Originally I’d planned to split this post into two, as I gradually read through the categories for the Toronto Public Library Reading Challenge (Part One and Two), but with a lot of desk hours lost to illness this year, I’ve combined them.
(Notes: Other books read for the challenge were discussed here, here, and here. And, if you want to see the categories but are blocked from the library’s website, I’ve linked them to the coral-coloured button previously posted here.)
The additional layer I added to my challenge? My twenty-four selections, inspired by the categories in a five-by-five Bingo grid, were all by writers who identify/identified as Indigenous, First Nations, and/or Inuit, including members of the following nations:
- Anishnaabe,
- Binnizá/Maya Ch’orti,
- Blackfeet,
- Bundjalung,
- Potawatomi,
- Cherokee/German-Greek,
- Couchiching First Nation/Ojibwe,
- Cowichan,
- Diné,
- Dene/Métis,
- Gwawaenuk,
- Haisla/Heiltsuk,
- Kanien’kehá:ka,
- Kanien’kehá:ka/Mohawk St. Regis,
- Kanien’kehá:ka Wakeniáhton (Turtle Clan),
- Kikuyu,
- Norway House Cree,
- Ojibwe/Cree,
- As’in’i’wa’chi Ni’yaw Rocky Mountain Cree,
- Swampy Cree Beaver Clan of the Opaskwayak Cree, and
- Secwépemc.

Each year, I read at least 25 books by Indigenous writers, but for 2025 I wanted to increase the amount of non-fiction I read by them: the library challenge seemed like a great way to help shift my habits a little, and it worked. Even though non-fiction usually make up 25-30% of my reading, of the 34 books I read this year by Indigenous writers, about half were non-fiction!
Jordin Tootoo’s All the Way: My Life on Ice (2014) is a book I’ve considered many times when browsing in the library because it’s the first of two memoirs by this hockey player. Because when you’re not very interested in something yourself, two books on the topic seems even better? But, in fact, I have really enjoyed some hockey stories. Like Bruce McDougall’s The Last Hockey Game (non-fiction) and Richard Wagamese’s novel Indian Horse. And now I can add this memoir but, admittedly, less for the hockey and more for this NHL player’s experience of navigating pro-athletics as an Inuk man. What really stands out to me are his relationship with his father, who taught him about having a right relationship with the land (growing up in Rankin Inlet), the sequence of events that led to his first contract (in Nashville), and the challenges of balancing northern values he inherited with the southern life he was living. The book is written with Stephen Brunt, who’s written about plenty of other sports figures (and way more than two books).
This book is one of the first I identified for this challenge (#21), as a Book about an Athlete. The next popped up while searching the library catalogue for another book, and I realised his account of his years in residential school would suit the category for having been formerly incarcerated (#6); to be clear, he committed no crime, but Indigenous children were compelled to attend residential school and often faced such deprivation and cruelty that it was akin to a prison sentence.
Chief Robert Joseph’s Namwayut: A Pathway to Reconciliation (2022) is dedicated to the “Survivors of Indian residential schools with special remembrance for those who never returned home. These are the child heroes who exposed the truth and the spectre of genocide.” The story begins with memories of growing up on Gilford Island, north and east of Vancouver Island (in colonial terms)—the village of Gwa’yasdam. I love the way he described his childhood home, the front of the house extending over the water: where “the ebb and flow of the current and tiny waves could be heard.” And the view he describes, of a natural aquarium, rich with so many forms of life. He also spent eleven years in residential school and his life’s work has revolved around the idea that each of us is one in the universe and one with the universe: “When I started to see myself as part of a whole, when I reconciled with myself, everything changed for me. I suddenly realised that my well being depended on my connecting with others, sharing others’ stories, understanding others’ gifts.” This story of one of the hereditary chiefs of the Gwawaenuk nation is told in simplest terms, and whether he’s writing about his days as a young reporter or sharing wisdom, his voice is engaging and inviting.
As the days in 2025 dwindled, I wondered if I would be able to find a book by an Indigenous author about AI before year-end: would it be the only category (#10) I’d miss in my quest to focus on Indigenous writers for every square in the challenge? Enter: Daniel H. Wilson’s Robopocalypse (2011), the Cherokee writer’s first novel (his first book was non-fiction, published in 2005 while he was in grad school: How to Survive a Robot Uprising).
Wilson’s got quite a reputation in the genre and was, for instance, selected to write to the sequel to Michael Crichton’s The Andromeda Strain. Despite being a tremendously difficult word to type, Robopocalypse, is an easy and inviting read. It reads a little like a cross between Kim Stanley Robinson’s The Ministry of Time* (structurally, with excerpts from documents and publications, along with quotations, so there are a lot of short segments) and Robert Cargill’s Sea of Rust (thematically, raising questions about the nature of humanity and how one behaves/operates in stressful situations). For my taste, I prefer the Cargill style (still lots of action but ultimately character-driven), but there were times when I absolutely hated a scene in Robopocalypse but the dialogue and events were so compelling I read on. Maybe I won’t read the follow-up (Robogenesis), but then again, I might—or another of his books. I do enjoy “discovering” a new-to-me writer via a challenge like this. [*EDIT: Ministry of the Future. Thanks, Stefanie.]
