b'READING CORNERBy Ingrid GreenRECOMMENDED READSTelling our stories is a critical element of who we are as a people. Teaching and learning through stories is a tradition that has been carried on since time immemorial. Indigenous authors and storytellers are sharing their truths and, in doing so, helping us heal from our trauma and experiences. For some, reading has been a way to escape from reality. For Indigenous people, seeing ourselves within literature allows our reality to not be something we need to escape from, but part of our healing journey. The following is a blended list of Indigenous classics and newer releases for your enjoyment.In Search of The Break April Raintree Katherena Vermette Beatrice Culleton MosionierHouse of Anansi PressPeguis PublishersHeart Berries: A Memoir Keeper N MeTerese Marie Mailhot Richard WagameseDoubleday Canada, an imprint of Anchor Canada Penguin Random House CanadaI Am Woman:In My Own Moccasins:A Native Perspective onA Memoir of ResilienceSociology and FeminismHelen Knott Lee Maracle University of Regina PressPress Gang PublishersIndigenous Toronto:Two Old Women: Stories That CarryAn Alaska Legend This Placeof Betrayal, Courage Edited by Denise Bolduc, and Survival Mnawaate Gordon-Corbiere, Velma WallisRebeka Tabobondung and Epicenter Press Brian Wright-McLeod Coach House BooksUnreconciled:Family, Truth, andSeven Fallen Feathers:Indigenous Resistance Racism, Death, and Hard Jesse WenteTruths in a Northern CityAllen Lane, an imprint of PenguinTanya Talaga Random House Canada House of Anansi Press72Spring/Summer 2022'