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Medicine Walk Paperback – Deckle Edge, March 3 2015

4.6 out of 5 stars 2,058 ratings
4.3 on Goodreads
12,630 ratings

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"One of the finest novels of the year." (Vancouver Sun) By the celebrated author of Canada Reads finalist Indian Horse, this is an unforgettable journey of a father and son, set in dramatic landscape of the BC Interior. For male and female readers equally, for readers of Joseph Boyden, Cormac McCarthy, Thomas King, Russell Banks and general literary fiction.
Franklin Starlight is called to visit his father, Eldon. He's sixteen years old and has had the most fleeting of relationships with the man. The rare moments they've shared haunt and trouble Frank, but he answers the call, a son's duty to a father. What ensues is a journey through the rugged and beautiful backcountry, and a journey into the past, as the two men push forward to Eldon's end. From a poverty-stricken childhood, to the Korean War, and later the derelict houses of mill towns, Eldon relates both the desolate moments of his life and a time of redemption and love, and in doing so offers Frank a history he has never known, the father he has never had, and a connection to himself he never expected.
A novel about love, friendship, courage, and the idea that the land has within it powers of healing,
Medicine Walk reveals the ultimate goodness of its characters and offers a deeply moving and redemptive conclusion. Wagamese's writing soars and his insight and compassion are matched by his gift of communicating these to the reader.

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From the Publisher

1

About Us

Emblem Editions is a trade paperback imprint publishing fiction and non-fiction originally published by McClelland & Stewart and Signal in reprint editions, as well as select original titles.

Product description

Review

"A masterpiece, a work of art that explores human interconnectedness with a level of artistry so superb that the personal becomes eternal." National Post
"Wagamese balances the novel's spiritual and political subtexts with sly humour, sharp, believable dialogue and superb storytelling skills.
Medicine Walk is a major accomplishment from an author who has become one of Canada's best novelists." Toronto Star
"This is very much a novel about the role of stories in our lives, those we tell ourselves about ourselves and those we agree to live by....
Medicine Walk is also testament to the redemptive power of love and compassion." The Globe and Mail

About the Author

RICHARD WAGAMESE is one of Canada's foremost writers and the author of twelve previous novels, including Keeper'n Me and Indian Horse, a recent Canada Reads Finalist. He is also the author of acclaimed memoirs, including For Joshua; the bestselling One Native Life; and, One Story, One Song, which won the George Ryga Award for Social Awareness in Literature. He has won numerous awards and recognition for his writing. He leads writing and storytelling workshops across the country, and makes frequent appearances as a speaker. He lives in the mountains outside of Kamloops, BC.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ McClelland & Stewart
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ March 3 2015
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 256 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 077108921X
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0771089213
  • Item weight ‏ : ‎ 215 g
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 13.13 x 1.68 x 20.32 cm
  • 鶹 Rank: #4,520 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.6 out of 5 stars 2,058 ratings

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4.6 out of 5 stars
2,058 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the content wonderful, superb storytelling, and a rendition that will not disappoint the reader. They describe the writing style as beautifully written, well-crafted, and gorgeous. Readers describe the book as poignant, heartfelt, and heartwrenching. They mention the book has a quiet power and a ring of truth. Readers also say the read adapts well to the pace of the apprehended task.

71 customers mention "Content"71 positive0 negative

Customers find the book wonderful, superb storytelling, and gripping. They say it's a deeply felt, profoundly moving, and tender story of a young man who is raised by other than his biological parents. Readers also describe Richard Wagamese as an incredible writer.

"Excellent book. Good well developed characters...." Read more

"Another wonderful book. The interaction between a dying father and his neglected son is beyond description. The book must be read and cherished...." Read more

"This was a great read and a wonderful story. It kept should be right from the beginning and I had a hard time putting it down...." Read more

"Fantastic read. Mr. Wagamese's style is rich and poetic...." Read more

41 customers mention "Writing style"41 positive0 negative

Customers find the book beautifully written, with well-crafted literary skills. They say the author has a wonderful way with words and descriptions. Readers also describe the book as poetic, heart-rendering, and a rendition that will not disappoint the reader.