Thanks to the Toronto Public Library for hosting such a fun challenge again this year and inviting everyone to keep their stacks and shelves fresh. And thanks to Rebecca for her monthly #LoveYourLibrary posts (I still cannot believe that a library overseas has a bra exchange, but I’m guessing that borrowing snowshoes sounds weird to the folks wearing those swapped bras.)
Despite knowing virtually nothing about hockey I suspect I would enjoy Tootoo’s memoir – I do enjoy sports in general and his backstory sounds interesting (sad.) I commend you on expanding your library’s challenge with the Indigenous layer. I am determined to expand my reading by Indigenous authors this year.
I think you’re more sportsy than I am, though; I watch live events only occasionally, and only since we started subscribing to CBC (it’s free but has the MOST annoying and repetitive ads) as an Elbows Up action. If you’re interested in Alexis Wright, Leslie Marmon Silko, or James Welch, and are interested in reading something together, they’re all on my list for this year (AW starting mid-February, then Silko bit later, then Welch).
I keep meaning to do the TPL challenge, but fail. (This year for sure!?) It would be precisely ‘Book about an Athlete’ that would do me in, LOL. But the Tootoo one did sound like it could be interesting.
Maybe you would be more inspired if you attended the release? (I never have.) I think they’ve moved it to February this year, and wonder whether it will still be at Runnymede.
Libraries for the win!!!
I’m sorry to hear you haven’t been well this year, anything that gets in the way of my reading and reviewing always seems like a bigger downer when it prevents us from doing what we love. Happy New Year Marcie, and I look forward to reading along with you in 2026 🙂
Thanks, Anne: I hope 2026 is a terrific year for you and your family, for your reading stack and your reviewing goals!
I looked at “Robopocalypse” and thought, would you pronounce it “Ro-bopocalypse” or “Robo-pocalypse” but then I saw “Robogenesis” and thought it would have to be the latter.
I feel like you about the hockey books. I don’t have to be interested in the sport to be interested in a book. Sometimes it’s because of the sorts of reasons you give, and sometimes it’s simply because I get to understand the passion for something that mystifies me. Tim Winton’s Breath did that for me.
I too would like to read more nonfiction works by First Nations writers, particularly those that aren’t memoirs though I like memoirs too. But I think you get my meaning.
That’s how I’m imagining it too, but I’ve not heard him say it (if I learn, I’ll come back and update).
Yes, the pursuit of excellence alone can be enough of a reason, I agree. That’s worked for me with sports in fiction too.
Completely: there is a preponderance of memoir and history, and that’s been influencing my thinking about whether to repeat this goal for 2026.
Well done! (It’s not a bra exchange so much as a recycling point. I assume the unwanted items go to a charity working in developing countries.)
/curtsies Thank you! (Aww, I had just gotten used to the idea of a bra exchange: I went from baffled to thrilled to disappointed, all in a swoop.) I’m thinking of different ways I could still participate in #LYL before spring. We’ll see.
I’ve read How to Survive a Robot Uprising! It was quite funny as well as useful, though robotics has advanced since then so I’m sure it needs an update. Still, I will never ever own a roomba! From your description I’m not sure I’d like Robopocalypse though. Do you mean Kim Stanley Robinson’s Ministry for the Future or Kaliane Bradley’s Ministry of Time?
Maybe that’s why it sounded familiar to me! I have a hunch you’d prefer his non-fiction. Ohhhh, thank you: Ministry for the Future (I haven’t read Ministry of Time yet…I started from the library once and liked what I read, but it was called back for another reader). Really: HOW many ministries must there be?!
So important of you to intentionally read books by Indigenous authors! I should strive to follow in your footsteps. And I haven’t read Robopocalypse but I sense I may feel similarly to you about reading that book… glad you’re putting yourself out there and trying new genres/reading about new things even if they’re uncomfortable. Yay reading!
Somewhere in a comment (but I don’t think it was here), I recall that you mentioned you wanted to start to read some Indigenous writers, and I\m sure you’ll get to it eventually. There are so many different ways to read diversely; we can’t read everything! And I was just saying on your blog that I am not sporty, but, look, see, I can reeeeeead sporty at least! heheh
I don’t do challenges, but I set myself ‘projects’ so in the end what’s the difference. I don’t think I’ve ever read a sports memoir and yet I follow sport pretty closely, though less so than when I was young. But in the end everyone’s life is unique and can be made into interesting reading (I surprised myself a few years ago by enjoying Kris Jenner’s Kardashian memoir).
I haven’t read Sea of Rust (should I?) but I’m interested that a novel about a robot is ‘character driven’, but then that’s true too of the Murderbot series.
I suppose that’s different if you only pick easy things for your projects? heheh Actually I prefer the word project; I don’t understand why ‘challenge’ was so commonly used in early blogland (maybe to lend gravitas to the simple act of reading)? Occasionally I enjoy veering off the usual path, and for some reason I had regularly picked up this guy’s memoirs but I don’t think it ever would have felt like the “right time” without an additional prompt.
Mr BIP is the reason I read Sea of Rust; it really shouldn’t be a book that I particularly enjoyed, but he was right, I really loved it. He also liked the Murderbot series BTW but has only read two (I think you’ve read them all; I want to read them, as well, but who knows).