a white man and his son in scuba gear on a point of land. Mick claims he couldn’t see them while Lisa waves.
Lisa remembers participating in the traditional experience of oolichan fishing with most of her family. Jimmy’s and Dad’s ambitions look outwards from the Haisla community towards the international, modern world represented by the Olympics and Jimmy’s developing swimming career. In contrast, Lisa cannot wait to participate in the fishing trip. The moment with the man and boy seems ambiguous: if Mick truly can’t see them, then they might be part of one of Lisa’s visions. If he can see them but pointedly ignores them, his disdain points towards the vexed history between Indigenous people and white North Americans, with Mick refusing to see members of a group whom he feels refuses to accept or acknowledge his identity and rights.
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Lisa and Mick have several hours of boating to reach the fishing grounds. The oolichan run in the Kitamaat River used to be legendary, but pollution eventually rendered the fish there too dangerous to eat. People who want oolichan must go south to the Kitlope or Kemano Rivers. This makes oolichan more expensive in terms of supplies and time. Because oolichan only spawn in a few rivers in British Columbia, they have long been one of the Haisla’s main trade commodities. “Oolichan” is the word for fish in the Chinook language that neighboring tribes created for the purpose of trade.
Lisa again describes some of the deep precolonial history of the Haisla people and their neighbors, who thrived along the Pacific coast long before any white colonists arrived. Moreover, she pins the degradation of the local environment squarely on the descendants of those colonists, who thoughtlessly take what they want from the land without caring for its ecological integrity. And then to make matters worse, this degradation puts traditional practices like fishing for oolichans out of the reach of all but the most financially secure modern Haisla.
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A little past Costi Island, Mick slows the boat to an idle and lets Lisa pilot it. She must sit on his duffle bag to reach the wheel. He teaches her how to handle the quirky engine, warns her to watch for deadheads—old, submerged logs—and sits back. He doesn’t even stop her when she guns the boat through a flock of ducks, scattering them to the wind. They stop mid-morning to drop crab traps for their dinner, then they head ashore to enjoy the nearby hot spring.
Lisa’s fond memories of Mick show why their relationship was so close: he allowed her to do things that her cautious parents wouldn’t have condoned, in the process teaching her the skills necessary to maintain a more traditional way of life (boating, crab fishing).
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At the hot spring, Lisa tells Mick that she wants to live with him and grow up to be a warrior. Her parents, she maintains, are boring. Mick protests that he only got scars from fighting. And he tries to prove that her parents are fun with the story of their first date. It happened in the winter. Dad left Mom at his house and went to town for beer, where he got stuck waiting for the snowplow to clear the road back to the village. A nervous Mom got alcohol from her friends and got drunk. Dad returned to find that she’d left, and when he called her, she complained about being cold and wet. In the morning, he woke up to find the yard covered in snow angels, which she didn’t even remember making.
Lisa wants to follow in Mick’s warrior footsteps, and she’s already shown herself to be a scrappy fighter when the need arises. But in this moment, Mick starts to teach her an important lesson about protest and power—fighting by itself won’t necessarily make her feel better or improve anything. Standing up against injustice can be dangerous both physically and emotionally—Mick claims he got nothing but scars from his attempts. It will take Lisa a long time still to understand the full meaning of his words. He also demonstrates his affection for Mom and Dad—and points towards their love for each other—as a corrective to Lisa’s pugilistic spirit. Love and support, he claims here, are as important in creating a good life and a better future as being a warrior.
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When Lisa and Mick finally return to the boat and begin pulling up their crab traps, each is fuller than the last. A silver-scaled halibut flops in the last one, along with three crabs. Neither Lisa nor Mick knows how the big fish could have gotten in through the trap’s small holes. Unsure whether it means good or bad luck, Mick carefully releases the magical halibut into the water without touching it. The afternoon sunshine and the previous night’s poor sleep send Lisa to sleep for the rest of the trip. When Mick rouses Lisa, she can see Mom waiting on the beach through Mick’s binoculars.