"Beautiful and Important story..." Read more

"A beautiful, haunting read. A tale told with slow, deliberate patience and a mesmerizing reverence for the land. One of the finest books I have read." Read more

"...A beautiful story by a master storyteller." Read more

"...Who is Frank, where is his family? So beautifully written . I found it very difficult to put it down!" Read more

26 customers mention "Emotional"26 positive0 negative

Customers find the book heartfelt, poignant, and heartwrenching. They say it makes their emotions run a gambit and shows what true love is. Readers also appreciate the sparse depiction of human pain and vulnerability.

"...As bleak as it is, it's heartwarming, courageous, and loving. Thank you for sharing your gift with us." Read more

"Well written and engaging." Read more

"Heartbreaking, powerful, beautiful...." Read more

"...words of none other than Jane Urquhart (on the back cover), "a deeply felt and profoundly moving novel, written in the kind of sure, clear prose..." Read more

4 customers mention "Truth"4 positive0 negative

Customers find the book has a quiet power and a ring of truth. They say it's a terrific read with hard truths, survival, and love.

"...without his parents, it deals with hardships, achol, and finding out the truth , which can be very hard to deal with, it's about a father trying..." Read more

"This book has a quiet power and a ring of truth...." Read more

"A terrific read. Part poetry, hard truths, survival and love and forgiveness" Read more

"Fiction can be loaded with truth...." Read more

3 customers mention "Pacing"3 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the pacing of the book. They mention the read adapts well to the pace of the apprehended task. Readers also praise the writing performance.

"I quite enjoyed this book. Although it is slow at times, the read adapts well to the pace of the apprehended task as Franklin brings his relatively..." Read more

"Just an incredible story and writing performance...." Read more

"A beautiful, haunting read. A tale told with slow, deliberate patience and a mesmerizing reverence for the land. One of the finest books I have read." Read more

Top reviews from Canada

  • Reviewed in Canada on May 1, 2014
    Verified Purchase
    When Franklin Starlight is sixteen he receives a summons by his father to visit him urgently. He is surprised but also pleased. "Still, he is my dad" is his response to the old man on whose farm he has been living as long as he can remember. "Don't expect it to be pretty." The old man warns him, but then, he knows that it never was easy... He gets the horse ready for the one day ride to the town where his father lives...

    Richard Wagemese's new novel, MEDICINE WALK, tells the story of Franklin, usually referred to as "the kid", and his search of who he is and where he comes from. The book is, in the words of none other than Jane Urquhart (on the back cover), "a deeply felt and profoundly moving novel, written in the kind of sure, clear prose that brings to mind the work of the great North American masters...". Following his great success with his previous novel, INDIAN HORSE, Wagamese's storytelling has become even more refined, subtle and deeply affecting. I was blown away pretty much from the beginning and not only by Wagamese's beautiful writing and the sense of place and his evocation of the natural beauty, but also by his rendering of the underlying drama of the story. While his characters are born out of and grounded in his own background and the Northern Ontario landscape, the fundamental questions he reflects upon - the questions of identity and family - are universal.

    Frank was very young when he first met his father who appeared at the farm for a brief visit. The kid didn't have much of a concept of what a father was. And the visit didn't change that. He was raised by "the old man", who felt like family to him. The farm was 'home'. The old man had taught him the difference between a guardian and a father... yet, his questions about his mother remained unanswered. Her story was up to the father to tell his son... Yet, the father has never been in the mood or condition to tell his son anything much.

    The Medicine Walk takes the central place and theme in the novel: the father's urgent call requested the son take to him to a particular place, a three day ride into the bush, a place that holds deep memories for him. It will hopefully bring his tortured soul and disintegrating body peace and a permanent resting place. Wagamese's description of the Walk is paced in the rhythm of the horse's movements, carrying the weight of the father and the son's pace. Franklin guides the horse over uneven ground, decides on resting places and provides for all the essentials needed to sustain them. He is more than comfortable in the bush. There are many periods of rest, time to reflect or dream, drink in the fresh air or let the mind wander over the fields in the distance... When they come across a bear, Frank intuitively knows what to do, to the father's surprise and admiration. Is this a turning point in their relationship?

