Standing in a River of Time merges poetry and lyrical memoir on a
journey exposing the intergenerational effects of colonization on a
Métis family. Kirton does not shy away from hard realities, meeting them
head on, but always treating them with respect and the love stemming
from a lifetime of spiritual healing and decades of sobriety. This
collection unravels painful memories and a mixed-blood woman's journey
towards wholeness. The Ancestors whisper to Kirton throughout, asking
her to heal, to bring them home, so that within these stories of
redemption and loss the dead walk with us, their presence felt as the
story unfurls in unexpected ways. Kirton does not offer false hope, nor
does she push us towards answers we are not yet ready for. Instead, she
gestures towards the many healing modalities she has explored as she
discovers that the path to reconciliation is not only a long and winding
road, but also that it begins with those closest to us.