WEATHER ALERT

Métis women’s struggles span generations

Advertisement

Advertise with us

Beautifully crafted and deeply moving, Manitoba-born, Newfoundland and Labrador-based Métis author Michelle Porter’s debut novel is a testament to the strength of Métis women.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Subscribe and receive a limited-edition Free Press branded hat or tote.

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $205*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*First annual payment billed as $205.00 + GST for one year. This annual subscription will automatically renew at $233.00 + GST every 52 weeks (10% off the regular annual price of $259.35). Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 03/06/2023 (1135 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Beautifully crafted and deeply moving, Manitoba-born, Newfoundland and Labrador-based Métis author Michelle Porter’s debut novel is a testament to the strength of Métis women.

Porter may be known best for her poetry, including her 2019 collection, Inquiries.

However, her background includes journalism, two works of non-fiction about her family history (including last year’s Scratching River) and teaching creative writing and Métis literature at Memorial University.

A Grandmother Begins the Story

A Grandmother Begins the Story

Porter’s range of experience shows in A Grandmother Begins the Story, a story about five generations of Métis women trying to understand their identities, overcome personal struggles and better connect with each other.

Porter writes in brief, no-nonsense prose that reflects both her journalistic and poetic backgrounds.

The characters take turns speaking, with some chapters only a few paragraphs long.

Carter, a young mother, recently separated from her husband, is struggling to parent her son and to find out what the Métis heritage she only learned of in her teens truly means to her.

“I felt guilty because it wasn’t like I had any sort of life to offer him. I mean, nothing like my ex’s parents, who’d spoil him like crazy, give him his own room, teach him their language and culture. Which is good right? I mean I knew f— all about my own,” Carter tells us.

Allie, Carter’s mother, is trying to make up for her absence from Carter’s childhood and protect Carter from the abuse Allie suffered from her own mother, Lucie.

And Lucie has just reached out to Carter, asking for help to die by suicide so Lucie can join her ancestors in the afterlife.

Great-grandmother Geneviève isn’t much help. Once a heart-stopping beauty and pianist, Geneviève is about to die and just wants to conquer her alcoholism before she goes.

Meanwhile Mamé, the great-great-grandmother, watches over her descendants from the afterlife, unable to rest until her daughters are at peace.

Parallel to the human women’s narratives run the stories of a herd of buffalo, including an angry, motherless calf named Dee who ignores the stories of her aunties and teachings of the Earth at her own expense.

With so many characters, the plot is tricky to follow at times.

Bojan Fürst photo
                                Michelle Porter

Bojan Fürst photo

Michelle Porter

As the title suggests, the novel takes a matriarchal view of family.

It’s rare for a novel to lean so heavily on the women’s perspectives. Men play minor roles in the narratives, and almost never positive ones.

Métis traditions such as beading, fiddling, dancing and storytelling serve as constant motifs.

In fact, the shifting perspectives that bring the characters closer to each other are reminiscent of beadwork, where individual pieces come together to form one work of art.

Though their writing styles differ, readers may be reminded of fellow Métis author Katharena Vermette, who in The Strangers and The Break also delves deeply into women’s stories and relies on multiple narratives in a single novel.

A grandmother begins this story; readers should hope Porter continues telling more.

Kathryne Cardwell is a writer and settler in Treaty 1 territory.

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

Puzzles Palace

1 minute read Wednesday, Jul. 8, 2026

To solve our puzzles, please subscribe with this special offer: |

Fort Garry Hotel on Métis federation’s radar

Scott Billeck 4 minute read Preview

Fort Garry Hotel on Métis federation’s radar

Scott Billeck 4 minute read Friday, Jul. 10, 2026

One of Winnipeg’s most iconic buildings, the Fort Garry Hotel on Broadway, is next on the Manitoba Métis Federation’s list of acquisitions.

“We are not done with our commitment to investing in Winnipeg’s downtown,” president David Chartrand said Friday, the same day the federation announced it has purchased the former National Research Council property on Ellice Avenue downtown.