Both Mick and Lisa take the halibut in the crab trap as a sign, although they cannot tell if it points towards good or bad luck. In its mysterious ability to get into the trap despite being far larger than the holes, it suggests the shapeshifters in Ma-ma-oo’s traditional Haisla stories and thus points towards a person’s ability to reinvent him- or her-self throughout life. It’s also possible to interpret the sign as pointing to Mick, or Lisa, both of whom feel somewhat trapped by their circumstances. And it foreshadows Mick’s impending death. Alternatively, it could always just be a strange thing that happened. Signs from the spirit world are equivocal and hard to interpret in this book, since the community lacks anyone familiar with the old ways and wisdom.
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When Mick lands the boat and Lisa scrambles ashore, she asks Mom about the buildings she glimpses through the trees. Mom explains that there used to be a village here but after most of its residents died, the survivors abandoned it. She refuses to answer any more questions about it. And she won’t let Lisa go see the Alcan outpost, either. To vent her frustration, Lisa makes her loudest moose call, which echoes off the mountains. As Uncle Geordie and Uncle Mick unload the last of the fishing supplies, Lisa races up the path to the house. She hears distant, tinkling laughter from the trees. At first sight, she concludes that the lovely, old house likely hosts many ghosts, and she bangs around upstairs to dislodge them until Mom yells at her to stop.
The abandoned village points to historical traumas in the Haisla community, even though it doesn’t lay out the specific circumstances. It also suggests an explanation for the voices and laughter that Lisa hears through the trees: ghosts. This confirms for Lisa her grandmother’s assertions that the barrier between the waking world and the realm of the spirits is thin and permeable, and it offers another early glimpse of Lisa’s awakening connection to the spiritual realm. But just because Ma-ma-oo feels comfortable around ghosts doesn’t mean Lisa does, so she tries to scare them from the house.
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While Mom makes dinner, Uncle Mick and Lisa collect water. Lisa can barely keep up with her uncle’s long strides. At the end of the beach, they follow a stream to a dark-colored spring full of clear, sweet water. On the way back, Mick pauses for a smoke break on the beach. He recalls coming here with Dad when they were kids and mentions the water-gathering contests they’d had. Lisa challenges Mick to a race and spills most of her water bucket on her pants in her rush.
While Mom didn’t want to get into the painful details of the past, Mick proves more willing to share stories with Lisa. Granted, he tells happier stories, but they still point towards the realities of life: at some point the fun and games of childhood end and people must grow up and face adult life. Mick retains some of his childlike exuberance but can never recapture the innocence Lisa still has at this point.
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After dinner, Mick tells everyone about the last time he and Dad came to the cabin. They were hunting bears, and they slept in their bags on the beach without a tent because it was so warm. In the morning, they woke surrounded by seals, one of which snuggled so close to Dad that it trapped him in his sleeping bag. Dad finally convinced it to move off by making whale calls. After this story, Lisa convinces Mick to walk her partway to the outhouse, because she fears ghosts—especially the ones she heard laughing earlier.
Mick’s story of the seals aligns with and anticipates Ma-ma-oo’s stories about shapeshifters which Lisa will later describe. Over time, she learns an important lesson from the shapeshifters, that a person can—and must—undergo changes as they grow up but that they can still maintain continuity with their past. Notably, shapeshifters seem to favor transforming from seals or bears into humans—and both kinds of animal figure prominently in this story.
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Back in the house, Mick tells Mom that Lisa heard ghosts. Mom glares at him, accusing him of telling Ba-ba-oo’s ghost story. Uncle Geordie tells Lisa—crossing his heart that it is true—that farting keeps the ghosts away. Mick starts to tell Ba-ba-oo’s ghost story, but Mom cuts him off. Anyway, Geordie reasons, Ba-ba-oo probably just imagined it because he was drunk. That night, nightmares plague Lisa, and she wakes to the sound of Mick groaning and calling out for a cookie in his sleep. Mom wraps herself in a quilt and goes to rouse him. Lisa listens to the shocking sound of her brave uncle weeping. Mom returns and makes Lisa promise not to ask him any questions and to be patient if he’s in a bad mood the next day.
Lisa worries about ghosts but it’s memories that haunt Mick. He dreams about Cookie, the wife whom Lisa will later learn died violently in connection with their activism. Not only do his nightmares suggest that loss and suffering form an inevitable part of everyone’s life, but they point towards the violence and abuse suffered by Indigenous groups in the past—and the ways these violent cycles have enduring consequences. Lisa’s experiences at Kemano confirm Ma-ma-oo’s claims that the spirit world lies close to the waking world and often bleeds through into it.
