Joseph Boyden

Canadian novelist and short-story writer
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Quick Facts
Born:
October 31, 1966, Toronto, Ontario, Canada (age 58)

Joseph Boyden (born October 31, 1966, Toronto, Ontario, Canada) is a Canadian novelist and short-story writer whose work focuses on the historical and contemporary experience of First Nations peoples of northern Ontario. He became widely known in Canada following the publication of his debut novel, Three Day Road (2005), which won numerous awards and was nominated for a Governor General’s Award. His second novel, Through Black Spruce (2008), won the Scotiabank Giller Prize. He was made a Member of the Order of Canada in 2015.

Education and early writing career

Boyden, the son of a highly decorated medical officer of World War II (Raymond Wilfrid Boyden), was educated in Toronto at Brebeuf College School and York University and subsequently at the University of New Orleans.

The focus of Boyden’s writing career has been the First Nations peoples of northern Ontario. His work recounts, in great detail, the perils of poverty, violence, and drug and alcohol abuse both on and off reservation. The damaging and isolating influence of residential schools is vividly depicted. However, his portraits of marginalized groups also represent their strengths—social and familial cohesion, mutual support and friendship, cooperation, and humour. Boyden’s work highlights the endangered but crucial value of the collective memory of living off the land and the importance of respect and understanding for it.

Boyden’s first major publication was a collection of short stories, Born with a Tooth (2001). Not all are serious; there are some light-hearted tales of music making, socialising, gambling, and even the theatricality of professional wrestling. But the erosion of old patterns of existence and the skills that supported Aboriginal groups for millennia is a central theme, as are the alienation and damaging lifestyles all too often experienced both on “the rez” and in the city. Several of the stories introduce members of the Bird family, central to Boyden’s later novels.

Novels

Boyden’s first novel was Three Day Road (2005). This evocative and harrowing study of two First Nations friends caught up in the catastrophic upheaval of World War I presents in stark terms the transposition of Aboriginal survival techniques to a war zone. The central figure, Xavier Bird, and his best and oldest friend, Elijah Weesageechak (also known as Whiskeyjack), volunteer for the trenches. Through the application of skills honed in the wilderness—stealth, patience, elusiveness, and marksmanship—they become highly successful snipers on the Western Front.

But the price of this success in the effect upon their personalities and beliefs is high. Badly wounded and addicted to morphine, Xavier Bird returns to Canada where he is cared for by his aunt Niska. On their travels by canoe back to James Bay, she tells him the story of her life as he reflects upon his own. Three Day Road won the Rogers Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize and was a finalist for the 2006 CBC Canada Reads competition; it was also nominated for a Governor General’s Award and won the McNally Robinson Aboriginal Book of the Year Award.

Through Black Spruce (2008) continues the saga of the Bird family in a contemporary context and has structural parallels with the earlier work. It is principally the story of the life experiences of Will Bird, a bush pilot who is lying in a coma in a hospital in Moose Factory. His niece Annie Bird, after travelling south to Toronto, Montreal, and New York City in an attempt to find her vanished sister Suzanne, returns to northern Ontario, attends his bedside, and tells him her story. Through Black Spruce won the 2008 Scotiabank Giller Prize.

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Boyden’s next novel in the Bird saga, The Orenda (2013), is a fictional take on 17th-century missionaries in Wendake (modern-day central Ontario). The story follows three main characters said to be based on Jean de Brébeuf, a Huron leader, and a Haudensosaunee captive, in the lead-up to the dispersal of the Huron in the Iroquois wars. The novel was on the longlist for the Scotiabank Giller Prize and was also nominated for a Governor General’s Award.

Boyden’s later fictional works included Wenjack (2016), which was inspired by the true story of an Ojibwa boy who ran away from school and died while undertaking the arduous journey home.

Joseph Boyden and Canada

Boyden—who identified his heritage as Irish, Scots, and First Nations—divided his time between Louisiana, where he taught creative writing at the University of New Orleans, and the James Bay area of Ontario, where he was an accomplished hunter, trapper, and bushman, and where he taught in the Northern College Aboriginal program from 1996 to 1998.

Boyden asserted that distancing himself from Canada provides perspective on his subject matter. He drew parallels between the disenfranchised peoples of First Nations tribes and the sufferings of the poor Hispanic and black populations of New Orleans during and after Hurricane Katrina. His lecture on this topic, which he gave at the University of Alberta, was published in 2008 as From Mushkegowuk to New Orleans: A Mixed Blood Highway. He also wrote the nonfiction book Louis Riel and Gabriel Dumont (2010), part of Penguin’s Extraordinary Canadians series.

Boyden was also writer-in-residence at Trent University, Wilfrid Laurier University, and Athabasca University. He served on the jury for the Canadian Aboriginal Writing and Arts Challenge, a writing and visual arts competition for youth of Aboriginal descent.

Alban Harvey Tabitha Marshall The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica

The original version of this entry was published by The Canadian Encyclopedia.