Bone Talk
By: Candy Gourlay
Genre: Historical Fiction, Philippians, Colonization
Location: FIC GOU
A wonderful novel... will stay with me for a long time.’ Elizabeth Laird
More than a hundred years ago, a boy named Samkad thinks he knows everything about the world. He knows the mountains he lives in. He knows his people. He knows his blood enemy, the Mangili. And he wants to become a man, to be given his own shield, spear and axe to fight with. His best friend, Luki, wants all the same things – but she is a girl, and no girl has ever become a warrior.
But everything changes when a new boy arrives in the village. He calls himself Samkad’s brother, yet he knows nothing of the ways of the mountain. And he brings news of a people called ‘Americans’, who are bringing war and destruction right to his home . . .
Young Samkad is desperate to become a man. His father is a valued and respected warrior within the Bontoc community, and, to Samkad, the epitome of what it means to be a man. If only Samkad could prove to the elders that he too possesses such physical and inner strength. However, when a spiral of events prevents the ceremony that would establish Samkad’s manhood from taking place, the protagonist can only feel rage and bitterness at the injustice. But, with passing time and impending danger, Samkad learns that he must put others before himself, that the security of his culture and people is of far higher importance than his manhood.
In terms of theme, this was extremely strong, and I think that a long time could be spent picking apart masculinity, threat and difference within this story. I am extremely intrigued by the attention paid to individuals within groups breaking away from what they are perceived to be, particularly in relation to what Samkad comes to understand about individuality and identity, and how values may be personal to those that hold them.
To me, Gourlay’s story is a triumph. Her writing is so vivid, and completely immerses the reader in the sounds and sights of Cordillera and the traditions of the Bontoc people, bringing to life a culture I had never even heard of prior to opening the book. Emotionally, very affecting; I too felt the disorientation and deep urgency that Samkad describes when what is known is threatened by violence and upheaval. Truly immense; it is stories like these that highlight the absence within literature when periods of history are so wrongfully neglected. I hope that Bone Talk makes a mark for a wave of different stories to be told, as it has certainly made a mark on me. Review by Ellie- Goodreads
Review by Matthew
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