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Living in the Tall Grass by R. Stacey Laforme
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Living in the Tall Grass

Poems of Reconciliation

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Narrator R. Stacey Laforme

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Length 1 hour 41 minutes
Language English
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In Living in the Tall Grass: Poems of Reconciliation audiobook, Chief Stacey Laforme performs his poems that tell a history of his people and let people see through the eyes of Indigenous people. In it, he hits hard on matters of residential schools, the environment, suicide among Indigenous youth, domestic abuse, and so on, but also writes poems of love and hope.

Stacey Laforme was born on a cold December morning into a life of alcoholism and abuse. At fifteen, he left home and lived on the street, eventually finding a home with both of his grandmothers. He started his first job at twelve years old, eventually going into the family business and joining the iron workers union. He attended college late in life. He retired from iron work and, as he admits, โ€œIf I am honest, I was not the best at iron work.โ€ After his mother passed away at the age of fifty, he was elected to council. He ran and was elected Chief of the Mississaugas of the Anishnaabe in December 2015, a few months after his father passed away. Chief Laforme says, โ€œI am dedicated to my people, and to all the people who live within our treaty lands.โ€In 2017, Chief Laforme became only the third Honourary Senior Fellow of Massey College, Toronto, joining The Duke of Edinburgh and The Chancellor of Oxford University in the rarest honour the college bestows.

Stacey Laforme was born on a cold December morning into a life of alcoholism and abuse. At fifteen, he left home and lived on the street, eventually finding a home with both of his grandmothers. He started his first job at twelve years old, eventually going into the family business and joining the iron workers union. He attended college late in life. He retired from iron work and, as he admits, โ€œIf I am honest, I was not the best at iron work.โ€ After his mother passed away at the age of fifty, he was elected to council. He ran and was elected Chief of the Mississaugas of the Anishnaabe in December 2015, a few months after his father passed away. Chief Laforme says, โ€œI am dedicated to my people, and to all the people who live within our treaty lands.โ€In 2017, Chief Laforme became only the third Honourary Senior Fellow of Massey College, Toronto, joining The Duke of Edinburgh and The Chancellor of Oxford University in the rarest honour the college bestows.

Illustration of person sitting

Shop small, give big!

With credit bundles, you choose the number of credits and your recipient picks their audiobooks—all in support of local bookstores.

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Limited-time offer

Get two free audiobooks!

Nowโ€™s a great time to shop indie. When you start a new one credit per month membership supporting local bookstores with promo code SWITCH, weโ€™ll give you two bonus audiobook credits at sign-up.

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Reviews

โ€œ??All peoples learn from authentically written expressions about not only our struggles but hope and vision. Chief Stacey Laforme has eloquently written pieces which invoke our emotion and inspire reflection and change.โ€โ€” ?Perry Bellegarde, National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations โ€œ?The poetry of Chief Stacey Laforme illustrates the wonderful state of being alive. His words compel us to improve our capacity to listen, to understand and learn to live together. It is a generous gift from one who cares deeply and looks for good in the world.โ€โ€” ? Hon. Elizabeth Dowdeswell, Lieutenant Governor of Ontario Expand reviews
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