At ‘WesPress’ we are celebrating Native American Heritage Month! Here is a sampling of relevant books about Indigenous people that range from poetry to memoir and highlight North America’s diverse Indigenous communities.
2022 Native American Heritage Collection
In Mad Love and War / Joy Harjo
“I first encountered Joy Harjo, member of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation, at the Gathering of Nations powwow in Albuquerque, New Mexico, in the late 1990s. At an offsite event she read some poems, then sang and played her saxophone with her band, Poetic Justice. I was transfixed. I picked up a book of her poetry, “In Mad Love and War” (Wesleyan University Press, 1990), which she signed and inscribed, “For Chris, For Justice, For Love.” I have carried that book with me through every move, every bookshelf culling, every physical and emotional transformation since. At a time when I was just beginning to appreciate poetry, Harjo’s work became a touchstone against which pretty much everything else would be measured. The poetry of other writers has come and gone, but Harjo’s work has remained lodged deep in my heart.”
—Christopher LaTray, The Missoulian
Wings of Night Sky, Wings of Morning Light: A Play by Joy Harjo and a Circle of Responses / Joy Harjo and Priscilla Page
“Harjo’s play follows an ancient path, that of tribal creation, healing pain, loss, love, and ultimately helps us remember we will survive. Wings of Night Sky, Wings of Morning Light: A Play by Joy Harjo and a Circle of Responses is destined to become a classic.”
—LeAnne Howe, Edison Distinguished Professor in American Literature, University of Georgia
Soul Talk, Soul Language: Conversations with Joy Harjo / Joy Harjo and Tanaya Winder
“A fascinating, complex portrait of Joy Harjo, the poet musician, emerges from these conversations. Soul Talk, Song Language focuses on her process of making an organic fusion of the musicality of words with the language of the saxophone. Everyone who loves her performances and her writing will want to read this book, which includes Joy’s monthly columns for the Muscogee Nation News.”
—Leslie Marmon Silko, author of The Turquoise Ledge
In the Current Where Drowning Is Beautiful / Abigail Chabitnoy
“This remarkable book undertakes a kind of geological exploration of the hidden-in-plain-sight strata making up the world around us and our lives within it: raspberries against graves against glaciers; disappeared women alongside disappearing rivers; mythic transformations next to anonymous martyrdoms. Connecting it all are stories—the questions they ask and answer, what they reveal or obscure—and water—as source of life and death, body of history and place where history’s bodies are buried, manifestation of the cross-currents that swirl through and around us, bellwether of what’s to come. Chabitnoy invites us into a dazzling, urgent mode of inquiry in which poems—keen and liminal, epic and intimate, fierce and tender—are the conscious element depositing us wide-awake on the shore of the precarious present we inherit and inhabit where, increasingly, ‘the high ground isn’t.'”
—Lisa Olstein, author of Late Empire
How to Dress a Fish / Abigail Chabitnoy
“Never before have readers been of a mind to apprehend such prodigious poems. Determined by the wealth and control of their poet’s language and the most profound respect for the powers of history, this work insists upon the necessity of poetry. Poems like these change the world, connecting us to each other and all else that sustains life. Herein, the lyric bones are barbed and all the crafts: laden. Not in division, but through the responsibility and gifts of this most crucial poet: Abigail Chabitnoy. With her poems, together we may, as real people, spring from and return to the islands, the sea, and the ice with utmost elegance. Traveling together, and most attentive to our context.”
—Joan Kane, 2018 Guggenheim Fellow in Poetry
Blue Ravens: Historical Novel / Gerald Vizenor
“Historical novels about Native Americans in World War I are few and far between. This is one such rare book. It speaks to the importance of traditions and the trickster archetype without romanticizing these oft-appropriated symbols. Refusing to give in to a mentality of victimization, Blue Ravens tells an intriguing story while keeping hold of the realities of love, war, traditional culture, and life.”
—Nota Benes, World Literature Today
Native Tributes: Historical Novel / Gerald Vizenor
“Native Tributes will encourage you to revisit the aftermath of World War I – from a Native American perspective.”
—Kristina Baudemann, American Studies Journal
Satie on the Seine: Letters to the Heirs of the Fur Trade / Gerald Vizenor
“Science fiction. Screenplays. Nonfiction. Literary theory. Poetry—including entire books of Haikus. Gerald Vizenor, a member of the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe, White Earth Reservation, is a prolific writer with an oeuvre of over 25 books.”
—Elena Nicolaou, O, Oprah.com
Waiting for Wovoka: Envoy of Good Cheer and Liberty / Gerald Vizenor
“Part novel, part haiku/Anishinaabe dream song, part puppet show, part autobiography, part travelogue = an all-Vizenor bushel of ‘trickery queries and spontaneous mockeries;’ ‘heart songs, dream songs, and tumble names.'”
—Kenneth M. Roemer, Co-Editor, The Cambridge Companion to Native American Literature
Treaty Shirts: October 2034—A Familiar Treatise on the White Earth Nation / Gerald Vizenor
“[A]n ironic, intertextual, slipstream, futurist, speculative constitution and declaration of the rights of human, chicken, mongrel, holotrope, and mutant fish beings Treaty Shirts offers science fiction as an ironic, playful space to imagine possibilities for survivance and sovereignty.”
—Stina Attebery, Los Angeles Review of Books
Favor of Crows: New and Collected Haiku / Gerald Vizenor
“As a volume of nature poems, Favor of Crows: New and Collected Haiku is a joyous, flamboyant, and radiant collection that sharpens our ability to perceive and appreciate discrete manifestations of the natural world. Through the vehicle of these wondrous and succinct poems, Vizenor reinforces the reality of our human dependency upon the natural world as the source that sustains us within the cycle of life. He reminds us that we are born to perceive the beauty of our surroundings and, by doing so, celebrate life in all its majesty.”
—Sonja James, The Journal
Shadow Distance: A Gerald Vizenor Reader / Gerald Vizenor
“Vizenor is unquestionably one of the most radical American literary voices on the subject of racial identity and an ironist extraordinaire as a witness to the aftermath of Manifest Destiny.”
—Voice Literary Supplement
Music and Modernity among First Peoples of North America / Victoria Lindsay Levine and Dylan Robinson
“This stunning book explodes every iteration of the indigenous-modern dialectic. Its essays range across borders, generations, technologies, genres, politics, and identities to produce brilliant and coherent arguments that define the leading edge of indigenous sound studies.”
—Philip J. Deloria, author of Indians in Unexpected Places