Young Adult Fiction Aboriginal & Indigenous
The Fragments that Remain
- Publisher
- Cormorant Books
- Initial publish date
- Mar 2025
- Category
- Aboriginal & Indigenous, Death & Dying, Epistolary (Letters & Diaries)
- Recommended Grade
- 9 to 12
- Recommended Reading age
- 15 to 18
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781770867796
- Publish Date
- Mar 2025
- List Price
- $16.95
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
First-year college student Andy can’t afford to slow down. Study, volunteer, work, make new friends, fall in love — whatever it takes to keep her from obsessing over her brother Ally’s death, which was ruled suicide by overdose. Navigating a new life chapter without her “honorary twin,” Andy writes letters to him as she strives to embrace her bisexuality and her Indigenous identity. Once she discovers Ally’s hidden poems, Andy pours over them to make sense of her brother’s life — and his death.
Back in senior year, Ally dreamed of being a poet. His parents encouraged him to write as a hobby, but they always expected him to inherit the family-owned bookshop with his sister. Ally wrote to cope with his emptiness, until he turned to drugs to fill the void.
Reaching for her brother through unanswered words, Andy must reckon with living a once-shared life alone.
About the author
Mackenzie Angeconeb (Aan-ji-qui-ni-ai’ib) (she/they) is an Anishinaabekwe author and educator from Lac Seul First Nation. She began writing while attending university, incorporating themes from the common pains of Indigenous youths and families, as well as her own coming-of-age. In their spare time, they like to paint with watercolours and acrylics, bead earrings, read second-hand books, or learn Anishinaabemowin when their schedule permits. The Fragments that Remain is her debut novel. Angeconeb lives in Sioux Lookout, ON.
Editorial Reviews
“[The] Fragments that Remain takes the reader on a candid journey of brokenness and awakenings. Through layers of grief, the narrator navigates the path toward hope and healing with beautifully authentic thoughts, feelings and experiences. This novel, the first from Mackenzie Angeconeb, is a triumph.”
Valerie Sherrard, award-winning author of The Glory Wind and Standing on Neptune