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Heart Berry Bling

by Jenny Kay Dupuis

illustrated by Eva Campbell

Publisher
Portage & Main Press
Publication date
May 2023
Subjects
English Language Arts, Social Studies, Social-Emotional Learning
Grade Levels
1 to 3
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9781774920558
    Publish Date
    May 2023
    List Price
    $24.95
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781774920589
    Publish Date
    Jun 2023
    List Price
    $20.00

Where to buy it

Descriptive Review

Educators looking for a fresh yet gentle introduction to discrimination in Canadian law will appreciate this resource. Maggie learns that her granny lost her First Nations status and the right to live in her community after marrying a man who is not First Nations. Granny shares how she kept her culture and strength through beading, traditional foods, and sharing stories. In grandmotherly fashion, she gently weaves Teachings about patience, perseverance, practice, traditions, and culture while showing Maggie how to bead. This book supports the Social Studies curriculum as well as social-emotional learning, social justice, values, and virtues, with supplemental themes of truth, respect, love, peace, and hope. Additional materials include an author’s note at the back along with a book trailer on the publisher’s website.

Other End Matter: Author's note
Images: Colour illustrations
Contributor Affiliation: Author Jenny Kay Dupuis (Nipissing First Nation), Illustrator Eva Campbell
Bibliography: No
Index: No

Source: Books BC - Indigenous Books for Schools

About the authors

Jenny Kay Dupuis (she/her/hers) is a sought-after public speaker, best-selling author, educator, and accomplished Woodland pop artist whose focus is raising awareness about Indigenous realities. She is well-known for her exceptional knowledge of Indigenous care theories, leadership models, and engagement frameworks, and has shared this expertise to support corporations, non-governmental organizations, school districts, and post-secondary institutions around the world in shifting their organizational practices.

As co-author of the award-winning children’s book I Am Not a Number, Jenny Kay shared her granny’s experiences at a residential school in Canada. Her latest book for children, Heart Berry Bling, brings together some of her own experiences and those of many others to highlight how the rights of thousands of First Nations women were taken by the Indian Act.

A certified teacher and learning strategist, Jenny Kay holds her Bachelor of Arts in History and Visual Arts, Master of Education in Special Education, and Doctorate in Educational Leadership. Jenny Kay is a member of Nipissing First Nation and lives in Toronto, Ontario. Follow her on social media @jennykaydupuis.

Jenny Kay Dupuis' profile page

EVA CAMPBELL is an artist and illustrator who teaches visual art. She has exhibited her work in Canada, the US, the UK, Barbados and Ghana. Eva won the Children’s Africana Book Award for her illustrations in The Matatu by Eric Walters. She also illustrated Africville by Shauntay Grant, winner of the Marilyn Baillie Picture Book Award and the Lillian Shepherd Memorial Award for Excellence in Illustration, and a Governor General’s Literary Award finalist. Eva lives in Victoria.

 

Eva Campbell's profile page

Awards

  • Commended, Bookstagang Best of 2023 Picture Book Awards
  • Winner, CBC Favorites Awards

Editorial Reviews

This title stimulates the senses as the reader experiences impressions of colour, sound, touch, scent and taste through the keenly observed descriptive text and the accompanying illustrations. Text and illustrations meld together perfectly. It is a deceptively simple story of love that also draws attention to injustices of which most non-indigenous people are unaware. A great addition to all collections. Highly Recommended

CM Magazine

Heart Berry Bling teaches Indigenous realities and culture while warming the human heart.

Anishinabek News

This is a really simple story with [a] really powerful meaning underneath it. This story is so important. This book...does a great job of highlighting the importance of passing down tradition and cultural practices and will start a really great conversation in your classroom.

49th Kids, Top Grade CanLit for the Classroom

Among Rise: A Feminist Book Project 2024 Booklist

Rise: A Feminist Book Project

Among Bookstagang Best of 2023 Picture Book Awards

Bookstagang

We need books from writers like Jenny Kay Dupuis--people whose families hold ... brutal realities in their memory as something they lived through--and people across North America have so much learning to do about Native life and history, and about authenticity of storyteller and storytelling. Quite magnificent….Highly recommended.

American Indians in Children’s Literature (AICL)

Social justice messages lie at the heart of many children’s and YA books with Indigenous authorship. The picture book Heart Berry Bling (HighWater, May), written by Jenny Kay Dupuis, a member of the Nipissing First Nation, and illustrated by Ghana-born artist Eva Campbell, shares the tradition of Anishinaabe beadwork and highlights the experiences of women, including the author’s grandmother, who lost their First Nations status due to Canada’s Indian Act.

Publishers Weekly

Touches on the emotional aspects of beading as well as a few technical skills! All this weaved into a visit between a girl and her grandmother, with a sprinkling of Canadian history, women's rights, and the importance of perseverance. Great for a read aloud for older students to introduce some of the unfair treatments [of] Indigenous Peoples in North America.

Follett Learning

Among AICL's Year in Review, Best Books of 2023

American Indians in Children's Literature

Among recommendations for new picture books to share and discuss with young readers.

Candian Children's Book News

Eva Campbell’s richly detailed illustrations and warm colour palette perfectly capture the loving relationship between Maggie and her granny. Heart Berry Bling is both a gentle introduction for readers who are not already familiar with the [Indian] Act, and a validation for those impacted by it. The book is an excellent educational resource for teachers, librarians, and parents looking to enrich collections of books about Indigenous histories in Canada.

Quill & Quire