This is a great, great book. Told in an interview style, it's a series of 120+ questions, broken into categories (economy, culture, religion, etc), that the author attempts to answer fairly and thoughtfully.
The questions, ranging from the most top of mind - like "what is the best term to use these days?" "does the mascot conversation really matter?" "what should schools do with christopher columbus?" - to the more niche and specific, like how the tax system works on reservations - were thoroughly approached. Even the most blatant didn't end with a simple "yes" / "no."
Anton points out in the book that, for most people, the education system in the united states tells the (extremely whitewashed) story of the native americans meeting the european colonists, and then their subsequent massacre - and that's it. Narratively, it feels like they are history, and not living in the present. We don't learn at all about native american history after the trail of tears, or what it's like to be native american today.
For ages, the PopSugar prompt "a nonfiction book about indigenous people" stumped me. I want to read diversely, without everything I read about other cultures being the worst things that ever happened to them. But I also want to learn, and I don't want to pretend the terrible things didn't happen.
This felt like a perfect book. I found it to be highly informative and educational, covering the bad and the good - and even covering information about the people native to Canada, which I knew even less about. 10/10 recommend in general, and definitely 10/10 recommend for PopSugar!
popsugar 2024: a nonfiction book about indigenous people.