I read this book in honor of Native American Heritage Month in November, and also because I was featuring it in a display at work, and I never like to put anything in a display that I haven't read yet. It is the first book written by the author and is based on elements from her own family history. The book is well written and Edie is a sympathetic character. It is a good introduction for young people about some of the injustices of history. (spoiler alert) I didn't know that for decades about 1/3 of children of Native people in the US were taken without their parent's consent and put in foster care or up for adoption. The justification was that the homes they were born into were in "indigent" conditions. It seems horrifying to us today, but I can see how people then considered it the right thing to do because poverty was a major issue among Native people. It is ironic that the government condemned them for their poverty, when a generation or two before that same government drove them off of good prosperous lands and forced them onto reservations that were in the worst, least productive regions of the country. (288 p. 2020)
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