    Frank is a quiet and reflective young man, determined to asking the questions he has kept in his mind for years, Yet, the dialog does not come easy to either of them and time appears to be running out. "He could feel words churning in his gut, like fish fighting their way upstream. None broke the surface..." he describes his difficulty to talk to his father later on. In contrast, "His father was like a photograph that had been in the light too long. He was a stranger." Over time, the father gradually opens up, but "... He talks a lot, but I still got no sense of him. So far it's all been stories. - It's all we are in the end. Our stories..." They are not easy stories, however, they are painful and heart-wrenching ... but they make up a portrait of Franklin's family and they will help the kid to answer many of his fundamental questions. [Friederike Knabe]
    6 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in Canada on January 29, 2025
    Verified Purchase
    This is how a book should make you feel. Richard makes your emotions run a gambit! You will hate, laugh, feel sorry and love the dad and so much more. Wow! Great storytelling
  • Reviewed in Canada on October 17, 2015
    Verified Purchase
    I enjoyed this book, I would highly recommend it , it is a powerful story about a young man's upbringing , without his parents, it deals with hardships, achol, and finding out the truth , which can be very hard to deal with, it's about a father trying to make right with his son , on his last journey on earth.
  • Reviewed in Canada on June 27, 2014
    Verified Purchase
    Richard Waganese is Canada's unsung hero in the literary world. Loved his Indian Horse novel which was another gripping tale. Medicine Walk is a story that requires the reader to fully submit and truly "listen" to this moving tale. I was moved by the fundamental goodness in each of the characters despite the demons that plaque their existence. Waganese is an astute storyteller with well crafted literary skills (i.e. beautiful landscape descriptions and authentic dialogue). This is an intimate tale of a father/son relationships that is nothing short of brilliant. It also pays homage to what constitutes a family. I recommend taking this journey with Frank and Eldon!!
    2 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in Canada on January 7, 2025
    Verified Purchase
    I would highly recommend Richard Wagamese books to anyone but this one is my favorite of all his books.
    One person found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in Canada on June 13, 2014
    Verified Purchase
    This book has a quiet power and a ring of truth. The story of Frank and his father, Eldon, unfolds as a story of loss, pain and the struggle for the father to find forgiveness and the boy to discover his story. Told with simple prose, this book speaks as much through the silences as with Wagamese's words. It has a rare, inner spaciousness that held me. A very satisfying read.
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in Canada on December 1, 2016
    Verified Purchase
    A beautifully written book about lost identity and its different effects on father and son. A beautiful story about love, loss and hope that winds itself into the heart of a father, an adoptive father and their son.
  • Reviewed in Canada on September 11, 2024
    Verified Purchase
    LIKED THIS BOOK, TELLS OF A YOUNG BOY WHO HAS BEEN ABANDONED BY HIS FATHER. THE YOUNG BOY GOES TO Live WITH A OLD FAMILY FRIEND WHO IS INDIAN AND HE TEACHES THE BOY THEWAYS OF HIS ANCESTERS.
    GREAT AUTHER , I HAVE READ ALMOST ALL OF HIS BOOKS. THEY ARE BASED ON AUTHORS TRUE LIFE’
    ENJOY.

Top reviews from other countries

  • T. Angevin
    5.0 out of 5 stars To be read by every sons
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 11, 2016
    Verified Purchase
    We always critise our fathers, thinking they could have done better or differently. We hardly ever know their story. This book is essentially about this: the story of a father who failed at everything and only imminent death brings him to tell all he went through.
    I love authors in the like of Joseph Boyden, Jim Harrison, Jack Kerouac, and was very pleased to discover Richard Wagamese as a writer in the veins of the aforementionned ones. To be read by every sons.
  • Laurence R. Bachmann
    5.0 out of 5 stars Fathers and sons; what we're owed and owe each other
    Reviewed in the United States on July 4, 2015
    Verified Purchase
    The most frustrating thing about reviewing a Richard Wagamese tale is one knows at the outset it will not do justice to the beauty of the writing, the depth of characterization and the rush of emotion the author's prose excites. Wagamese is a master-storyteller, now at the peak of his powers, and I use the word "powers" deliberately. The saga of Franklin and Eldon Starlight is at times quite literally gut-wrenching, knocking the wind out of the reader. Like all Wagamese stories the natural beauty, wonder and mystery of the world is seamlessly woven into the story, as lustrous as a Bayonne tapestry as marvelous as a Bosch triptych. Characters' connection, or reconnection to the natural world is often the most affecting and moving aspect of the novel.

