Whiskey tender a memoir
(2024)

Nonfiction

Audiobook CD

Book Discussion Collection

Call Numbers:
BOOK/DISCUSSION/NONFICTION/TAFFA,D/CD

Availability

Locations Call Number Status
Book Discussion collection BOOK/DISCUSSION/NONFICTION/TAFFA,D/CD Available

Details

PUBLISHED
*** Book Discussion Audiobook CDs check out for 6 weeks with no renewals ***
New York, NY : Harper Audio, [2024]
EDITION
Unabridged
DESCRIPTION

10 audio discs (11 3/4 hr.) ; 4 3/4 in

ISBN/ISSN
9780063288720, 0063288729, 9780063288720
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Title from container

Deborah Jackson Taffa was raised to believe that some sacrifices were necessary to achieve a better life. Her grandparents, citizens of the Quechan Nation and Laguna Pueblo tribe, were sent to Indian boarding schools run by white missionaries, while her parents were encouraged to take part in governmental job training off the reservation. Assimilation meant relocation, but as Taffa matured into adulthood, she began to question the promise handed down by her elders and by American society: that if she gave up her culture, her land, and her traditions, she would not only be accepted, but would be able to achieve the "American Dream." Taffa traces how a mixed tribe native girl, born on the California Yuma reservation and raised in Navajo territory in New Mexico, comes to her own interpretation of identity, despite her parent's desires for her to transcend the class and "Indian" status of her birth through education, and despite the Quechan tribe's particular traditions and beliefs regarding oral and recorded histories. Taffa's childhood memories unspool into meditations on tribal identity, the rampant criminalization of Native men, governmental assimilation policies, the Red Power movement, and the negotiation between belonging and resisting systemic oppression. Pan-Indian, as well as specific tribal histories and myths, blend with stories of a 1970s and 1980s childhood spent on and off the reservation

Read by Charley Flyte

Additional Credits