Book: Life and Times of Louise (Trottier) Moine
- EFN Staff | December 02, 2013
The Gabriel Dumont Institute (GDI) has published the posthumous memoirs of Louise Moine, entitled Remembering Will Have to Do: The Life and Times of Louise (Trottier) Moine.
Moine wrote about her childhood spent on the ranching frontier of southwest Saskatchewan in the early 1900s, as well as her time in an Indian resident school in two previously published books and various articles in the 1970s and 1980s.
A long-time resident of Val Marie, she also wrote candid vignettes about her many family members and friends living in southwest Saskatchewan and nothern Montana.
Remembering Will Have to Do: The Life and Times of Louise (Trottier) Moine collects her various writings, including her previously-published books and essays, as well as unpublished stories, photographs, and appendices.
Having lived almost 102 years, Louise Moine witnessed the changing Prairie West as Euro-Canadian and European settlers moved in and overwhelmed the region's Aboriginal residents.
Although much of this text was written decades ago, it still retains its relevance and carries an authenticity of somebody who personally witnessed the rise of southwest Saskatchewan's ranching culture, the end of the Métis' nomadic lifestyle, the growth of the dysfunctional Indian residential school system, and the impact of colonization on the region's Aboriginal people.
To order Remembering Will Have to Do: The Life and Times of Louise (Trottier) Moine, visit GDI's website.