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Wandering Stars
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
57 posts | 42 read | 23 to read
The eagerly awaited follow-up to Pulitzer Prize finalist Tommy Orange's breakout best seller There There--winner of the PEN/Hemingway Award, the John Leonard Prize, the American Book Award, and one of the New York Times Ten Best Books of the Year--Wandering Stars traces the legacies of the Sand Creek Massacre of 1864 and the Carlisle Industrial School for Indians through to the shattering aftermath of Orvil Redfeather's shooting in There There. Colorado, 1864. Star, a young survivor of the Sand Creek Massacre, is brought to the Fort Marion Prison Castle, where he is forced to learn English and practice Christianity by Richard Henry Pratt, an evangelical prison guard who will go on to found the Carlisle Industrial School for Indians, an institution dedicated to the eradication of Native history, culture, and identity. A generation later, Star's son, Charles, is sent to the school, where he is brutalized by the man who was once his father's jailer. Under Pratt's harsh treatment, Charles clings to moments he shares with a young fellow student, Opal Viola, as the two envision a future away from the institutional violence that follows their bloodline. Oakland, 2018. Opal Viola Victoria Bear Shield is barely holding her family together after the shooting that nearly took the life of her nephew Orvil. From the moment he awakens in his hospital bed, Orvil begins compulsively googling school shootings on YouTube. He also becomes emotionally reliant on the prescription medications meant to ease his physical trauma. His younger brother Lony, suffering from PTSD, is struggling to make sense of the carnage he witnessed at the shooting by secretly cutting himself and enacting blood rituals which he hopes will connect him to his Cheyenne heritage. Opal is equally adrift, experimenting with Ceremony and peyote, searching for a way to heal her wounded family. Extending his constellation of narratives into the past and future, Tommy Orange once again delivers a story that is by turns shattering and wondrous, a book piercing in its poetry, sorrow, and rage--a masterful follow-up to his already--classic first novel, and a devastating indictment of America's war on its own people.
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blurb
ChaoticMissAdventures
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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I have a review to post and one weekend book to finish but I am thinking about the first December books already. Week one of the final countdown!

I am going to tackle 2 of my #10BeforeTheEnd (Ours is a chunkster expecting it to take all month) and 2 from the #ToB both Creation Lake & Wandering Stars are on that list and the NYT best books of 2024.

dabbe 🖤🐾🖤 3w
32 likes1 comment
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Amor4Libros
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Bailedbailed

Very unpopular opinion but I just couldn‘t get into this one.

Lesliereadsalot I liked this one but it took awhile to get into it. Almost bailed myself! 2mo
Amor4Libros @Lesliereadsalot I gave up at 20% 😅 2mo
42 likes3 comments
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Kazzie
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
Pickpick

Not as good as his debut, but great! He has such a real voice, and spending time with Orvil and his family and ancestors was lovely. Sadness and happiness together

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Amor4Libros
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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I‘m reading too many memoirs right now and I‘ve been putting this one off for way too long…

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quietlycuriouskate
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Mehso-so

As with Anne Michaels' "Held", I was into the first half but once the narrative reached 2018 it kind of dissipated and/or fragmented whilst feeling increasingly repetitive, not helped by the fact that the various characters are written with the same voice. It's a worthy book dealing with seriously heavy themes and perhaps I'd feel differently had I read "There There" beforehand but, as it is, my reading experience became something of a trudge.

32 likes1 comment
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BooksNBowls
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

This wasn‘t as captivating as There There, but it was still a really solid follow up and I love the way Tommy Orange says things! He really makes you think and I enjoy his play on words and ability to connect us to history. 3.75/5

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Larkken
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

Super emotional read with lots of tough subjects including but not limited to genocide, residential schools, loss of parents, addiction, drug abuse, and a mass shooting. I loved the epistolary feel and sometimes-epistolary format and how the book therefore often felt like it was talking directly to me. The writing was lovely and the narration fantastic but this was a bit of a tough book to chill with due to subject matter.

