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Stealing Little Moon

The Legacy of the American Indian Boarding Schools (Scholastic Focus)

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"Stealing Little Moon is both a moving family saga and an expertly told true story that all Americans should know." -Steve Sheinkin, New York Times bestselling author of Bomb and Undefeated

Little Moon There Are No Stars Tonight was four years old when armed federal agents showed up at her home and took her from her family. Under the authority of the government, she was sent away to a boarding school specifically created to strip her of her Ponca culture and teach her the ways of white society. Little Moon was one of thousands of Indigenous children forced to attend these schools across America and give up everything they'd ever known: family, friends, toys, clothing, food, customs, even their language. She would be the first of four generations of her family who would go to the Chilocco Indian Agricultural School.

Dan SaSuWeh Jones chronicles his family's time at Chilocco—starting with his grandmother Little Moon's arrival when the school first opened and ending with him working on the maintenance crew when the school shut down nearly one hundred years later. Together with the voices of students from other schools, both those who died and those who survived, Dan brings to light the lasting legacy of the boarding school era.

Part American history, part family history, Stealing Little Moon is a powerful look at the miseducation and the mistreatment of Indigenous kids, while celebrating their strength, resiliency, and courage—and the ultimate failure of the United States government to erase them.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from August 19, 2024
      In 1885, armed federal agents stormed the Ponca reservation. Though panicked parents tried to hide their children, four-year-old Little Moon There Are No Stars Tonight was one of several Native youths taken from their families. The children were transported hundreds of miles to the Chilocco Indian Agricultural School in Oklahoma; there, they were cut off from their culture, and many given new, “American” names. Via urgent, intimate-feeling first-person prose, Jones (Living Ghosts and Mischievous Monsters), Little Moon’s grandson, chronicles the history of Chilocco from its opening in 1884 to its closure in 1980. Through extensive research and interviews with key figures, the author details the goal of North American residential schools (“Kill the Indian in him, and save the man”), their strict rules, and the inhumane and traumatic conditions under which the children lived. Quotes and stories from Chilocco survivors—as well as relevant personal experiences from his childhood that Jones threads throughout—unravel heartbreaking situations and further deepen the text’s visceral and empathetic depiction of this horrific chapter in U.S. history. Ages 8–12.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Native voices resonate in this account of the infamous American Indian boarding schools. Ojibwe poet and activist Denise K. Lajimodiere delivers her foreword, and Ponca author and filmmaker Dan SasuWeh Jones narrates his introduction. Then, Blackfoot actor Shaun Taylor-Corbett takes the mic to narrate Jones's combination of memoir and history. Four generations of Jones's family attended Chilocco Indian Agricultural School in Oklahoma. From its establishment to its closing, their experiences provide personal touchpoints for listeners, helping them navigate this account of a decades-long attempt to strip Native children of their identities and force them to assimilate. Taylor-Corbett evinces pain and anger aplenty, but also love and pride, as the story is ultimately one of resilience, proof positive that the schools failed in their mission. Powerful. V.S. © AudioFile 2024, Portland, Maine

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