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Sorell, Traci

Summary: Too often, Native American history is treated as a finished chapter instead of relevant and ongoing. This companion book to the award-winning We Are Grateful: Otsaliheliga offers readers everything they never learned in school about Native American people's past, present, and future. Precise, lyrical writing presents topics including: forced assimilation (such as boarding schools), land...

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: Charlesbridge 2021

Copies Available at East Bay

1 available in Juvenile Nonfiction, Call number: J 973.04 SOR

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Juvenile Nonfiction, Call number: J 973.04 SOR

Copies Available at Interlochen

1 available in Juvenile Nonfiction, Call number: J Native Sorell

Copies Available at Peninsula

1 available in Juvenile, Call number: J973.04 SOR

Lajimodiere, Denise K.

Summary: Education professor Denise Lajimodiere's interest in American Indian boarding school survivors stories evolved from recording her father and other family members speaking of their experiences. The journey to record survivors stories led her through the Dakotas and Minnesota and into the personal and private space of boarding school survivors. While there, she heard stories that they had never...

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: North Dakota State University Press 2019

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 371.829 LAJ

Reséndez, Andrés

Summary: A landmark history: the sweeping story of the enslavement of tens of thousands of Indians across America, from the time of the conquistadors up to the early 20th century. Since the time of Columbus, Indian slavery was illegal in much of the American continent. Yet, as Andrés Reséndez illuminates, it was practiced for centuries as an open secret. There was no abolitionist movement to protect the...

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2016

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 970 RES

Fletcher, Matthew L. M.

Summary: Even before the Revolutionary War, American colonists feared and fought “merciless Indian savages,” and through the following centuries, American law and policy have been molded by the relentless tradition of Indian-hating. From proportional representation and restrictions on the right to bear arms, to the break-up of tribal property rights and the destruction of Indian culture and family, the...

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: Fulcrum 2020

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 977.004 FLE

Miranda, Deborah A.

Summary: "In this beautiful and devastating book, part tribal history, part lyric and intimate memoir, Deborah Miranda tells both the stories of her Ohlone/Costanoan-Esselen family and the experience of California Indians as a whole through oral histories, newspaper clippings, anthropological recordings, personal reflections, and poems. Reassembling the shards of her people's past, she creates a work of...

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: Heyday 2013

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 305.8 MIR

Cozzens, Peter

Summary: "The Creek War was one of the most tragic episodes in American history, leading to the greatest loss of Native American life on what is now U.S. soil. What began as a vicious internal conflict among the Creek Indians metastasized like a cancer. The ensuing Creek War of 1813-1814 shattered Native American control of the Deep South and led to the infamous Trail of Tears, in which the government...

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: Alfred A. Knopf 2023

Copies Available at Kingsley

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 973.5 COZ

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 973.5 COZ

Copies Available at East Bay

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 973.5 HAR

Dodds Pennock, Caroline

Summary: "A landmark work of narrative history that shatters our previous Eurocentric understanding of the Age of Discovery by telling the story of the Indigenous Americans who journeyed across the Atlantic to Europe after 1492"--

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: Alfred A. Knopf 2023

Copies Available at Kingsley

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 970.004 PEN

Summary: Articles present opposing viewpoints on such Columbus-related issues as the motives of the conquistadors, treatment of the Indians, and twentieth-century views of Columbus.

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: Greenhaven Press 1992

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 970.015 CHR

Jacobs, Wilbur R.

Contents: Indian-white contact: background. The white man's frontier in American history: the impact upon the land and the Indian -- Unsavory sidelights on Colonial trade -- Wampum and the protocol of treaty-making -- White gift-giving: French skills in managing the Indians -- Indian-white contact: frontier conflicts. -- British Indian-white relations: Edmond Atkin's scheme for imperial control -- A...

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: University of Oklahoma Press 1985

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 323.1197 JAC

O'Gara, Geoffrey.