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rmaclean4
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

There is a lot to admire in this novel. The first half of the book worked best for me. Once the novel picked up where There There left off, I started to lose interest. Well worth a read, but not on my personal short list. 3 🌟 #bookerlonglist #booker @squirrelbrain @AnneCecilie @charl08 @JamieArc @BarbaraBB @Graywacke @jlhammar @Deblovestoread

BarbaraBB Agree! 3mo
jlhammar I also preferred the first half. 3mo
Graywacke I started to lose interest in the first half. 🙂 And never fully recovered. I loved There There. 3mo
squirrelbrain Great review - I agree completely! 3mo
20 likes4 comments
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ClairesReads
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

This prequel/sequel to There There is a powerful piece of fiction when read as part of that whole story. As a novel itself, this one didn‘t work as well for me. The two parts of this novel didn‘t work equally well for this reader. As a result, although moving, and important, the messaging felt a bit too obvious to me, and accordingly the storytelling was a bit less resonant.

BarbaraBB Well said! 3mo
ClairesReads @BarbaraBB thank you 🙏🏻 3mo
32 likes2 comments
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BookishTrish
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

A soft pick - it finished strong but suffered in parts by being to repetitive. #booker

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charl08
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

I liked this a lot. Hoping it gets shortlisted.
#Booker24 #Longlist
Powerful engagement with indigenous histories of the US. As the dedication suggests, also a deep dive into youth addiction. Hoping it gets shortlisted.

Graywacke I felt different overall, but i appreciates the dive into addiction 4mo
charl08 @Graywacke I've seen lots of different reactions - seems to split readers. 4mo
See All 9 Comments
Graywacke @charl08 it does. But it seems almost all the books on the longlist do that. 4mo
rmaclean4 Glad to see your review. It is up next in my TBR pile. 4mo
charl08 @rmaclean4 hope you enjoy it! 4mo
charl08 @Graywacke I think James is going to win, have yet to see a negative comment.... 4mo
Graywacke @charl08 i‘ve seen some comments about readers being bored by James. I don‘t have a sense of what it is that makes it work. Of course, I‘ll want to discover that by reading it. 🙂 (Working on Enlightenment) 4mo
charl08 @greywacke interesting: I've not heard that. I loved it so much I feel (completely irrationally) defensive on the book's behalf 4mo
60 likes9 comments
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charl08
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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One thing I want you to understand is that your suffering does not make you special. There's a voice inside everyone who suffers that says, no one else has it like this, and so much selfish action comes from listening to that voice. You are not alone, you are not special, and there is help. We have one another."

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charl08
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange

All the Indian children....went on to have ....Indian children....whose Indian children became American Indians, whose American Indian children became Native Americans, whose Native American children would call themselves Natives, or Indigenous, or NDNS, or the names of their sovereign nations, or the names of their tribes, and all too often would be told they weren't the right kind of Indians

37 likes1 stack add
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DHill
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Third hold this week came in but I can never bring myself to extend them after waiting so long.

#audiobooks #libby

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Deblovestoread
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

#BookerLonglist

I had a hard time getting into this book but once I got through the first part it picked up for me. 3.5 🌟

atenelli Good to know. My bookclub will read that in September. 4mo
BarbaraBB Glad you enjoyed it! 4mo
54 likes2 comments
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jlhammar
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

Heavy stuff. Didn‘t quite reach the heights of There There for me (loved that one), but still very good. Only my second from the #Booker2024 longlist (after James).

BarbaraBB I think There There was better too. To be honest I was a bit underwhelmed by this one because There There was so good! 4mo
Graywacke @BarbaraBB There There was terrific. I didn‘t like this one. ☺️ 4mo
BarbaraBB @Graywacke To be honest me neither ☺️ 4mo
Lesliereadsalot Agreed. There There was better but still liked this one. 4mo
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squirrelbrain
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

#bookerlonglist 9/13

As with There, There, this was a tough read although, I think because I knew what to expect in terms of the author‘s style, I found it a little easier to read.

I preferred the first half of the book - the more recent sections (based in the aftermath of the Powwow in There, There) became rather repetitive.

This will be borderline, I think, for my own personal shortlist although I can see why the judges may shortlist it.

Graywacke I read this one earlier this summer and was not a fan. 🤷🏻‍♂️ I was surprised to see it on the longlist. 4mo
JenP Agreed. It was a so so for me honestly. Loved the first half and disliked the second half 4mo
julesG Your lavender looks gorgeous. 😁 4mo
squirrelbrain It‘s even more enormous this year! @julesG 4mo
BarbaraBB I didn‘t like this one much. There There was so much better 4mo
72 likes5 comments
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Jari-chan
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

I remember being impressed by There, There, but rarely remember it. Still, I wanted to read this one as well. And I'm glad I did, because it's so important to remember what Europeans did to Indigenious people all over the world. That colonization is not over and done, that it still lives on from generation to generation. Therefore, it's so important that we read those books and listen to what their authors have to tell us.