    At 1 week old Franklin is abandoned by his father to be raised by a character who is known (til the very last chapters) simply as the old man. While it is by far the best that could be done for the infant, like all foster children Frank grows up with the ache of abandonment and the constant, painful wondering, "why?". The story is a counterpoint of joys and disappointments--his growth to young adulthood under the tutelage of the old man and his constant disappointment with the drunken wastrel who is his genetic father. On the cusp of manhood Frank is summoned one last time by Eldon and asked to take an extraordinary journey with him.

    Most wonderfully this story is about the power of stories and the mystery of life--ours and others'. Each life is filled with both--stories we are told and those we tell ourselves. The truths and the lies that keep us going, purposeful and hopeful, or the moments in life that drag us down, like stones in the pockets of a drowning man. "I still got no sense of him. So far it's all been stories. She nodded. It's all we are in the end. Our stories." And: "We're a Great Mystery. Everything. Said the things they done, those old-time Indians, was about learning' to live with that mystery. Not solving it, not com in' to grips with it, not even tryin' to guess it out. Just bein' with it. I guess I wish I'da learned the secret to do that."

    The author has an awesome ability to summon "the gumbo of smells" that constitute a meadow, or the gumbo of emotions and conflict that constitute a man. It is also about forgiveness, and whether it should be given even if it is undeserved. Powerful ideas. Powerful emotions, and Wagamese doesn't flinch from looking at them squarely. This is a great work of literature, specific to a people and place but transcendent as well, broad and in every human way, universal. It's not to be missed. If you read one book this year, make it Medicine Walk. You won't regret it.
  • 鶹 Kunde
    3.0 out of 5 stars Not a great read.
    Reviewed in Germany on April 10, 2021
    Verified Purchase
    The book was ok.
  • Roger Brunyate
    4.0 out of 5 stars Starlight and Loss
    Reviewed in the United States on August 2, 2015
    Verified Purchase
    "Jimmy said Starlight was the name given to them that got teachin's from Star People. Long ago. Way back. Legend goes that they came outta the stars on a night like this. Clear night. Sat with the people and told 'em stuff. Stories mostly, about the way of things. The wisest ones got taught more. Our people. Starlights. We're meant to be teachers and storytellers. They say nights like this bring them teachin's and stories back and that's when they oughta be passed on again."

    ======

    Ignore my star rating for the moment. Ignore whatever I may say in the second half of this review. If you can allow this beautiful novel to draw you into its spell, if you can remain in its world and believe in its characters, you will find something utterly moving. You will find a book that, out of the most basic realities of life in the woods and mountains, weaves an almost ritual story that contains deep truths about fathers and sons, and what it takes to learn to be a man. The friend who persuaded me to buy the book called it the most powerful reading experience she had had all year, taking her totally out of her surroundings while immersed in its pages. I can easily see why.

    Franklin Starlight, most often referred to as "the kid," is sixteen, living on a ranch somewhere in the mountains of Western Canada with the man who has clearly brought him up, similarly referred to as "the old man." They are like father and son, in every way except literally. When the book opens, the kid is setting off on a two-day ride across the mountains to visit his biological father, Eldon Starlight, living in a beat-up flophouse in the nearest mill town. His liver shot from years of drinking, Eldon feels close to death, and has sent for his son to take him three days' walk into the wilderness, according to Indian custom, so that he can die and be buried on a mountain facing the East.

