Basque, W. (1992). Sma'knis. Nova Scotia: (n.p.). Poem available at Mi'kmaq Resource Centre, Cape Breton University, Sydney, Nova Scotia and at First Nations Help.
1p.
CBU/MRC - Pam #185 MRC 2001-185-1542...
Basque, W. (1992). Sma'knis. Nova Scotia: (n.p.). Poem available at Mi'kmaq Resource Centre, Cape Breton University, Sydney, Nova Scotia and at First Nations Help.
1p.
CBU/MRC - Pam #185 MRC 2001-185-1542...
Joe, R. (1999). We are the Dreamers: Recent and Early Poetry. Wreck Cove, NS: Breton Books.
96 pp.
ISBN: 1-895415-46-2
From website: "A book of new poems from Cape Breton Mi`kmaw writer Rita Joe,...
Joe, R. (2011). Song of Rita Joe: Autobiography of a Mi’kmaw Poet. Wreck Cove, NS: Breton Books.
200 pp.
ISBN: 978-1-926908-04-5
Earlier editions, now out of print, were published by Ragweed Press...
Joe, R. (1991). Lnu and Indians We're Called. Charlottetown, PEI: Ragweed Press.
70 pp.
ISBN: 0-921556-22-5
I try to have a positive outlook on life, and to reflect that in my writing. We all...
Joe, R. (1988) Song of Eskasoni: More Poems of Rita Joe. Charlottetown, PEI: Ragweed Press.
88 pp.
ISBN: 0-920304-85-0
From back cover: "I was born in Whycocomagh in 1932. When mother died in 1937...
Joe, R., & Choyce, L. (Eds.). (1997) The Mi'kmaq Anthology. Lawrencetown Beach, NS: Pottersfield Press.
286 pp.
ISBN: 1-895900-04-2
This is the most comprehensive single volume of Mi'kmaq writing...
Francis, B. (1984,...
Chants in Mi'kmaq, including: The Feast Chant - Wi'kupaltimkewey, The Hunting Song, The Marriage Song, Mi'kmaq Tlqamiksutimuowek Me' Mu Aklasie'w Pekisinukek, along with a commentary on customs of the Mi'kmaq before European contact. Includes...
Trotter, Maxine. (1996). Loon rock/Pkwimu Wkuntem (H. Sylliboy, Trans., D. Christmas, Illustrator) [In Mi'kmaq and English]. Sydney, Nova Scotia: Cape Breton University Press.
A children's story written in both English and Mi'...
Stones and Switches, Simon’s first and only novel, is set in the 1930s on the fictional reservation of Messkig, one of the Mi’kmaq words for “large.” “It is an ironic name for a reservation,” writes Simon, “that has had most of its lands...