Skip to content

That Shakespearean Rag

A Blog About Books and Reading

  • Home
  • About
  • Account
  • Log In
  • Newsletter
  • Contact

That Shakespearean Rag

A Blog About Books and Reading

  • Home
  • About
  • Account
  • Log In
  • Newsletter
  • Contact
  • Home
  • CanLit
  • The debut novel by Jessica Johns reclaims Indigenous horror tropes in a story about pervasive familial grief
CanLitNovelsThe Horror Show

The debut novel by Jessica Johns reclaims Indigenous horror tropes in a story about pervasive familial grief

January 17, 2023January 17, 2023
by Steven Beattie

What is apparent throughout Bad Cree is Johns’s facility for dealing with the rocky and tumultuous terrain of familial memory.

This content is for Monthly Reader members only.
Login Join Now
Cherie DimalineGraham MastertonJessica JohnsStephen Graham JonesStephen King

Share this post

Post navigation

Previous article

Around the web: Standing up for morally ambiguous characters, a romance novelist fakes her own death, RIP Russell Banks, and more

Next article

Vancouver writer Jen Sookfong Lee’s new essay collection locates itself at the intersection of pop culture and identity

Steven Beattie

Related posts

In Lost in Canada, Lydia Perović reconsiders her adopted country’s status as a bastion of liberal democracy

January 24, 2023January 24, 2023

Vancouver writer Jen Sookfong Lee’s new essay collection locates itself at the intersection of pop culture and identity

January 18, 2023January 18, 2023

With “The Heart of a Pig,” novelist and book columnist James Grainger resurrects the serial format

January 13, 2023January 13, 2023
Powered by the Elsie WordPress theme