From the Ashes by Jesse Thistle
Title: From the Ashes
Author: Jesse Thistle
Read by: Jesse Thistle
Publisher: Simon
& Shuster Audio
Length:
Approximately 9 hours and 55 minutes
Source: Review
Copy from Simon & Shuster Audio.
Thank-you!
What book by or
about Indigenous people have you read or is on your "to read" list?
At the start of
June, I read the sad news story of the remains of 215 Indigenous children that
were found at a boarding school in Canada. It inspired me to read From the
Ashes by Jesse Thistle. I first learned about these boarding schools as an
adult teaching at a local college. A couple of my students told me about how
they had existed in Wisconsin and had wiped out much of their tribal culture. I
was horrified.
From the Ashes is
author Jesse Thistle's memoir of what it was like going up Indigenous, but not
knowing about his culture. He had a very hard life and always felt displaced.
The police took custody of him and his two older brothers one day when his dad
didn't return home. Jesse was three years old. His paternal Grandparents raised
him until he disobeyed their rules and was found with drugs. He was kicked out
and homeless.
Jesse spiraled
into years of drugs, homelessness, and bad decisions. It was hard to read
about. He finally was able to turn it around and pull himself back up into a
good life filled with love. He reconnected with his mother and learned the
history of his people. He earned a college degree and married the woman he
loved. He is now an expert on homelessness in Indigenous cultures. It was very inspiring,
and I would love to read more from Jesse Thistle.
I listened to the
audiobook which was narrated by the author Jesse Thistle. I always love when an
audiobook is narrated by the actual author, especially a memoir.
Overall, From the
Ashes was a very inspiring and heartfelt read.
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