#roll100 @PuddleJumper

AnnCrystal 💝🥲👍. 5mo
Jari-chan @AnnCrystal ❤️❤️ 5mo
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Jari-chan
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks 🧡🧡🧡 5mo
AnnCrystal 💝💝📚💝💝. 5mo
24 likes2 comments
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Chelsea.Poole
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

This follow up to There There is worthy, but does not surpass what Orange has done originally with the characters and vibes of his first novel. I enjoyed the audiobook‘s various narrators which emphasized various Native American experiences, both past and present. Themes of heritage, addiction, and familial connection across generations.

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Graywacke
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Mehso-so

I loved his 1st novel, There There (2018) This 2nd novel is more of the same, but this time it‘s not new. And he never changes style. Several characters all written in the same style. Oye. It works for one character, Orvil. For the rest, well, so so or worse for me.

Hooked_on_books I wanted to love this but couldn‘t get into it at all. 6mo
Graywacke @Hooked_on_books I never did really get into it… 6mo
47 likes3 comments
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Anna40
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

I liked the first half better than the second because I was more interested in the characters &their story. I wish the author had focused on either the present or past &explored those stories in more depth. Addiction,as much as it is a real issue,was too repetitive. I ended up not being as emotionally engaged as I could have been.Overall though, this is a great book, a writer whose voice I love to hear& I‘m looking forward to what he writes next.

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BarbaraBB
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Panpan

“Lony feels worse because he doesn‘t even care about being Native or Indian and would rather just have a normal life and not have to always feel so heavy, have to carry more than it feels like he should have to carry.”

And heavy it is, this prequel/sequel to There There. Tommy Orange dedicates his second book to ‘everyone surviving and not surviving this thing called and not called addiction‘. ⬇️⬇️ #camptob

BarbaraBB And indeed, it seems everyone is addicted to something in this book and it‘s always so repetitive, reading about it.

I feel like Orange could have made much more of the potentially very interesting characters. I didn‘t enjoy the book half as much as I did There There.
(edited) 6mo
Soubhiville Thanks for your honest review. I‘ve wondered how this one is. 6mo
BarbaraBB @Soubhiville I am a minority here and I know it‘s probably based on true stories. I feel for them but it‘s not written in a way that engaged me 🤷🏻‍♀️ 6mo
See All 9 Comments
dabbe #fanofthepan! 🤩🤩🤩 6mo
Anna40 I agree. I liked the first half a lot though! 6mo
BarbaraBB @Anna40 Yes, I think too that the first half was better! 6mo
Graywacke @BarbaraBB - your 1st comment here is spot on 6mo
BarbaraBB @Graywacke I didn‘t reread There There either but I remember it as a much better worked out book. 6mo
tpixie @BarbaraBB @Soubhiville I agree. With both books. Lots of characters, lots of depressing stuff, which I understand, but not my favorite writing. 6mo
66 likes9 comments
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Graywacke
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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I haven‘t tried this local (and significant) book club before. It‘s free to join online. I started the book last night.

(For the curious: https://inprinthouston.org/event/inprint-book-club-discusses-wandering-stars/ )

BarbaraBB Very interesting. I am going to read this for #CampToB 7mo
Graywacke @BarbaraBB 👍 I got the summer ToB email yesterday and saw this was on there. 7mo
Liz_M @Graywacke @BarbaraBB FYI over on LT, Ridgewaygirl strongly recommended (re)reading There There before this one 6mo
See All 6 Comments
BarbaraBB @Liz_M Oh really? I highly value her opinion so I probably will then. @RidgewayGirl (edited) 6mo
Graywacke @Liz_M @BarbaraBB nope. Not doing that. 😁 (but i value her opinion too! @RidgewayGirl ) 6mo
39 likes6 comments
review
Cortg
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

I really enjoy Orange‘s writing style and storytelling. This prequel/sequel ties in Orville‘s family lineage dating back to the late 1800‘s as we learn about each generation‘s story. We are then brought into the more present time as we learn about Orville and his family after the powwow. So much to think about after closing this book. ❤️

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shawnmooney
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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#SundaySentence by Clarice Lispector, quoted in Tommy Orange‘s Wandering Stars

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Lesliereadsalot
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

It‘s 1864 in Colorado and so begins this story about one Native American family, generation after generation. We live through massacres and shootings and drug addiction and alcoholism and cancer, never really knowing how it‘s going to turn out in the end. It‘s about one family‘s quest to understand their history and come to terms with it. A thoroughly engaging book about a slice of life with which you may not be familiar.

