The Birthing Tree
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- Pedido anticipado
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- Se espera: 1 sept 2026
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- USD 12.99
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- Pedido anticipado
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- USD 12.99
Descripción editorial
From the internationally bestselling author of The Berry Pickers: a powerful, intensely moving novel of family and legacy, following one woman as she confronts buried truths and the fragile future she alone must protect
As I stood under it, looking up into the branches, listening as the wind rustled the leaves, I could hear my Kiju’s voice: “This tree holds our stories.”
Born under the shadow of a tree sacred to generations of Indigenous women, Aliet has been brought up by her fierce, loving grandmother, Kiju. Her father remains a mystery, and her mother died under that very tree, gently held by its cradle of roots as Aliet came into the world.
But now the world beyond their small community is changing. Local women are increasingly reluctant to follow traditional birthing rituals, and at the hospital, white doctors are sceptical of Indigenous practices. Aliet and Kiju are distraught to witness their prejudice turn into condemnation, but decades later, Aliet too will move away and work as a nurse in the city, administering modern medicine while still holding her grandmother’s wisdom dear.
When Kiju passes away suddenly, grief-stricken Aliet understands that she must return to the tree: only these roots can help her reconnect with her heritage, and discover long-buried secrets about herself. It is the start of Aliet’s journey to protect her land, her traditions, and the memory of the women who came before her, as she decides which parts of her inheritance she will carry into the future.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Peters (The Berry Pickers) draws on her Mi'kmaq heritage for this nuanced depiction of the tribe and its threatened traditions. Aliet is raised in 1960s Nova Scotia by her grandmother Kiju, a revered tribal healer and midwife. Aliet's teenage mother died giving birth to her under the eponymous tree—its roots shaped in the form of an embrace—where the Mi'kmaw women have their babies. Peters alternates from Aliet's childhood in the '60s to her return home in the '90s after Kiju dies and Aliet leaves her job as a nurse to reclaim the house where she grew up. Aliet's memories of her childhood are colored by a kind boy who visited with his apple-picker family each season, and by a bully named Kenneth, who called her an "orphan half-breed." Kenneth's words torment Aliet, as does a violent act he committed when she was a teen, which is revealed late in the novel ("When I was seventeen, my world turned upside down, and I had abandoned this house... naively thinking that the past would remain the past"). The alternating storylines gradually converge, and the narrative builds to a satisfying resolution. It's a tender story of self-discovery and the power of generations of women.