Fotografía de autor

Margaret Verble

Autor de Maud's Line

5 Obras 539 Miembros 51 Reseñas

Obras de Margaret Verble

Maud's Line (2015) 190 copias
Cherokee America (2019) 149 copias
Stealing (2023) 92 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Género
female
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugares de residencia
Lexington, Kentucky, USA
Educación
University of Kentucky

Miembros

Reseñas

As Indigenous People's Day has just passed, it is perhaps entirely fitting to share Margaret Verble's stunning novel, Stealing.

Told in chapters as letters written to whoever discovers her missing, this is the beautiful, heartbreaking story of Kit, a young half Cherokee, half white girl whose mother is dead and whose father does the best he can for his daughter. She has a large extended Native family on her mother's side, all of whom cherish her. She is a lonely child though, living way out in the country, so it's not a surprise when she befriends the nearest neighbor, a glamorous and beautiful woman named Bella, whose lifestyle causes the townspeople to look askance, thinking the worst of her. This friendship is the catalyst for a terrible crime and the reason behind the whole story.

Switching back and forth between Kit's present in a religious boarding school and the events that led her there, she innocently chronicles the hypocracy of the "Christian" adults around her, the racism and cruelty of the rural 1950s, and the terrible harm that comes when adults discount a child's word. The crime is perhaps predictable and inevitable but Verble still has some surprises in store for the reader. The writing, entirely in Kit's voice, is lovely and the structure serves the story beautifully. Kit, as a character, is wholly sympathetic, surprisingly worldly for her age in some ways, and yet sweetly naive and innocent in the ways that matter most despite her life and desires and family all being stolen from her. This is a hard and heartbreaking book, magnificently written and well worth the time spent reading it.

This novel is one of the Women's National Book Association's Great Group Reads for 2023.
… (más)
½
 
Denunciada
whitreidtan | 4 reseñas más. | Oct 12, 2023 |
Stealing was an impulse loan from the library. Although I've read a fair bit of First Nations literature from Australia, I have not read much from elsewhere. But I had heard about rel="nofollow" target="_top">abuses in the Canadian Indian residential school system and the book blurb suggested that it was about similar hypocrisies in church residential schools in America.
Now, if you read the blurb at Goodreads, you will see that there is a trigger warning there, one that isn't in the blurb on the back of my edition. So I was not expecting explicit scenes which arose after I had become invested in the story. The child Kit is the narrator, and the first intimation of abuse was in Chapter 17 when all she says is that she just went off in her mind when she is alone with the perpetrator. And that's all: she immediately goes on to recount something else. We can guess what is happening without being given the details.

But there are two further incidents which are nauseating to read, so I can't recommend this book to anyone who prefers not to read explicit scenes of sexual abuse. And although I did my best to avoid it, I wish I hadn't read it myself.… (más)
 
Denunciada
anzlitlovers | 4 reseñas más. | Oct 8, 2023 |

Happy Publication Day! - February 07, 2023

4.5⭐

“But a lot of the girls here have already given up. You can see it in their eyes and their shoulders. But not me. I’m not going to be that fence standing alone out in the field, so I don’t give up hope. That would be against my nature. I am descended from people who survived the Trail of Tears.”

It has been over two years since Karen "Kit" Crockett was forcibly sent to The Ashley Lordard Children’s Home. After her mother’s demise Kit was being by her father who though a bit distant was never unkind to her. Close to her late mother’s Cherokee family, Kit had a caring and loving group of relatives who also looked out for her. Her days were spent attending school in town, roaming the countryside, fishing in the bayou, and reading Nancy Drew books borrowed from the bookmobile. When an enigmatic young woman named Bella moves into her late great uncle’s home nearby, Kit makes a new friend. But Kit’s closeness to Bella triggers an unfortunate sequence of events that ultimately lands her father in jail.

Kit is torn away from her family and eventually sent to a Christian boarding school at the age of nine for her education, a Christian upbringing and “good moral values”. At her new school, she meets other children from Native American families and along with them she is forced to shed her heritage and is subjected to ill-treatment, abuse and forced religious indoctrination. In other words, her life as she had known it was being “stolen” from her.

“And we’re told stories about how even little children are naturally evil and about how we’re all born with some sort of sin that has to get washed off of us. But I think the kids here are mean because they’re unhappy. They probably came here unhappy, and being in a children’s home doesn’t improve on that. But, in my experience, grown-ups are a lot meaner than kids.”

Kit begins writing about the events leading up to her father’s trial and subsequent incarceration, and her experiences as a student and boarder at Ashley Lordard in her journal, all the while devising a plan to find a way to return to her family. She hopes to reveal the truth about what goes on in the school and the abuse she is frequently subject to in the hands of Mr. Hodges, the Director whose idea of dealing with a “disciplinary situation” translates into sexually abusing minor girls, mostly targeting those from Native American backgrounds, a fact another victim shares with Kit.

Narrated in the first person, Stealing by Margaret Verble is a compelling read. The author brilliantly captures Kit’s innocence, inquisitiveness, confusion, pain and determination. This is an absorbing read and I found it hard to put down. Set in the 1950s, the story sheds a light on the plight of Native American children who were forcibly sent to boarding schools and compelled to abandon their Native identity and culture. Kit is an endearing protagonist and I was immersed in her world as seen through her eyes. I loved the author’s vivid description of the countryside and Kit’s closeness to nature. The author tackles sensitive themes such as religion, injustice, prejudice and sexual abuse with sensitivity and compassion. In turn, I felt heartbroken, angry and hopeful as I kept turning the pages all the while rooting for Kit. Overall, this is an impactful read that I would not hesitate to recommend.

Many thanks to Margaret Verble, Mariner Books and NetGalley for the eARC of this beautifully-written novel. All opinions expressed in this review are my own.

⚠ Sexual abuse of a minor
… (más)
 
Denunciada
srms.reads | 4 reseñas más. | Sep 4, 2023 |
Historical fiction by Margaret Verble, Strong NDN Woman protagonist arts, gigs, diving horse act. Mystical, spirits, witches, medicine, ghosts, Tennesee, Reconstruction, class status, this novel has so many facets it could be studied in honors English where learners are encouraged to find symbolism in fiction showing America's melting pot, and which can identify areas where women, children, and LOC are at the mercy of men of the lowest ilk. This story could easily morph into a series. Unforgettable.… (más)
 
Denunciada
ourBooksLuvUs | 14 reseñas más. | Aug 20, 2023 |

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Obras
5
Miembros
539
Popularidad
#46,220
Valoración
3.8
Reseñas
51
ISBNs
38
Idiomas
1

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