Anthologies are usually solid three-star reads for me, four if it's really good. But this one gets a rare five stars for its unity and uniqueness in this genre.
This book features short stories from a number of different native tribes, which usually feel unified only in their themes. But this anthology is unified around the Sandy June's Legendary Frybread Drive-In, a place that appears to the characters in each story, usually when they need it most. It's unclear if this is a real or imagined place, but it is one that offers peace, reflection, and tradition for those who find themselves lost or seeking a part of themselves they haven't met before.
In the past few years, I've tried to read more books, fiction and non, from these voices, and many of them, thanks to the reality of their experiences, tend to center around more depressing themes. When choosing texts for students, there are plenty of books like that to help students learn about this important experience, but there is also so much need for joy. It's so difficult to find stories that center joyful or hopeful themes, even through depressing or dark experiences like grief or heartbreak. But this collection tackles the reality of life, without avoiding the negative, but uses the drive-in as a place of healing and hope that makes this a worthwhile read.