Billy-Ray Belcourt is a writer from the Driftpile Cree Nation. He is an assistant professor in the School of Creative Writing at the University of British Columbia and the founder of oteh nikan, an online magazine of LGBTQ2S+ indigenous writing. He lives in Vancouver, Canada.
"An absolutely dazzling confluence of big ideas and raw emotions,
told in Billy-Ray Belcourt’s singular poetic voice. A Minor Chorus
is about loving, questioning, and fighting for your life, and it’s
as compelling a debut novel as I’ve read in years."
*Jami Attenberg, author of I Came All This Way to Meet You*
"No one breaks your heart as elegantly as Billy-Ray Belcourt.
Innovative, intimate, and meticulous."
*Eden Robinson, author of Son of a Trickster*
"A Minor Chorus is a rare gem of a book. We will be reading and
rereading A Minor Chorus for decades to come."
*Alicia Elliott, author of A Mind Spread Out on the Ground*
"A truly exceptional novel about how the disregarded sometimes live
the most remarkable lives. A Minor Chorus is like a song that’s
over too soon; I want to play it on repeat, to memorize the words
so that I can sing them to myself."
*Katherena Vermette, author of The Strangers*
"An achingly gorgeous debut novel of Indigenous survival…This is a
breathtaking and hypnotic achievement."
*Publishers Weekly (starred review)*
"Following his essay collection, A History of My Brief Body, poet
Belcourt, from the Driftpile Cree Nation, continues his exploration
of Indigenous trauma and queerness in this erudite debut
novel…Smart, thoughtful."
*Kathy Sexton - Booklist*
"With his first novel, wunderkind Belcourt cements what has become
increasingly clear across two poetry collections and a memoiristic
book of essays: he is a fearless writer... [A Minor Chorus is]
a ruminative constellation of ideas regarding colonial trauma,
heteropatriarchy, and the innate sociality of writing; Belcourt’s
boldest, freest, and most linguistically assured work yet."
*Library Journal (starred review)*
"A Minor Chorus is a feat of technical brilliance, a novel
that questions the worth of writing even as it asserts its own
value. It is a slippery, scholarly work, rooted in the layered
complexity of Indigenous life."
*Laura Sackton - BookPage (starred review)*
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