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By the Fire We Carry
By the Fire We Carry: The Generations-Long Fight for Justice on Native Land | Rebecca Nagle
10 posts | 4 read | 18 to read
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quote
charl08
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In a personal letter to President Monroe in 1817, Jackson confessed that he had long viewed treaties with Indigenous nations as an "absurdity." Such treaties were necessary, Jackson wrote, when Indigenous nations were strong and the federal government was still weak, but now, "circumstances have entirely changed." ?

Susanita 🤔 9h
34 likes1 comment
quote
charl08
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45 years! At 14!🤯

#WomensPrizeLL25

Suet624 Tragic. 3d
23 likes1 comment
review
Hooked_on_books
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Pickpick

Nagle looks at a modern day jurisdictional debate as well as the history of US government behavior regarding native peoples in this book. While I liked all the parts of it, it didn‘t entirely work for me as a whole. The current story is regarding the Muskogee reservation but much of the past history was about her own Cherokee family. I found that split a little confusing and would have liked to see one or the other as the focus. #WPNF25

squirrelbrain Great review! I‘ve just started this on audio. 4d
Hooked_on_books @squirrelbrain I‘m so curious to hear what you think of it. There were big chunks of things I already knew, and I wonder if maybe that helped fuel my reaction. 4d
squirrelbrain I‘m not sure if it‘s going to hold my attention on audio, particularly when I‘m driving. I think I‘ll stick with Neneh Cherry on tomorrow‘s commute ‘cos I‘m loving that. 4d
58 likes3 comments
quote
charl08
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I wrote this book because I believe the American public needs to understand that the legacy of colonization is not just a problem for Indigenous peoples, but a problem for our democracy.

#WomensPrizeLL25

31 likes1 stack add
blurb
Chelsea.Poole
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“I wrote this book because I believe the American people need to understand that the legacy of colonization is not just a problem for Indigenous peoples but a problem for our democracy.
And, selfishly, I wrote this book because the story lived in my body and I needed it to come out.”

AnnCrystal “the story lived in my body and I needed it to come out“ 👏📚💝. 5d
Librarybelle I think this one was well done. 5d
charl08 I just copied this quote and then scrolled down to see you were ahead of me. So powerful. 5d
78 likes1 stack add4 comments
review
Chelsea.Poole
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Pickpick

Heartbreaking, maddening, unbelievable what the white man has perpetrated against the Native American people. This should be required reading, in order to understand the systematic way people were removed from land, the way entire ways of life have been destroyed. This begins with a crime and a legal battle over tribal lands and jurisdiction which I felt was a great way to introduce the many and varied ways tribes have been denied rights.

squirrelbrain Great review! I (almost) started this earlier today. Had to stop after the prologue to go do something else. 🤨 6d
Chelsea.Poole @squirrelbrain it‘s so good, feels like it‘ll be hard to top, for me. 6d
See All 9 Comments
squirrelbrain I‘ve thought that about all 3 I‘ve read so far…. 🤷‍♀️ Which is fabulous, really, that we get to benefit from such great books. 6d
Suet624 I haven‘t read this one, but I‘ve read so many heartbreaking stories over the last 50 years of how we‘ve screwed Native Americans that I‘m not sure I can read another. But the more reviews I read of it I may just have to. 6d
WildAlaskaBibliophile Have you read Killers of the Flower Moon? This true story is also heartbreaking, maddening, and unbelievable. 6d
AnnCrystal
Difficult History 😢📚💔❤️‍🩹💝.
5d
AnnCrystal @WildAlaskaBibliophile that story was crazy, a masterpiece, yet absolutely scary crazy. I kept checking if it was indeed nonfiction! 5d
93 likes3 stack adds9 comments
blurb
Librarybelle
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I had two 5-star reads in November, and both tie into injustices.

The tagged book is a true crime story, but it‘s more than that—it‘s about laws and injustices against Indigenous communities. Nagle provides a history of wrongs and the constant struggle the communities face. This even involves a Supreme Court case. Be ready to be angry.

The Book Censor‘s Library was so good! Satire that is way too close to reality. #12BooksOf2024

Andrew65 Important themes. 2mo
kspenmoll Stacked! 2mo
63 likes1 stack add2 comments
blurb
TieDyeDude
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@WildAlaskaBibliophile and I do our own jolabokaflod exchange on Christmas Eve. Here's what I got! I've been wanting to get into the Locked Tomb trilogy for a while, but I think I'm going to start with the tagged book!

AllDebooks What a lovely tradition ❤️ 2mo
45 likes1 comment
review
Librarybelle
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Pickpick

This should be required reading for every American. Seriously.

Part true crime and part history, Nagle writes a clear and blunt look at the treatment of Indigenous communities since the founding of the US. Nagle, who is a citizen of the Cherokee nation, reports on the sins of everyone, including her ancestors—everyone has dark secrets. There are very scary parallels to today‘s world; I‘m not sure if it was wise or prudent to read this now. 5 ✨

73 likes5 stack adds
quote
Librarybelle
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“The fight over truth is so bitter because power flows from the dominant narrative—the power to shape both public sentiment and public policy.”

I barely made it to page two of the Prologue and found this. It resonates so well today, and for Nagle, a member of the Cherokee nation, it speaks volumes to the mistruths about the indigenous past.

#TodayILearned #NFNovember

Bookwormjillk 🔥🔥🔥 3mo
Christine Man, she said that so well. I‘ve been meaning to get to this one, looking forward to your review! 3mo
Librarybelle @Christine I want to read it rather than clean! Maybe I can continue reading this afternoon. 3mo
Christine Yes, I hope you do! 3mo
69 likes2 stack adds4 comments