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143 pages, Hardcover
First published February 6, 2018
You should have thought before you made a crazy Indian woman your lover.
I think self-esteem is a white invention to further separate one person from another. It asks people to assess their values and implies people have worth. It seems like identity capitalism.
I wanted to cry, and hurt people, and I didn’t trust myself. I didn’t know if what I felt was authenticity, or a disease that would overtake me.
You think weakness is a problem. I want to be torn apart by everything.
Audio book source: Hoopla
Story Rating: 2.5 stars
Narrator: Rainy Fields
Narration Rating: 3 stars
Genre: Non-Fiction/Memoir
Length: 3h 45m
This story is yours, culprit of my pain. Which one of us is asking for mercy?
I wrote like I had something to prove to you. The stories were about the Indian condition alongside the mundane. Most of the work felt like a callback to traditional storytelling. Salish stories are a lot like its art: sparse and interested in space. The work must be striking.
I woke up today, confused, inside of something feminine and ancestral in its misery. I woke up as the bones of my ancestors locked in government storage. My illness has carried me into white buildings, into the doctor's office and the therapist's – with nothing to say, other than I need my grandmother's eyes on me, smiling at my misguided heart. Imagine their faces when I say that?
When I look at these books, the distinctions are clear; the voices are present and impactful; different, obviously. Not so much Elissa's book – and people could stand to write about it more because her work is fascinating and cerebral and new – but the genre-marketing of Native memoir into this thing where readers come away believing Native Americans are connected to the earth, and read into an artist's spirituality to make generalizations about our natures as Indigenous people. The romantic language they quoted, or poetic language – it seemed misused to form bad opinions about good work.
"She transcended resilience and actualized what Indians weren't taught to know: We are unmovable."
"You were a bystander to my joy. You had a black eye, and we covered it with excuses."