Margaret Pokiak-Fenton
Margaret Pokiak-Fenton | |
---|---|
Occupation | Writer |
Nationality | Canadian |
Period | From 2010 to present |
Genre | Children Literature |
Spouse | Lyle Fenton |
Margaret Pokiak-Fenton is a Canadian Aboriginal author of children’s books.[1] She was born in the late 1930s on Holman Island, Nunavut, Canada. Her family was travelling to Banks Island where they would hunt during the winter and remained there until she was eight years old. Margaret is Inuvialuit, which is the Aboriginal community of the Inuvialuit settlement region. As a child she learned how to drive a dog-sled, how to hunt and would travel on a schooner on a regular basis to gather supplies.[2]
When she was eight years old she moved to join the other kids at the Catholic residential school in Aklavik. Aklavik was a residence of the fur trade, which her great-grandfather established.[3] In her book "Fatty Legs" Margaret describes this experience and reveals her eagerness to learn how to read and her desire to join school, in spite of the oppressive atmosphere present in these schools.[4]
After her schooling, Margaret moved back to her family, which was in Tuktoyaktuk at the time. There she began her work for The Hudson's Bay Company. In Tuktoyaktuk she also met Lyle Fenton, her future husband. Lyle was working on the DEW Line Project. They moved together to Fort St. John, where they raised a family of eight children.[5]
Works
Fatty Legs, 2010
A Stranger at Home, 2011
When I Was Eight, 2013
Not My Girl, 2014
References
- ↑ "Margaret Pokiak-Fenton". Margaret Pokiak-Fenton. Retrieved 2016-03-24.
- ↑ "Margaret Pokiak-Fenton". Margaret Pokiak-Fenton. Retrieved 2016-03-24.
- ↑ "Margaret Pokiak-Fenton". Margaret Pokiak-Fenton. Retrieved 2016-03-24.
- ↑ Pokiak-Fenton, Margaret (2010). Fatty Legs. USA: Annick Press. pp. 3–87. ISBN 9781554512461.
- ↑ "Margaret Pokiak-Fenton". Margaret Pokiak-Fenton. Retrieved 2016-03-24.