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In the morning, Lisa wakes up to the sound of Uncle Mick screaming at Uncle Geordie and Aunt Edith. He exploded when Aunt Edith tried to say grace. He screamed about how Christian missionaries tortured and indoctrinated Indigenous children like himself in the residential schools. Mom intervenes, insisting that Mick come with her to look for oolichans in Kitlope Lake. Lisa tags along. They travel upriver in the rain, passing a black bear familiar to Uncle Geordie digging for something in the sand.
Mick’s reaction to Edith’s prayer points toward the abuse he and others suffered in the residential school system, which was explicitly designed to obliterate the cultural and social heritage of Indigenous Peoples. His experiences fueled his activism, leading to his relationship with—and loss of—Cookie. Historical cycles of abuse continue to play out in his life, with long-term consequences.
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Tall and glaciated mountains surround Kitlope Lake. At the river’s entrance, Mom and Mick wash their faces ritualistically. Mom points out where a landslide swallowed a village 500 years before. They go along slowly to avoid snagging on logs or tearing their keel on a deadhead. Lisa searches for Kermode bears—black bears whose coats range from white to pale brown—in the yellow, dry grass of the riverbanks. As they enter the lake, Mom points out the footsteps of the Stone Man pressed into massive granite boulders. According to legend, he was a peerless hunter who went up the mountain against the advice of his elders. When he sat down to wait for his dogs, a cloud descended and turned him to stone.
Mom and Mick carry on some  traditional Haisla knowledge and rituals, but their connection to the past seems tenuous, thanks to the history of violence and attempts on the part of the residential schools to destroy their heritage. But the legends and stories continue to help people like Lisa understand her place in the world. The gods punished the stone man for failing to heed the advice of his elders. Similarly, Lisa’s later failure to heed Ma-ma-oo’s  warning about her powerful yet dangerous connection to the spirit world will endanger her.
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Mick and Mom unload camping supplies and send Lisa to look for the seagulls, which will point them toward the oolichans. A long time ago, Mom said, people were afraid to travel up the Douglas Channel because they thought a great, white monster guarded it, but it was just a flock of seagulls feasting on fish. She warns Lisa not to go wandering off; killer whales have been known to swim up the channel this far at high tide, and the woods are full of sasquatches—or at least grizzly bears masquerading as sasquatches.
Mom’s story illustrates the idea that things aren’t always what they seem to be. Sometimes harmless things seem dangerous and frightening; sometimes benign things threaten danger. Sometimes sasquatches are really bears, yet this still leaves open the possibility that magic exists in the world for those who, like Lisa, have the eyes to see it.
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After dinner, Lisa drifts to sleep by the fire. She wakes up when Mick carries her to the tent, and she listens to him and Mom talking about his plans. Mom wants him to find a wife and have kids. She reminds him that he “did his part” already. He assures her that he’s not “going back,” but he hasn’t found answers at home, either. After a silence, Mom tells him that he would make a great dad, and Mick teases that she just wants to keep him around for free babysitting. Relieved that Mick has stopped talking about leaving, Lisa falls asleep.
The conversation between Mom and Mick illuminates some of the consequences of racism and violence in Mick’s life. He has never found a place in the world, in part, the book implies, because of his experiences in the residential schools and the violence he suffered as an activist. The idea of her relationship with Mick changing if he left the village terrifies Lisa even as it reminds her that life guarantees nothing but change.
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Lisa wakes before dawn and wriggles out of the tent to find a long-legged bird standing on a log on the beach. It stares at her with curious yellow eyes, then flies off over the lake. It looks as exotic as a pterodactyl, although she will later learn it was just a blue heron. Soon after, Mick wakes up and dives headlong into the freezing cold lake. Lisa watches ripples spread across the surface of the lake until he climbs back onto the beach. She can’t take her eyes from the rippling water for a long time, certain something else would surface. But nothing does.
At the lake, Lisa has a series of encounters with nature which suggest that something deeper or more magical lies beneath the mundane, everyday world around her. The heron studies her as intently as she studies it and shows no fear in her presence; the water ripples as if something potentially sinister lurks below its surface. Though nothing appears, Lisa’s fixation on it, especially when Mick remains underwater, foreshadows his death and subtly points towards Lisa’s developing connection with the spirit world.
