What do you think?
Rate this book


310 pages, Hardcover
First published May 18, 2021
The school has its own graveyard. Seventy-seven graves. Each marked with a wood cross. Originally, the crosses were white, but now the wood is grey and weathered, the graves all but forgotten. … I think of my efforts as a reconciliation project, even though I don’t believe in reconciliation any more than I believe in religion.Jeremiah Camp certainly foretold this one: the day I started reading this book, the mass graves of 215 Indigenous children were located on the grounds of a residential school in Kamloops, British Columbia on Canada’s west coast. Not a surprise to anyone since thousands of children disappeared from these schools over the 160+ years they were in operation in Canada. I was relieved to see this book come out because of the elegiac nature of Thomas King’s last book Indians on Vacation; it read like a farewell to, well, everything. (And I just found out that it has been awarded the 2021 Stephen Leacock Memorial Medal for Humour, a major Canadian literary award.) Sufferance was a wonderful, funny, painful, hopeful read. Not a book to rush through looking for the jokes, though, although there were plenty of lovely lines and deceptively light-hearted chatter. It’s all entertaining, it’s all relevant, and it all hurts. There are also very astute observations about political corruption as well.
What is it about public office that turns decent people into political cartoons?I guess that’s one thing we understand in Canada - politicians, every stinkin’ one, are all heart and sincerity until they get into office, and then they develop corruption like a poison oak rash. It goes along with their custom-made desk chairs and the name plates on their doors.
All the fires in the world will not burn history clean.