Three Day Road

Paperback, 400 pages

Published March 14, 2006 by Penguin Canada.

ISBN:
978-0-14-301786-8
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4 stars (6 reviews)

1 edition

Review of 'Three Day Road' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

"The cruelty of living and dying can be astounding."

This one will stick with me for a bit. Xavier Bird grows up in the bush with his aunt Niska, but finds himself pulled into World War I by his friend Elijah who is enamored with the idea of heading off to fight. Xavier reluctantly follows. The story is told from two points in time: Xavier having returned from the war without a leg and addicted to morphine being paddled down the river on a 3-day journey home by Niska who picks him up at the train station, and Xavier reliving his time during the war and what happens between him and Elijah. The war is, predictably, horrific, and does terrible things to both Xavier Bird and Elijah's minds and bodies. We also get some backstory for Niska herself, as she cares for her nephew during his periods of unconsciousness and …

Review of 'Three Day Road' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

I've read a lot of WWII novels but this is the first one I've read from the perspective of Canadian native Americans. It was getting rave reviews so I picked it up on Audible. It's the story of two Ojibwe Cree boys, Xavier Bird and Elijah Whiskey-Jack, and Xavier's aunt Niske. As Xavier returns from the war missing a leg and addicted to morphine for the pain, Niske paddles him back home in her canoe and the story is told back and forth between his flash backs to the war and her recounting stories of her youth and his childhood to try and bring him back from his addiction. Xavier and Elijah are modeled loosely on real life Ojibwe sniper Francis Pegahmagabow, and brutal and bloody descriptions of their experiences as soldiers and snipers at Ypres and the Somme definitely do not glorify war.

I enjoyed the story as it's …

Review of 'Three Day Road' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Great novel. The story of two Canadian Cree Indian friends who become snipers in the first world war. The story is told as flashbacks from one of the protagonists as he slowly returns home on a river trip by canoe in Canada. The horrors of the war are experienced differently by the two friends, and are tied to and related by reference to Algonquin mythology (manitous and so-called windigo psychosis) and to images of nature, both in Canada and in no-man's land. A moving account of the war to end all wars.
Recommended by A2J, and seems to unite his interests in Canadian history and Zombie attacks.

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