
Touching Grass
âA story readers are going to love. What a fun read.â âRichard Van Camp, author of The Lesser Blessed and Beast
Winner of Middle Grade Book of the Year at the 2025 Northern Lights Book Awards | A Calgary Public Library Best Book of the Year | An Indigo Top Ten Kidsâ Book of 2025
From the author of the Governor Generalâs Awardâshortlisted, Silver Birch Award finalist Mortified, a funny, heartfelt middle-grade novel about a young gamer who is sent to âtouch grassâ at a Dene First Nation culture camp
Tristen would do anything to avoid going outside. The bugs sting, the snakes are poisonous, the heat will kill you if the cold doesnât, and bodies of water? Forget it. Tristen likes it best indoors, deep in his online world where itâs safe, with his online friends. Something he has a hard time with IRL.
But Tristen is in trouble at school again, and the principal is threatening to kick him out of this third school in two years. His mom believes the answer is to get Tristen off the games and in touch with nature and his Dene roots. This means Tristen has to spend a week at a culture camp in the wilderness. Itâs his worst nightmare!
And at first it is a nightmareâno internet, no phone reception, no Bepsi!âand Tristen has no idea how to do any of the skills the other kids seem to do easily. But soon, with some surprising new friends, a few patient teachers and a little help from technology, Tristen begins to think he might be able to hack this nature stuff after all.
âI think itâs so important for kids to see themselves in books, and our area isnât often included. I think kids from the North who read this will feel included. I think they will laugh when they read it. I sure did.â âRonelda Robillard, Hatchet Lake DenesuÌšĆineÌ First Nation, Treaty 10
âI am Dene, and I come from an Athabasca Dene community. I endorse Touching Grass. This book, with its themes of resilience, survival and the importance of community, resonates deeply with the Saskatchewan community. . . . We would love kids everywhere to read it!â âRosalie Tsannie-Burseth, Hatchet Lake DenesuÌšĆineÌ First Nation, Treaty 10
Original: $11.50
-70%$11.50
$3.45More Images



Touching Grass
âA story readers are going to love. What a fun read.â âRichard Van Camp, author of The Lesser Blessed and Beast
Winner of Middle Grade Book of the Year at the 2025 Northern Lights Book Awards | A Calgary Public Library Best Book of the Year | An Indigo Top Ten Kidsâ Book of 2025
From the author of the Governor Generalâs Awardâshortlisted, Silver Birch Award finalist Mortified, a funny, heartfelt middle-grade novel about a young gamer who is sent to âtouch grassâ at a Dene First Nation culture camp
Tristen would do anything to avoid going outside. The bugs sting, the snakes are poisonous, the heat will kill you if the cold doesnât, and bodies of water? Forget it. Tristen likes it best indoors, deep in his online world where itâs safe, with his online friends. Something he has a hard time with IRL.
But Tristen is in trouble at school again, and the principal is threatening to kick him out of this third school in two years. His mom believes the answer is to get Tristen off the games and in touch with nature and his Dene roots. This means Tristen has to spend a week at a culture camp in the wilderness. Itâs his worst nightmare!
And at first it is a nightmareâno internet, no phone reception, no Bepsi!âand Tristen has no idea how to do any of the skills the other kids seem to do easily. But soon, with some surprising new friends, a few patient teachers and a little help from technology, Tristen begins to think he might be able to hack this nature stuff after all.
âI think itâs so important for kids to see themselves in books, and our area isnât often included. I think kids from the North who read this will feel included. I think they will laugh when they read it. I sure did.â âRonelda Robillard, Hatchet Lake DenesuÌšĆineÌ First Nation, Treaty 10
âI am Dene, and I come from an Athabasca Dene community. I endorse Touching Grass. This book, with its themes of resilience, survival and the importance of community, resonates deeply with the Saskatchewan community. . . . We would love kids everywhere to read it!â âRosalie Tsannie-Burseth, Hatchet Lake DenesuÌšĆineÌ First Nation, Treaty 10
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
âA story readers are going to love. What a fun read.â âRichard Van Camp, author of The Lesser Blessed and Beast
Winner of Middle Grade Book of the Year at the 2025 Northern Lights Book Awards | A Calgary Public Library Best Book of the Year | An Indigo Top Ten Kidsâ Book of 2025
From the author of the Governor Generalâs Awardâshortlisted, Silver Birch Award finalist Mortified, a funny, heartfelt middle-grade novel about a young gamer who is sent to âtouch grassâ at a Dene First Nation culture camp
Tristen would do anything to avoid going outside. The bugs sting, the snakes are poisonous, the heat will kill you if the cold doesnât, and bodies of water? Forget it. Tristen likes it best indoors, deep in his online world where itâs safe, with his online friends. Something he has a hard time with IRL.
But Tristen is in trouble at school again, and the principal is threatening to kick him out of this third school in two years. His mom believes the answer is to get Tristen off the games and in touch with nature and his Dene roots. This means Tristen has to spend a week at a culture camp in the wilderness. Itâs his worst nightmare!
And at first it is a nightmareâno internet, no phone reception, no Bepsi!âand Tristen has no idea how to do any of the skills the other kids seem to do easily. But soon, with some surprising new friends, a few patient teachers and a little help from technology, Tristen begins to think he might be able to hack this nature stuff after all.
âI think itâs so important for kids to see themselves in books, and our area isnât often included. I think kids from the North who read this will feel included. I think they will laugh when they read it. I sure did.â âRonelda Robillard, Hatchet Lake DenesuÌšĆineÌ First Nation, Treaty 10
âI am Dene, and I come from an Athabasca Dene community. I endorse Touching Grass. This book, with its themes of resilience, survival and the importance of community, resonates deeply with the Saskatchewan community. . . . We would love kids everywhere to read it!â âRosalie Tsannie-Burseth, Hatchet Lake DenesuÌšĆineÌ First Nation, Treaty 10