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As Mick makes breakfast, he and Mom tease each other familiarly. On their way back to Kemano, Mom stops the boat to show Lisa the Stone Man—a rock formation that looks just like a black, hunched-over figure watching the lake—and, Lisa is sure, watching Lisa herself.
Mick and Mom clearly share a history about which Lisa knows little if anything at this point. Their good-natured teasing and obvious affection for each other reinforces the importance of familial relationships to thriving in a world full of painful experiences. Lisa’s feeling that the stone man watches her again points towards her sensitivity to the mythical and magical things that go on just beyond the boundary of the regular world.
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The temperature has fallen by the time Mom, Mick, and Lisa return to Kemano. Uncle Geordie and Aunt Edith are up at Alcan getting more fuel. Mick goes off to do some line fishing; Mom makes Lisa do her homework and chores. When she has earned her freedom, Lisa runs headlong into the bright, cold morning without her coat. From the beach, she turns into the woods toward the graveyard. She explores the decaying carved-wood grave markers in the hush of the clearing. She gets colder and wetter all the time, and fearing that Mom will make her stay indoors once she returns, she stays outside tracing wolf tracks and exploring the abandoned village until she hears Mick return.
Mom remains in the house while Mick and Lisa spend the day outdoors connecting to nature (by fishing, in Mick’s case) and the past (by exploring the graveyard and village, in Lisa’s). In a way, this exploration seems to pose a danger to Lisa—she’s overexposed to the elements, and indeed she falls ill by the end of the day. In contrast, Mom makes herself “safe” by isolating in the house, but she also denies her connection to the world around her. The cemetery carries a feeling of sadness, but also of peace. Here, the boundaries between the buried dead and the verdant life of the forest blur.
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Lisa starts to follow Mick inside the house but slips back out to the porch when she noticed him sneaking up behind Mom. She watches as he wraps his arms gently around Mom’s waist and tenderly kisses her neck. Mom slowly disentangles herself and pushes him away without looking in his eyes. Lisa backs off the porch silently without betraying her presence. She waits outside until she feels nauseated and shakes with cold and emotion. In the morning, she returns to Kitamaat early with Uncle Geordie
Much of the story in this book follows Lisa’s growth and maturation; as in many coming-of-age stories, part of this growth involves her increasing awareness of her own sexuality and the complicated relationships between the adults around her. In this moment, she realizes that there’s a much more intimate connection between Mom and Mick than she had realized.
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Later, Aunt Edith tells Lisa about their misadventure on the trip home. She, Mick, and Mom were towing the small punt boat when a wave flooded and sank it, threatening to pull the trawler under too. Mom tried to untie it but couldn’t and Mick had to cut it free with his knife. In the few seconds it took for him to do so, Mom saw porpoises in the water. At first, she screamed because they looked like people. But then she realized they were a good omen, there to assure her that she and everyone else would be safe.
As in the earlier incident with the trapped halibut, Mom’s vision simultaneously terrifies and comforts her. As in almost every other example in the book, it proves almost impossible to easily distinguish good from bad omens, at least in the moment. Only in retrospect—after a death, after a moment of salvation—does the omen’s meaning become clear.
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Returning to the present, Lisa remembers the greengage tree covered in netting to keep the fruit out of the crows’ reach. The clever birds find ways to get it anyway. She remembers feathers falling from the half-eaten chickens, dropped by the hawks, and the puzzling and disturbing sight of their decapitated heads lying on the ground beneath it like fallen fruit.
Lisa remembers the day hawks got into the chicken coop. In this moment, it seems that the crows might be aligned with the figure of the trickster, since Lisa suggests that they might have helped the hawks reach the chickens, with their clever ability to breach Dad’s protective barriers. The exuberant life of the crows congregating on the tree contrasts sharply with the gruesome deaths of the chickens, offering a harsh reminder of the fragility of life and inescapability of death.
