[2009. Aboriginal author of Canadian classic releases new title: Come walk with me, a memoir by Beatrice Mosionier. NationTalk, December 17. http://nationtalk.ca/story/aboriginalauthor-of-canadian-classic-releases-new-title-come-walk-with-me-a-memoir-by-beatrice-mosionier (accessed 10 May 2015.) ]Search in Google Scholar
[Acoose, Janice. 1999. The problem of ‘searching’ for April Raintree. In Beatrice Culleton Mosionier In search of April Raintree. Critical Edition, Cheryl Suzack (ed.), 227-236. Winnipeg: Portage & Main Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Alston-O’Connor, Emily. 2010. The Sixties scoop: Implications for social workers and social work education. Critical Social Work: An Interdisciplinary Journal Dedicated to Social Justice 11(1). http://www1.uwindsor.ca/criticalsocialwork/the-sixties-scoop-implications-for-social-workers-and-social-work-education (accessed 09 May 2015.) 10.22329/csw.v11i1.5816]Search in Google Scholar
[Anderson, Kim. 2000. A recognition of being: Reconstructing native womanhood. Toronto: Sumach Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Armstrong, Jeanette. 2006. Keynote address: The aesthetic qualities of aboriginal writing. Studies in Canadian Literature/Études en littérature canadienne 31(1). 20-30.]Search in Google Scholar
[Bolaki, Stella. 2011. Unsettling the Bildungsroman: Reading contemporary ethnic American women's fiction. Amsterdam: Rodopi.10.1163/9789401200677]Search in Google Scholar
[Eakin, Paul John. 1999. How our lives become stories: making selves. Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press.10.7591/9781501711831]Search in Google Scholar
[Episkenew, Jo-Ann. 2009. Taking back our spirits: Indigenous literature, public policy, and healing. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press ]Search in Google Scholar
[Fournier, Souzanne and Crey, Ernie. 1997. Stolen from our embrace: The abduction of First Nations children and the restoration of Aboriginal communities. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre.]Search in Google Scholar
[Keeshig-Tobias, Lenore. 1990. Stop stealing Native stories. Globe and Mail 26 January. A7.]Search in Google Scholar
[LaRocque, Emma. 2010. When the Other is me. Native resistance discourse 1850-1990. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Logan, Tricia. 2008. Métis scholarship in the 21st century: life on the periphery. In Kerstin Knopf (ed.), Aboriginal Canada revisited, 88-99. Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Lutz, Hartmut. 2002a. Cultural appropriation as a repression of peoples and histories. In Approaches: Essays in Native North American studies and literatures, 75-82. Augsburg: Wissner.]Search in Google Scholar
[Lutz, Hartmut. 2002b. Confronting Cultural Imperialism: First Nations people are combating continued cultural theft. In Approaches: Essays in Native North American studies and literatures, 83-97. Augsburg: Wissner.]Search in Google Scholar
[Mosionier, Beatrice Culleton. 1999. In search of April Raintree. Critical Edition. Ed. Cheryl Suzack. Winnipeg: Portage & Main Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Mosionier, Beatrice. 2009. Come walk with me. A memoir. Winnipeg: Highwater Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Smith Sidonie and Julia Watson. 2010. Reading autobiography: A guide for interpreting life narratives. University of Minnesota Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Smulders, Sharon. 2006. “What is the proper word for people like you?”: The question of Métis identity in In search of April Raintree. English Studies in Canada 32(4). 75-100.10.1353/esc.0.0018]Search in Google Scholar
[Weaver, Jace. 1997. That the People might live: Native American literatures and Native American community. Oxford: New York. ]Search in Google Scholar