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| photo: Courtney Molyneaux |
Julie Flett is a Cree-Métis author, illustrator, and artist who has received numerous awards for her books, which include My Friend May, recently published by Greystone, a "true story about a big black cat who started out gray." We All Love, a companion picture book to Flett's 2021 We All Play, will be published by Greystone in February 2026.
Handsell readers your book in 25 words or less:
We All Love: Flowers communicating through molecules, turtles dancing to magnetic fields, stars and music through math and story, mama bears rescuing cubs, and shrews navigating their way.
On your nightstand now:
There's always a pile of fiction and nonfiction to choose from. Right now it's No Mud, No Lotus by Thich Nhat Hanh; The Cree Word for Love: Sâkihitowin by Tracey Lindberg and illustrated by George Littlechild; Portrait of a Body by Julie Delporte; Shadow Life by Hiromi Goto and illustrated by Ann Xu; Indigenous Poetics in Canada, edited by Neal McLeod; and Starting Point: 1979-1996 by Hayao Miyazaki. I recently finished rereading Ways of Seeing by John Berger, which I passed on to my son for his nightstand (we also watched the series together recently).
Favorite book when you were a child:
Picture books: The Snowy Day by Ezra Jack Keats and The Owl and the Woodpecker by Brian Wildsmith. I loved Ant and Bee and the Secret by Angela Banner and Frederick by Leo Lionni because I loved little imagined worlds with little creatures. And Peanuts by Charles M. Schulz.
I wasn't much of a reader until later but Watership Down by Richard Adams and The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett both factor in.
Your top five authors:
This is almost impossible but here's a start:
Maria Campbell, Louise Erdrich, Tarō Gomi, Ezra Jack Keats, and Annie Pootoogook (visual narrative artist).
Books you would take to that proverbial desert island:
It would be great to watch the sky with Wilfred Buck's Tipiskawi Kisik: Night Sky Star Stories. I would bring the Tao Te Ching, the works of Louise Erdrich and Mary Oliver, and Moccasin Square Gardens: Short Stories by Richard Van Camp. Also, anything by Rumi and Rilke, a sketchbook, and some of the books "I wouldn't part with" listed below. I'd be set.
Book you've faked reading:
I wouldn't say I've faked reading books. It's more that there are some I picked up with good intentions but never quite made it to the end.
Book you're an evangelist for:
A Bubble by artist and musician Geneviève Castrée. I always have this one propped open and upright on my bookshelf. This was her last work, it was for her daughter and for the love of doing what she loved, drawing and making. I love her work and this one in particular holds so much tenderness for everything and everyone she loved.
Also kâ-pî-isi-kiskisiyân / The Way I Remember by Solomon Ratt, who calls for others to "breathe life back into Cree language and culture."
Books you've bought for the cover:
Arctic Dreams and Nightmares by Alootook Ipellie: this is a book I found in a secondhand bookshop years ago. Beautiful ink drawings and short stories.
Jillian Tamaki's classic Penguin Threads series: Black Beauty, Emma, and The Secret Garden. Stunning.
Books that changed your life:
Franz Kafka, in particular his short story The Bridge; Half Breed by Maria Campbell; Tender Buttons by Gertrude Stein; and the works of Matsuo Bashō.
Favorite line from a book:
That's hard to pare down but I keep these two close by.
"So you see, once a person drops the scales of prejudiced certainty and doubts appear, there is no telling how far a heart can open." --Louise Erdrich, Four Souls
"The highest human purpose is always to reinvent and celebrate the sacred." --N. Scott Momaday, The Way to Rainy Mountain
Five books you'll never part with:
Arctic Dreams and Nightmares by Alootook Ipellie; Ruth Asawa: All Is Possible organized by Helen Molesworth; I Heard the Drums by Allen Sapp; I Really Want to See You, Grandma by Tarō Gomi; Itee Pootoogook: Hymns to the Silence, written by Nancy Campbell, works by Itee Pootoogook; C.G. Jung and the Sioux Traditions by Vine Deloria, Jr.
Book you most want to read again for the first time:
I Really Want to See You, Grandma by Tarō Gomi. It's good for the heart and I'd be so happy to read it--for the first time--to a little audience of kids and grandparents.
Book that made you want to become a writer:
Snowy Day by Ezra Jack Keats and Halfbreed by Maria Campbell.