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Lesliereadsalot
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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There were children, and then there were the children of Indians, because the merciless savage inhabitants of these American lands did not make children but nits, and nits make lice, or so it was said by the man who meant to make a massacre feel like killing bugs at Sand Creek.

#FirstLineFridays @ShyBookOwl

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shawnmooney
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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shawnmooney
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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https://youtu.be/z_P8wkOpzeA?si=s0v_o4p3DWZ8vjXS

Political commentary

A fabulous biblioadventure

Mystery guest

Johnny I Hardly Knew You by Edna O'Brien

Wandering Stars by Tommy Orange

Marzahn, mon amour by Katja Oskamp, Jo Heinrich (Translator)

Making Up the Gods by Marion Agnew

Young Bloomsbury: The Generation That Redefined Love, Freedom, and Self-Expression in 1920s England by Nino Strachey

In Tongues by Thomas Grattan

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Jolynne
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

This is a story of a survivor of the Sand Creek Massacre and continues on with his descendants. It is about finding oneself, it is about healing. I loved it. “You are from a people who survived by making their surviving mean more than surviving, who did their best to stay together”. Tommy Orange.

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tpixie
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Reading these books back to back is breaking my heart 💔 They are complimentary- his 2nd book, Wandering Stars, is a prequel & sequel to his 1st book- There, There. Tommy Orange is coming to Wichita to the Mid- America Indian Center in a couple of weeks. I‘m looking forward to this author event.

Tamra I didn‘t realize it was connected to There There! 8mo
tpixie @Tamra yes! I‘m just starting it but it‘s a prequel of some of the ancestors and I we meet some of the characters from there there as time goes on 8mo
Tamra @tpixie I‘m looking forward to it. 😄 8mo
See All 9 Comments
mcctrish Oh how exciting to see Tommy Orange 8mo
tpixie @mcctrish yes!! we don‘t get too many Author events in Wichita so this is exciting. If I had an option when I retired, I would go somewhere that had bookstores where there are a lot of events!!! 8mo
mcctrish @tpixie that‘s my dream too ( there‘s a big book festival over several weekends in a town east of Toronto - I live in London ON which is south of Toronto - and I‘d love to go to it some time ) 8mo
tpixie @mcctrish oh! That sounds like it would be great!! 8mo
Suet624 Enjoy your visit with Tommy! 8mo
tpixie @Suet624 thanks 😊 8mo
64 likes1 stack add9 comments
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MsLeah8417
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

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Nathan_Opland-Dobs
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Panpan

🥔

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Floresj
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

Orange has an unique style of writing that makes the plot and characters unique and intriguing. This has different eras that we visit, with flawed characters who share their perspectives in their storytelling. Good with a little variety in the stories.

tpixie I‘m reading There, There now, then will read this book in preparation for him coming to town at the Mid America Indian Center in Wichita, KS in a couple of weeks. Killers of a Flower Moon author will be coming to Hutchinson Kansas next week. It‘s my month to read Native American books! (edited) 8mo
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rachelsbrittain
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

Generations of a Cheyenne family grapple with the legacy of a massacre and a residential school alongside the institutional racism that results in severe generational trauma even as they strive to come together and protect each other. This was my first Tommy Orange book and I definitely want to read There There now, specially since the two books are interconnected.