    Both men, like the author himself, are part Ojibway. But Eldon has never been brought up in Indian ways and is now as far from a warrior as you could imagine. Franklin has learned everything about the woods that the old man could teach him, but his teacher is not Indian at all. So in a sense, this journey for both father and son is a quest to assume the mantle of a forgotten heritage -- a theme brought to radiant transcendence in the lovely closing page of the book. But over and above that, there is the story of a father trying to introduce himself to a son whom he hardly knows. Bit by bit, as Eldon croaks out those stories that should have been told years ago, we hear about his fearless youth when he really was a warrior of a kind, the mistakes he made and the burdens that have dragged him down, and finally the story of Franklin's birth and the identity of the old man. Hardly the lore of the Star People, but at least the confession of this one Starlight who has almost, but not quite, lost touch with his heritage. It turns out to be an altogether fuller and richer story than the simple journey into the mountains might suggest, and immensely rewarding for readers who can make the journey with them.

    ======

    Unfortunately, I couldn't, not entirely. Unlike my friend, I could not immerse myself totally in the story; I kept popping out of it every few pages, and reading, as it were, over my own shoulder. But the problem is most likely with me rather than the author. For one thing, it is not my world. You do not have to be Indian, but this does very much play into the North American myth of the wild. The idea that the boy becomes a man when he shoots his first game, that he learns wisdom through woodcraft, is a commonplace in American literature from Fenimore Cooper through Faulkner to Hemingway and beyond, but it does not resonate with me, a European. I was always conscious of the artifice, the juggling act required to keep the reader's disbelief suspended. The story was beautifully constructed to lead to the revelations of those three days, but constructed nonetheless, and it was hard to forget that. I was also aware of an imbalance between the characters. Eldon grows from being a stock drunk to a fully realized character, and becomes the true protagonist of the novel. But Franklin is simply too good to be true, without a single moment of weakness. He is the perfect woodsman, catching and cooking all their food, staring down a rampant bear; he always finds absolutely the right answer, the mature, no-nonsense answer, for his father. One changes; the other doesn't much, although he learns a great deal.

    I enjoyed the laconic dialogue, written throughout in what I take as authentic dialect. The tone is set right on the first page, when the kid goes into the barn to see the old man milking a cow: "Get ya some breakfast," he said. / "Ate already," the kid said. / "Better straight from the tit." / "There's better tits." Or take a line like "Poetry's nothin' but a man feelin' what's there anyhow." I marked this down as a nugget of real wisdom, but then it began to seem a little corny. Once I realized how easy it would be to parody this style, it lost some of its potency. It is significant, I think, that the stories that really matter -- when Eldon is telling about his life -- are no longer in direct speech, but narrated in the third person, in the author's own voice. And they are more effective because of it.

    I do not generally think of an author's real life while reading his fiction; art before facts is my watchword. Yet with Richard Wagamese, that distinction is not so easy. I was greatly impressed by his previous novel, INDIAN HORSE, which I gather was partially autobiographical. There, he was writing of things he knew personally: the government-run Indian Schools, finding an escape through ice hockey, and learning which would-be mentors could be trusted and which not. Relatively ordinary things that he made sound extraordinary. But here, I feel, he is trying too hard to manufacture something elemental, something primal. And too often it seems just a little self-consciously mythic, lacking the authenticity that shone through the earlier book.

    And yet, and yet. Wagamese's short but moving afterword suggests that writing this book may have served as a medicine walk for him too. Like so many Native Americans of his generation, he was robbed of his heritage and parenthood, brought up in residential schools and assigned to foster families. The theme of trying to connect with the land and spirit of his people, and thinking about a father whom he never knew, must have been extremely painful. I have later learned that he has written about the difficulty of being a father to his own sons, as a legacy of his own trauma. Seen in this way, with the author identifying with both Franklin and Eldon, the novel has quite a different kind of authenticity: the authenticity of loss and regret. And that I find very moving indeed.
  • Wendy Gauntner
    5.0 out of 5 stars A Quiet and Beautiful Read
    Reviewed in the United States on July 4, 2025
    Verified Purchase
    This book was one of the best I’ve read in a while. The descriptive writing and deep story line settle in from the beginning. I highly recommend it!