“One potential new acquisition we’re considering, if the price is right and the partnership is positive, is the Fort Garry Hotel. It is an iconic part of Winnipeg’s history and its future, just like the Red River Métis,” Chartrand said.

The 113-year-old hotel was co-listed for sale in May by real estate brokerage firms Avison Young and Cushman & Wakefield Winnipeg, but doesn’t have a list price.

Read
Friday, Jul. 10, 2026

Rage politics meets its serious counterpart

David McLaughlin 5 minute read Preview

Rage politics meets its serious counterpart

David McLaughlin 5 minute read Yesterday at 2:02 AM CDT

Serious times call for serious politics. That means serious leaders offering serious solutions.

If all this sounds like a campaign slogan for the establishment, you’re probably right. But its rising resonance may well prove the unravelling of the conservative populist rage that has been driving politics in Canada, the United States and Europe.

Already we are seeing signs that the “burn it all down” rhetoric of more than a decade of MAGA Trump in the United States, Brexit and Faragism in the United Kingdom, and the angry and anti- establishment brand of Poilievre conservatism in Canada, has crested. Today, voters are yearning for stability and real solutions, the exact opposite of what divisive populist politics promise.

Events, current and past, rightly fuelled the anger. The 2008 financial crisis marked the beginning of our current “end times.” It was followed in short order by the first triumph of Donald Trump’s Make America Great Again movement in 2016, Brexit in Britain in 2016, the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas atrocities in Israel and that country’s two-year invasion and war in Gaza, and the triumphant return of Trump and MAGA in 2024. Now comes the ongoing war with Iran launched by the U.S. and Israel.

Read
Yesterday at 2:02 AM CDT

Returner Vaval, QB Brown lead Bombers past Argos in season’s most complete effort

Taylor Allen 7 minute read Preview

Returner Vaval, QB Brown lead Bombers past Argos in season’s most complete effort

Taylor Allen 7 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 8:21 AM CDT

It was the loudest Princess Auto Stadium has been all season.

Moments after fumbling a fourth quarter punt that put the Toronto Argonauts in scoring range, Winnipeg Blue Bombers returner Trey Vaval bounced back in a big way.

Argos kicker Lirim Hajrullahu misfired on a 40-yard field goal with nine minutes remaining and Vaval made the visitors pay by racing 129 yards to the opposite end zone to boost the home side’s lead to 29-14.

Vaval, who had four return touchdowns in his sensational rookie campaign last year, entered the contest ranked first in the CFL in punt-return yards and second on kickoffs — the only thing he was missing was his first score.

Read
Updated: Yesterday at 8:21 AM CDT

Banned drunk driver in crash charged with getting behind wheel again

Erik Pindera 3 minute read Preview

Banned drunk driver in crash charged with getting behind wheel again

Erik Pindera 3 minute read Yesterday at 2:02 AM CDT

A Winnipeg man who served time for drunkenly slamming a minivan into an off-duty police officer riding a motorcycle in 2023 is accused of getting behind the wheel, despite court orders.

Braedon Lee Gordon, 25, is charged with one count of driving while prohibited for an incident on March 2. His next court date is later this month.

Dan Léveillé, a veteran Winnipeg Police Service constable who was left with life-altering injuries in the June 14, 2023, collision, said he was not surprised to learn of the new charge.

“This is just another one of those stories, where a habitual, repeat offender is charged for the same offence. After having served time, his behaviour continues,” said Léveillé.

Read
Yesterday at 2:02 AM CDT

Letters,

7 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

Multiple approaches required downtown

Re: Frustration, not fear, swells in Exchange after drug crackdown (July 9)

The recent coverage of Winnipeg’s drug crisis makes it sound as though compassion and public safety are somehow opposites. They are not.

One business owner said she was “absolutely enraged” by the police response and insisted, “This is not an unsafe situation” because she was not personally seeing violence.