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In the middle of the second night after the call from the Coast Guard about Jimmy’s disappearance, Lisa rips apart her room looking for more cigarettes. There are three at the bottom of her purse. The clock says 2:47 a.m. Rain blows against her window. She thinks about how dark and calm it is deep under the ocean’s surface, where tiny bits of decaying animals and plants fall like eternal, silent snow. She considers that humans have traveled 384,000 kilometers to the moon but have never touched the deepest ocean floor.
Lisa spends a sleepless night worrying about Jimmy and thinking about the bottom of the ocean. Like her connection to the spirit world, the ambiguous ocean teems with beauty and life but also great danger. It also points to the limitations of human knowledge and reminds readers that many mysteries remain shrouded from human knowledge on this earth, making the supernatural elements of the story feel more probable.
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Lisa hears the crows squawking in the greengage tree. She remembers how Ma-ma-oo told Jimmy that feeding the crows brought good luck. He used to feed them before every swim meet, and he often left shiny presents for them. Once he and Lisa had watched in amazement as Jimmy’s favorite bird, Spotty, lugged a broken pocket watch into the street and waited patiently for a car to run over it. When the first car had straddled the watch, she carefully adjusted its position and waited for another to crush it beneath its tires. Then she selected the pieces she wanted and flew off. The crows still hang around the porch, fighting for the best spots around Jimmy’s chair.
Up to this point in the book, the crows have primarily been associated with bad luck—their words about the bottom of the ocean don’t bode well for Jimmy’s safety, and they predict (or possibly contribute to) the chickens’ death. Now Ma-ma-oo introduces the idea that the crows might confer good luck on Jimmy. Thus, like Lisa’s connection to the spirit world, the crows seem to have great power which proves to be helpful or harmful in equal measure. Their intelligence also aligns with Ma-ma-oo’s stories about shapeshifters, since they seem to possess an almost human intelligence. They reinforce the idea that inexplicable, almost magical forces exist in the world.
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Lisa’s memories carry her to fifth grade sex education. After the class, she goes home with Tab. Aunt Trudy and Josh are drinking with friends. The hazy cigarette smoke and yeasty smell of the beers make Lisa queasy. Trudy demands to know if Tab “fuck[s] around” and with whom. Tab stares at her mother as a horrified Lisa leaps to Tab’s defense. Then Trudy turns on Lisa, attacking Lisa’s “precious Uncle Mick” as an old “horny dog,” drunk and “panting” after Mom. Tab and Lisa retreat to the basement as soon as they can.
Part of Lisa’s coming of age involves her dawning awareness of the complexities of adult relationships, especially in terms of sex and romance. In her drunken state, Trudy inappropriately sexualizes her daughter and niece in ways that mirror racist assumptions about Indigenous women—assumptions the book implies Trudy herself faced in residential school and beyond. Lisa, ever the pugilistic warrior, jumps to Tab’s defense. But when Trudy hits her where it hurts—in relationship to her beloved Uncle Mick—she doesn’t know how to respond, especially because Trudy’s allegations echo the interaction Lisa witnessed at Kemano.
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Although Tab tells Lisa that Trudy won’t remember anything in the morning, Lisa goes back to ferret out more information. Unable to think of a sly way to trick her aunt into revealing the truth, she asks outright if Mom and Uncle Mick had an affair. Trudy explains that Mick dated Mom but left before it got serious; Mom started dating Dad, and they fell in love. Then Trudy, claiming to be under the weather instead of hung over, offers to make Lisa and Tab food.
Although the information Lisa seeks from Trudy indicates that she’s not a little girl any longer, Trudy still treats her (and Tab) like children when she maintains the fiction of illness. The girls know as well as Trudy that a hangover, not a bug, causes her upset stomach. The complicated history between Mom and Mick points to the long-lasting, intergenerational effects of systemic racism and cultural violence against Indigenous Peoples; Mick’s early experiences in residential school and as an activist kept him from forming stable romantic relationships.
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 Lisa imagines a sea otter diving into a hazy kelp bed, snatching up an unsuspecting sea urchin and carrying it to the surface to eat the urchin’s soft underbelly, then dropping its shell to the bottom of the ocean, where it lands gently on the dark hair of a corpse.
