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Black Indian

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A moving memoir exploring one family's legacy of African Americans with American Indian roots.

Finalist, 2024 American Legacy Book Awards, Autobiography/Memoir

Black Indian, searing and raw, is Amy Tan's The Joy Luck Club and Alice Walker's The Color Purple meets Leslie Marmon Silko's Ceremony—only, this isn't fiction. Beautifully rendered and rippling with family dysfunction, secrets, deaths, alcoholism, and old resentments, Shonda Buchanan's memoir is an inspiring story that explores her family's legacy of being African Americans with American Indian roots and how they dealt with not just society's ostracization but the consequences of this dual inheritance.

Buchanan was raised as a Black woman, who grew up hearing cherished stories of her multi-racial heritage, while simultaneously suffering from everything she (and the rest of her family) didn't know. Tracing the arduous migration of Mixed Bloods, or Free People of Color, from the Southeast to the Midwest, Buchanan tells the story of her Michigan tribe—a comedic yet manically depressed family of fierce women, who were everything from caretakers and cornbread makers to poets and witches, and men who were either ignored, protected, imprisoned, or maimed—and how their lives collided over love, failure, fights, and prayer despite a stacked deck of challenges, including addiction and abuse. Ultimately, Buchanan's nomadic people endured a collective identity crisis after years of constantly straddling two, then three, races. The physical, spiritual, and emotional displacement of American Indians who met and married Mixed or Black slaves and indentured servants at America's early crossroads is where this powerful journey begins.

Black Indiandoesn't have answers, nor does it aim to represent every American's multi-ethnic experience. Instead, it digs as far down into this one family's history as it can go—sometimes, with a bit of discomfort. But every family has its own truth, and Buchanan's search for hers will resonate with anyone who has wondered "maybe there's more than what I'm being told."

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    • Kirkus

      June 15, 2019
      An author grapples with the uncertainties of her mixed racial inheritance. With interwoven stories about the women in her Michigan family, Buchanan (Equipoise: Poems From Goddess Country, 2017, etc.), the literary editor of Harriet Tubman Press, furthers the important work she has done in her poetry, uncovering the hidden histories of families struggling to define their mixed black and Native American bloodlines to their own satisfaction. In a highly personal narrative that includes a large number of characters and vignettes, the writing is occasionally repetitive in its declarations and observations. Still, it is a unique account of the damage inflicted on blacks and Native Americans in the late 1800s. With historical anecdotes involving the migration of freed slaves, the author injects information about the Dawes Act of 1887 into her personal story, and she focuses some of her resentment for noninclusion on Native American tribes who guard their enrollment with blood quantum standards. Without paperwork, Buchanan must rely on the oral traditions of her family to give her a sense of belonging in a culture that protects itself fiercely from appropriation, and she does a careful job of explaining how she can only speak for herself. The author diligently traces her ancestry, uncovering secrets, family dysfunction, addiction, old resentments, and painful identity issues. While it often feels as if there is little hope, she tackles her difficulties with humor. Buchanan is strongest when she argues that complex federal policies are to blame for the fractured sense of identity she feels; she stumbles when she displays a lack of empathy for those enrolled Native Americans who hope to maintain a semblance of cohesion and culture after an era of genocide. Ultimately, the book will be enjoyable for readers who grapple with confusing aspects of their ancestry. Intergenerational loss and a family's collective identity crisis provide the backbone for a winding American tale.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      July 1, 2019
      Poet Buchanan dives into her multi-ethnic heritage, about which she has only learned bits and pieces. Her great-grandfather had two families: one with an African wife, one with a Choctaw, and no one knew if he was a slave or a full-blood Indian. The Choctaw was one of the five tribes forced to leave the Southeast in the Great Removal, and they were accompanied by their black slaves, so perhaps her great-grandfather made that journey. Buchanan's mother and aunts were called half-breeds, or high yella gals, and Buchanan never knew which box to check: Black, half-white, half-Indian? Her grandfather tells her, If anybody ask you, we Mulatto. We ain't white. We ain't no goddamn Injun. And we ain't black. Her mother and aunts grew up poor in the Midwest, where poverty and identity crises led to addiction while they faced the constant threat of physical abuse by brothers, fathers, and husbands repeating the violence of their own upbringings. In her grimly haunting memoir, Buchanan reveals many aspects of American racism and sexism as she grapples with a painful legacy.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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