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Hooked_on_books
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Bailedbailed

I really want to like Tommy Orange. But I‘m afraid I just don‘t. I managed to get to the 21% mark of this one, but each time I have to force myself to pick it up and read a few more pages. I‘m glad people love him, but I‘m afraid he‘s just not for me.

vivastory I think it's fantastic that you can admit that although if it's not for you, others love the author. I see a lot of reviews on social media (not really on Litsy) where the creator will not only slam the book, but also the readers who have left positive reviews. (edited) 9mo
squirrelbrain I also have an ARC of this. Haven‘t got to it yet though, due to #womensprize lists. 9mo
Hooked_on_books @vivastory I won‘t lie, there are authors (I can think of one at the moment) who people love and I think are terrible, but I‘m certainly not going to slam those readers. After all, I don‘t want someone to slam me for my taste. And I do love seeing authors from marginalized groups succeeding, whether their books are for me or not. The more who succeed, the more the door will be open for others. 9mo
55 likes3 comments
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Honeybeebooks
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

Prequel - sequel call it anything you like, Wandering Stars is heartbreakingly beautiful. Looking back to the Sand Creek Massacre and following the family line to the contemporary Red Feather family, Tommy Orange examines the generational injury and trauma that often leads to addiction. Orange‘s powerful prose made this work my first 5/5 ⭐️ pick of 2024.

Honeybeebooks The cast for the audio version is phenomenal! 9mo
7 likes1 stack add1 comment
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Pinta
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Mehso-so

“There There” prequel & sequel. Shifting 1st per POVs (one 2nd person). Addiction & recovery. Bullet as star. Early characters feel in service to research—little dialogue or interiority. Missing the urgency of “There There.” But lovely bits. 2024

P114 “You are from a people who survived by making their surviving mean more than surviving.”

P135 “He was still trying to figure out what was pain & what was relief, what were dreams & what were drugs”

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Megabooks
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

I really enjoyed this follow up to There There. The audiobook production was great!

Orange first goes back in time tracing the lineage of Opal, Orvil, et al through the violence wrought by colonialism. Then he travels back to Oakland 2018 and follows the family after the shooting at the PowWow and the lingering effects of PTSD.

squirrelbrain I have this as a #netgalley ARC….just no time to read it at the moment! 😬 9mo
Megabooks @squirrelbrain I hope you do if you liked There There. It‘s a worthy follow up. 9mo
82 likes2 stack adds2 comments
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Lindy
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

The excellent audiobook production has a cast of 9 readers to voice the multiple viewpoints in this moving novel that begins with a Cheyenne survivor of the 1864 Sand Creek Massacre and his descendants through to contemporary times. Displacement, addiction, home and healing. The novel is linked to the characters in Tommy Orange‘s debut There, There and it‘s every bit as powerful.

ChaoticMissAdventures Oh I love a full cast reading! This is high on my 2024 TBR. 9mo
34 likes2 comments
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Lindy
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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We don‘t live on a planet, we are the planet. It made us.

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Lindy
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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… even wisdom, which word she hates, soaked as it is in new-ageyness, or so Native American-sounding you automatically hear the word accompanied by a Native American flute or an eagle‘s cry. Except that the sound effect everyone considers an eagle‘s cry is in fact a red-tailed hawk.

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Lindy
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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The only one who can save him is himself, and that is true for everyone.

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Lindy
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Recent Reads March 13: literary salon; Indigenous stories; audiobooks; poetry; women in translation
https://youtu.be/1PFEt1JRWf8

#booktube #CanadianAuthor

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AardvarkBookClub
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange

I knew then that I couldn‘t speak if I wanted to. I couldn‘t say anything and couldn‘t tell if I ever had before.

#aardvarkbookclub #jointoday

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AardvarkBookClub
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange

I‘d lived enough life, almost died enough times to know when a good thing came along, a thing you didn‘t know could fill you right up, which only when it filled you let you know there‘d been a hole in you before.

#aardvarkbookclub #tommyorange #jointoday

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AardvarkBookClub
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange

Everything they‘d learned to sit, stand, lean, lie, and rely on, bottomed out from under them as if the earth had quaked and taken all it could into cracks which widened into chasms.

#aardvarkbookclub #wanderingstars #tommyorange

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AardvarkBookClub
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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Pickpick

The Pulitzer Prize-finalist and author of the breakout bestseller There There, Tommy Orange traces the legacies of the Sand Creek Massacre of 1864 and the Carlisle Indian Industrial School through three generations of a family in a story that is by turns shattering and wondrous.

#aardavarkbookclub #jointoday

56 likes1 stack add
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jlhammar
Wandering Stars | Tommy Orange
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#bookmail part 2

Tamra Love Tommy Orange! Waiting for my audio hold to come in. 😬 10mo
68 likes1 comment