? [A] gripping first-person account of … the brutal conditions that are daily life for many First Nations communities in Canada... A necessary contribution to addressing age-old wrongs.
Publishers Weekly (starred review)
It’s very rare that a book will make you shake your head and drop your jaw.… There are horror stories documented in these pages, and some of resilience and courage. The author went down the rabbit hole and showed us the many problems this thing called civilization can cause.
Drew Hayden Taylor, playwright, novelist, and film maker
Alexandra Shimo’s investigative reporting shines much-needed light on the Third-World poverty and despair in First Nations communities that few Canadians are aware of and even fewer have experienced.
Alvin Fiddler, Nishnawbe Aski Nation Grand Chief
In its heartbreaking and vivid imagery, this book provides an intimate portrait of the harms done to our people and our resilience and strength. I hope it provides a wake-up call for Canadians and a vehicle for social change.
Edmund Metatawabin, Cree activist and author of Up Ghost River
Investigative journalism at its best… Anyone who wants to know this country needs to see Kashechewan as depicted in Alexandra Shimo’s vivid and gripping account.
Gabor Maté M.D., author of In The Realm of Hungry Ghosts: Close Encounters With Addiction
With remarkable economy and insight, Shimo details the past and present injustices that underlie our nation’s greatest failing. The result is a clear-eyed and compassionate call to action.
Alissa York, author of The Naturalist
An indictment of Canada’s abysmal relations with its First Nations people, a triage of our systematic racism, and a detailed dismantling of every lazily upheld cliché about daily life on a reserve.
Kathryn Kuitenbrouwer, author of All the Broken Things
Accessible and smart … her authentic voice is both informative and challenging.
Globe and Mail
In late 2005, the First Nation reserve of Kashechewan, Ontario, showed signs of E. coli. The provincial and federal response forms one strand of Alexandra Shimo’s Invisible North: The Search for Answers on a Troubled Reserve. A second follows the reason that reporters, in town to investigate, were duped with “tap water” that was actually dirty river water. Shimo arrives to follow both threads: how was public health allowed to degrade, and who switched the samples? What she finds is chaos: in a reserve gutted by colonialism and church condoned sexual predation; in a country where Native sovereignty conveniently absolves responsibility; and in Shimo herself. That last element, her unravelling mental and physical ability to withstand Kash’s horrors, lifts the book from whodunit into something achingly poignant for all Canadians.
2017 RBC Taylor Prize, Jury Citation
A must-read for every Canadian.
Winnipeg Free Press
Recommend[ed] to anyone who is interested in the plight of Canada's Indigenous peoples.
National Post