The Red Sash
- Publisher
- Groundwood Books Ltd
- Publication date
- Aug 2005
-
Hardback
- ISBN
- 9780888995896
- Publish Date
- Aug 2005
- List Price
- $18.95
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781773069821
- Publish Date
- Feb 2023
- List Price
- $14.99
Where to buy it
About the authors
Jean E. Pendziwol has published several highly acclaimed picture books, including Once Upon a Northern Night, illustrated by Isabelle Arsenault, finalist for the Governor General’s Literary Award and the TD Canadian Children’s Literature Award. She is also the author of Marja’s Skis, illustrated by Jirina Marton, and The Red Sash and Dawn Watch, illustrated by Nicolas Debon. Jean’s debut adult novel, The Lightkeeper’s Daughters, will be published in 2017 in more than ten languages. Jean finds inspiration in the rich history, culture and geography of Northwestern Ontario where she lives in the shadow of the Nor’Wester Mountains near Lake Superior.
Jean E. Pendziwol's profile page
NICOLAS DEBON won the Boston Globe–Horn Book Award for his book The Strongest Man in the World. His illustrations in Dawn Watch by Jean E. Pendziwol were nominated for a Governor General’s Literary Award. He has also written and illustrated A Brave Soldier and Four Pictures by Emily Carr. A Canadian, he now lives in France.
Awards
- Long-listed, Michigan Reading Association's "Great Lakes Great Books"
- Commended, CCBC Our Choice
Editorial Reviews
Pendziwol gives just enough detail for a real sense of this long-ago way of life....nicely abetted by Debon's gouache and mixed-media spreads.
Horn Book
Debon's wonderful bold gouache and mixed-media paintings...captivate with their detail of fort life, their freshness perfectly attuned to this tale's tone.
Globe and Mail
The Red Sash is...a welcome curriculum resource...
Quill & Quire
Librarian Reviews
The Red Sash
Fort William (now Thunder Bay), at the western end of the Great Lakes, was the meeting place for the fur trade. Voyageurs came to sell furs they had gathered from Aboriginal peoples in the western wilderness to representatives from Montreal companies, who would then ship the furs to Europe. It was where the voyageurs stocked up on supplies brought from the East. This story is about a Métis boy, the son of a voyageur and an Aboriginal woman from near Fort William. The boy canoes to a nearby island, where a storm erupts. A canoe carrying an important gentleman from Montreal is damaged. He offers his own canoe and paddles the man to safety.Pendziwol also wrote Dawn Watch, and was nominated for Governor General’s Literary Award for his illustrations. He also wrote and illustrated A Brave Soldier and illustrated Four Pictures by Emily Carr.
Source: The Association of Book Publishers of BC. Canadian Aboriginal Books for Schools. 2007-2008.
The Red Sash
A brave Métis boy saves the day – and earns a voyageur sash – nearly 200 years ago. Debon’s historically accurate illustrations give an authentic view of life at this busy fur-trading post.Source: The Canadian Children’s Book Centre. Canadian Children’s Book News. 2006.