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Field Notes from the Ravine
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Struggling to connect her young family to place, Carmen Gilmore starts researching the history of a local ravine, soon realizing that when you go looking for others’ stories, you can’t help but fin...
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13 April 2027

Struggling to connect her young family to place, Carmen Gilmore starts researching the history of a local ravine, soon realizing that when you go looking for others’ stories, you can’t help but find your own.
What is the story of a place? Intrigued by the absence of documented history about a local ravine, Carmen Gilmore sought to uncover more about its reclusive namesake, Mr. Petursson, and began piecing together his kaleidoscopic history. What started off as a curious interest about a quiet ravine became a profound personal exploration into how storytelling is connected to the land.
Carmen and her children explored the ravine, foraging salvage materials that she then transformed into inks for a series of maps — tiny topographies that she created to connect the stories she was reconstructing, such as the one about the chemical dump that contaminated the ravine’s waters yet preserved the wild space. In the course of her work, she found evidence of pre-colonial Métis river lots, deepening her personal journey toward Indigenous Reconciliation and her understanding of the land she now calls home.
Written as a series of braided essays, Carmen weaves together Mr. Petursson’s history and her own unfurling connection to place, uncovering her family’s long connection to Indigenous sovereignty and developing a nuanced understanding of how we all belong.
What is the story of a place? Intrigued by the absence of documented history about a local ravine, Carmen Gilmore sought to uncover more about its reclusive namesake, Mr. Petursson, and began piecing together his kaleidoscopic history. What started off as a curious interest about a quiet ravine became a profound personal exploration into how storytelling is connected to the land.
Carmen and her children explored the ravine, foraging salvage materials that she then transformed into inks for a series of maps — tiny topographies that she created to connect the stories she was reconstructing, such as the one about the chemical dump that contaminated the ravine’s waters yet preserved the wild space. In the course of her work, she found evidence of pre-colonial Métis river lots, deepening her personal journey toward Indigenous Reconciliation and her understanding of the land she now calls home.
Written as a series of braided essays, Carmen weaves together Mr. Petursson’s history and her own unfurling connection to place, uncovering her family’s long connection to Indigenous sovereignty and developing a nuanced understanding of how we all belong.
Price: $21.99
Pages: 340
Publisher: Dundurn Press
Imprint: Dundurn Press
Publication Date:
13 April 2027
Trim Size: 8.50 X 5.50 in
ISBN: 9781459757486
Format: Paperback
BISACs:
NATURE / Essays, Essays, BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Women, NATURE / Indigenous Stewardship, HISTORY / Canada / Provincial, Territorial & Local / Prairie Provinces (AB, MB, SK), National parks, marine parks, wilderness areas and nature reserves, Autobiography: general
Carmen Gilmore is an award-winning heritage researcher and writer. She is interested in land-based learning and connecting with youth through art and mapmaking. Her home is filled with two children, a menagerie of foster puppies, and the kitchen table is always used for art. She lives in Saskatoon.