Tasha Spillett-Sumner (née Spillett) is a Canadian author and educator. She is best known for her young adult graphic novel series Surviving the City, volume 1 of which won the Best Work in an Alternative Format at the 2019
Indigenous Voices Awards.
Career
Spillett-Sumner competed in the 2014
Miss Indian World pageant.[1] She was chosen as Miss Congeniality.[2] Spillett-Sumner was a board member of Manito Ahbee and served as the chair of the Miss Manito Ahbee Youth Ambassador gathering, which honoured of missing and murdered indigenous women and girls.[3] Spillett-Sumner also mentored young Indigenous people in Winnipeg through Sister Circle.[2] Spillett-Sumner has taught both high school social studies and English in addition to land-based knowledge workshops and programs.[4]
In 2018, Spillett-Sumner's debut graphic novel, Surviving the City, vol. 1, was published by Highwater Press. The book was illustrated by
Natasha Donovan and depicts two young Indigenous women, Miikwan, who is
Anishinaabe, and Dez, who is Inninew.[5][6] The second volume of Surviving the City, "From the Roots Up" was released in October 2020.[7]
In April 2021, Spillett-Sumner released the picture book I Sang You Down from the Stars, illustrated by Michaela Goade. I Sang You Down from the Stars debuted at number 3 on the
New York Times Best Seller List and remained there for a week.[8][9] Spillett-Sumner began writing the book while pregnant with her daughter, Isabella.[10] Spillett-Sumner's second picture book, Beautiful You, Beautiful Me, was published in 2022. It was defended by Janaye as part of the 2023 CBC Kids Reads.[11]
Works
Surviving the City
Volume 1: "Surviving the City" - illustrated by
Natasha Donovan (2018), as Tasha Spillett[12]
Volume 2: "From the Roots Up" - illustrated by Natasha Donovan (2020)[13]
I Sang You Down from the Stars - illustrated by
Michaela Goade (2021)[14]
Beautiful You, Beautiful Me - illustrated by
Salini Perera (2022)[15]
Spillett-Sumner is of
Nehiyaw and
Trinidadian descent.[13] She has a master's degree in land-based Indigenous education from the
University of Saskatchewan.[18] Spillett also is completing her PhD in education there.[19][10] She received the Queen Elizabeth II Centennial Aboriginal Scholarship to pursue her PhD.[20]
Spillett-Sumner is married to singer-songwriter
Leonard Sumner. She gave birth to their daughter, Isabella, in March 2020.[10]