Posted in Uncategorized

Happy Book Birthday to Miya Wears Orange

Miya Wears Orange, by Wanda John-Kehewin/Illustrated by Erika Rodriguez Medina, (Aug. 2025, Highwater Press), $18.95, ISBN: 9781774921258

Ages 6-8

A young Indigenous girl learns about residential schools in her class, making her fear that she will be sent to one. When Miya arrives at home from school, she reluctantly tells her mother about her concerns; her mother assuages her fears, telling her that the schools have closed and she will never have to attend one. When Miya questions why her teacher read a book about them, Mom notes that “We all need to understand the truth of what happened, so we can make sure it never happens again”.  Mom tells Miya about wearing an orange shirt as a way of remembering the struggles of Indigenous children, and Miya proudly wears when she returns to school. John-Kehewin shows the intergenerational trauma wreaked by the schools and how it reaches the current generation. Medina’s illustrations have cultural details and her characters are inclusive and expressive. An author’s note mentions her inspiration for Miya’s story. A powerful and moving story about residential schools as seen through the modern-day eyes of an Indigenous girl, Miya Wears Orange belongs in library collections everywhere.

Learn about the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation here.