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Ducks two years in the oil sands review
Ducks two years in the oil sands review











ducks two years in the oil sands review

This year’s slate of Canada Reads contestants are fighting to be named the one book “to shift your perspective.” Beaton’s book is being defended by “Jeopardy” super-champion Mattea Roach. The 430-page retelling of her two years in the oilsands portrays the industry as one burdened by misogyny and corporate interests, but also a place where employees can find unexpected acts of kindness and a tight-knit community. With “Ducks,” Beaton’s graphic memoir that’s now competing in Canada Reads, she sought to show people what the experience can really be like. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO - CBC *MANDATORY CREDIT*

ducks two years in the oil sands review

With the graphic memoir about her two years working in the oilsands, Beaton paints a nuanced portrait characterized by misogyny and corporate interests, but also unexpected acts of kindness and tight-knit community. Panellist for Canada Reads 2023 Mattea Roach poses with the book "Ducks" by Kate Beaton in this undated handout photo. “If you don’t have a personal connection to the actual area, the location, or the workforce, or the people that travel back and forth and work there, then it’s harder to have an understanding of day-to-day life there,” Beaton said in a phone interview from her home in Cape Breton. Those making the move now, some 15-plus years after the comics artist worked in Fort McMurray, have more information about the industry thanks to social media, she said. When Kate Beaton migrated west to work in Alberta’s oilsands, she didn’t know what to expect - other than a job that would allow her to pay down her student loans. Free Press 101: How we practise journalism.













Ducks two years in the oil sands review