Lisa’s ruminations on life in the ocean obsessively focus on its depths, suggesting her subconscious fear (or belief) that Jimmy is dead. The corpse in this moment may be his; it may also refer to Mick, towards whose death by drowning this section of the book has been building. The image of the otter, the sea urchin, and the corpse also points towards a certain harshness in the natural world—eat or be eaten—but it also invokes the cyclical nature of life and the ways in which the dead and the living nourish and support each other.
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In a flashback, Lisa recalls the return of the little man, one morning after a long absence during which she had convinced herself that he was just a bad dream. He dances a jig on her dresser, falls into her laundry basket, and sneaks around behind her to lay a gentle, comforting hand on her shoulder. Later that morning, she sits on the porch steps nursing a headache. Mick plops down next to her and asks what ails her. She demands to know if he will take her with him if or when he leaves. He ruffles her hair and tells her that he can’t. But she can come with him to check the family fishing net. She refuses because of her headache. The morning passes in haze.
The little man visits Lisa because of the strength of her connection to the spirit realm, but in her immaturity and inexperience, she tries to turn her back on him and his warnings. Thus, she willfully ignores his warning on the day of Mick’s death, even when their final conversation involves his inability to take her with him when he leaves. This will be the last time that Lisa ignores the little man’s warnings.
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Eventually, Uncle Geordie calls to warn Dad that seals are in the nets. Dad says Mick is checking the net, but he drives with Lisa to check anyway. They find Mick’s truck. Dad honks the horn and grumbles about Mick’s propensity for flirting. Lisa tries to tell herself that nothing is wrong. She remembers the rest of the morning like a movie: walking to the dock; the motor on Dad’s boat refusing to start easily; the choppy ocean; the unnaturally heavy net; Mick’s empty speedboat bumping against the shore; Dad firing his gun at the teeming seals and telling Lisa not to look; the morning light slanting over the mountains; a raven hopping through tree branches; the sound of the boat rushing back to shore.
Lisa’s sense of dread increases as she drives to the harbor with Dad. Her insistent assertion to herself that nothing is wrong mirrors a dream she will later have in which Ma-ma-oo tells herself the same thing, even though things are clearly very wrong. Mick’s death shows how thin the line between life—represented by the sustenance the fish in the net can provide the family—and death can be. Lisa experiences such trauma from this first, pivotal loss that her memory fragments into a series of images rather than a cohesive narrative.
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In the present, Lisa awakes from another dream about Monkey Beach to the sound of Spotty the crow mumbling “la’sda,” which means “go into the water” in Haisla. It’s early morning, and Lisa stumbles downstairs for cocoa. When the phone rings, she steels herself—she knows it’s either very good or very bad news. On the other end of the line, she hears Dad’s shaking voice; the Coast Guard found an empty life raft which they presume came from Josh’s and Jimmy’s boat. Lisa promises to come as quickly as she can and hangs up the phone. But the earliest available flights won’t get her to Namu for days; going by car, train, or bus will take nearly as long. Suddenly, she remembers the speedboat. Although it’s slow, it will still get her down the channel within a day. And she can stop at Monkey Beach on the way.
The book turns quickly from the last time Lisa ignored a message from the spirit world—the warning about Mick’s death—to the present, where she continues to struggle to understand what the crows want her to do. Spotty’s calls warn her of impending news, but until she hears Dad’s voice she can’t guess whether it’s good or bad, since the crows represent both kinds of luck. The way the first section of the book builds up towards Mick’s death—the first serious loss in Lisa’s life—certainly suggests her belief that Jimmy has met a similar fate. But the crows also have a positive message for her, which suddenly clicks into place as she realizes she can go to the water herself and reach her Mom and Dad more quickly that way.
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Lisa packs quickly, before Aunt Edith can wake up and make her wait for Uncle Geordie to take her. She leaves a note about the life raft and steals the keys to the speedboat. At the docks in the early morning light, she uncovers the boat and bails out several months’ worth of water before firing up the engine. She buys four cans of fuel from the marina gas station, then she passes her house on her way to open water. She’s cold and visibility is poor, but there’s nothing like being on the water to clear one’s head.
Lisa takes fate into her own hands in this moment; she’s at a point in her life where she’s learning to take her fighting instincts and direct her energies towards things she can change rather than indiscriminately lashing out whenever she’s in pain. The next section of the book will excavate the long and arduous path she traversed to learn this lesson in the years following Mick’s death.
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