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: Alfred Knopf 2000

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 970.4 OGA

Bunnell, David

Summary: "Good Friday on the Rez introduces readers to places and people that author, writer, and entrepreneur David Bunnell encounters during his one day, 280-mile road trip from his boyhood Nebraska hometown to the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation to visit his longtime friend, Vernell White Thunder, a full-blooded Oglala Lakota, descendant of a long line of prominent chiefs and medicine men. This...

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: St. Martin's Press 2017

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 921 BUNNELL, DAVID HUGH BUN

Calloway, Colin G. (Colin Gordon)

Summary: " ... A large number of Native leaders were well acquainted with city life. In fact, over the course of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries they were in town often, regularly traveling to Albany, Boston, Charleston, Philadelphia, Montreal, Quebec, New York and New Orleans -- primarly to conduct diplomatic or trade business, but often from a sense of curiosity and adventure. Some were even...

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: Oxford University Press 2021

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 970.2 CAL

Spence, Gerry

Summary: "The search for justice for a Lakota Sioux man wrongfully charged with murder, told here for the first time by his trial lawyer, Gerry Spence. This is the untold story of Collins Catch the Bear, a Lakota Sioux, who was wrongfully charged with the murder of a white man in 1982 at Russell Means's Yellow Thunder Camp, an AIM encampment in the Black Hills in South Dakota. Though Collins was...

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: Seven Stories Press 2019

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 978.004 SPE

Smith, Craig Stephen.

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: Indian Life Books 1997

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 266 SMI

Nerburn, Kent

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: HarperSanFrancicso 2005

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 921 JOSEEPH Nerburn

Reese, Debbie

Summary: "Going beyond the story of America as a country "discovered" by a few brave men in the "New World," Indigenous human rights advocate Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz reveals the roles that settler colonialism and policies of American Indian genocide played in formingour national identity. The original academic text is fully adapted by renowned curriculum experts Debbie Reese and Jean Mendoza, for...

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: Beacon Press 2019

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Young Adult Non-fiction, Call number: YA 970 REE

Richter, Daniel K.

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: Harvard University Press 2001

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 970.1 RIC

Tierney, Patrick.

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: Norton 2000

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 981.1 TIE

Churchill, Ward.

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: City Lights Books 1997

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 970.1 CHU

McGrath, Melanie

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: Alfred A. Knopf 2007

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 305.897 MCG

Jacoby, Karl

Summary: Predawn, April 30, 1871, a party of Americans, Mexicans, and Tohono O'odham Indians gathered outside an Apache camp in the Arizona borderlands. At first light they struck, murdering nearly 150 Apaches, mostly women and children, in their sleep. In its day, the atrocity, known as the Camp Grant Massacre, generated unparalleled national attention--federal investigations, heated debate in the...

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: Penguin Press 2008

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 973.82 JAC

Dunbar-Ortiz, Roxanne

2 holds on 3 copies

Summary: "Today in the United States, there are more than five hundred federally-recognized Indigenous nations comprising nearly three million people, descendants of the fifteen million Native people who once inhabited this land. The centuries-long genocidal program of the US settler-colonial regimen has largely been omitted from history. Now historian and activist Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz offers a history...

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: Beacon Press 2014

Copies Available at Kingsley

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 970 DUN

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 970 DUN

Hogan, Lawrence J.

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: Amlex 1998

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 364.1523 HOG

Cleland, Charles E.

Summary: For many thousands of years before the arrival of Europeans, Michigan's native peoples, the Anishnabeg, thrived in the forests and along the shores of the Great Lakes. Theirs were cultures in delicate social balance and in economic harmony with the natural order. Rites of Conquest details the struggles of Michigan Indians - the Ojibwa, Ottawa, and Potawatomi, and their neighbors - to maintain...

Format: text

Publisher / Publication Date: The University of Michigan Press 1992

Copies Available at Woodmere

1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 977.4 CLE
1 available in Reference, Call number: NEL 970.1 CLE

Copies Available at Peninsula

1 available in Adult, Call number: MI 977.4 CLE

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