Not My Fate

The Story of a Nisga’a Survivor

True story of a proud Nisga’a woman who broke the cycle of systemic oppression to reclaim her life and reach forgiveness. Josephine Caplin (Jo) was born into a world marred by maternal abandonment, alcoholism and traumatic epileptic seizures. In grade three, she was apprehended by child services and separated from her protective brother and her early caregivers, her father and uncle, who were kind men with drinking problems. Placed into many alienating and lonely foster homes, Jo would not see her family again until she was fourteen. Throughout her life Jo fought symptoms of fetal alcohol syndrome, abuse by sadistic men and the collective horror of generations of ancestors forced into residential schools, causing many to believe Jo was destined to repeat a hopeless cycle. Yet she did not surrender to others’ despairing expectations: against all odds, Jo fought to create her own cycle full of hope and growth. Born of a Métis-Canadian background, author Janet Romain delicately and proudly tells the story of her heroic friend and explores the tragic aftermath of Canada’s residential schools and the effects of colonization. Jo is a courageous woman who determined her own fate and reclaimed her life. Not My Fate: Story of A Nisga’a Survivor is her struggle to move past a legacy of hardship toward a life of peace and forgiveness.

Janet Romain

Janet Romain is Métis-Canadian. She was born in Vancouver, but has lived most of her life in northern BC. She worked in a variety of jobs from short-order cook to lumber grader, but eventually bought land out in the country. She has three grown children and currently lives with her husband near Fort Fraser. She is surrounded by gardens and wildlife, just a stone’s throw from where she grew up. Not My Fate: Story of A Nisga’a Survivor is her second book with Caitlin Press.

Marketing & Publicity
  • review mail-out to Aboriginal media publications/radio
  • submit to First Nations / Metis literature awards
  • target library reading lists and librarians with Aboriginal mandates
  • endorsements by American-Aboriginal writers