A review by henrymarlene
Flock: First Nations Stories Then and Now by Ellen van Neerven

4.0

These short stories have all been published previously over the last twenty-five years. That is not to say they have been well and truly read. It is the bringing of them all together in this flock that reignites their purpose, their meaning. The stories all reach out to hard places - racism, the unempowered, death, abuse, rape, stolen generations: "The evil always seemed not too far away". They also expose history that we all should know about. These stories question what has gone before, and what might be. These stories seem to take you on a cyclical journey, as if each story is pushing the reader to feel the joy and beauty of country and culture, thrashing abuse and terror, and the steps towards life renewed. All different but equally emotive and evocative. There is so much colour and texture in each story with voices across generations. There is heartache and heartbreak. "For sometimes it is the smallest thing that can bring comfort": these stories have again stretched their wings to fly.