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aimeebissonette's review
5.0
A beautifully layered story that will touch the hearts of readers young and old who have experienced a military deployment, cultural conflict, or a deep love of animals. Nancy Bo Flood is a smart, sensitive storyteller. This book is a gem.
ljrinaldi's review
4.0
It took a while to get into this book. At first I was bored, but then the story started being more descriptive of the local customs of the Navaho, and the landscape, and that is when the story blossomed.
The books starts with a true event, the death of the first native woman in a foreign war (the Iraq War, Lori Piestew), and how the Navaho and Hopi of the area honor her. From there, the story. From there, the story follow Tess, whose sister is also gone off to be a soldier, because she wants to go to medical school, and enlisting is the only way her family can afford it.
Tess is half white, half Navaho (white on her father's side) and goes to a white high school. Her friends on the reservation call her a red apple, red on the outside, white on the inside, and rotten to the core. Her "friends" at the high school just call her Pocahantaus, and insulting names. She feels as though she doesn't belong in either world, and wonders which one she should be.
So, there are two things going on her, her sister off in foreign lands, and her coming to know herself. The first part of the book is that. The second book is her finding herself, when she goes off to the Sheep Camp with her grandmother (who is pretty hip, and wears green tennis shoes along with her native clothes). There she gets more in touch with herself and with the land.
The book is sprinkled with Navaho words, and the part of the book that happens at Sheep Camp is deeply moving and very well described. I keep wondering if the author had seen this, and was Navaho herself, it was that good. (Nancy Bo Flood is a teacher on the reservation). I was tottering between a three and a four star, until I got to the second half of the book. If there had been more of that, more of the beautiful vistas, and such, it could have even gone to five.
The book reminds me a little bit of "The Absolutley True Diary of a Part Time Indian, except it didn't go that way. We only hear a little bit about the school, and how hard it is to be there. As I said, it is almost as though it is two books, which isn't bad.
I want to thank NetGalley for providing this book for an honest review.
The books starts with a true event, the death of the first native woman in a foreign war (the Iraq War, Lori Piestew), and how the Navaho and Hopi of the area honor her. From there, the story. From there, the story follow Tess, whose sister is also gone off to be a soldier, because she wants to go to medical school, and enlisting is the only way her family can afford it.
Tess is half white, half Navaho (white on her father's side) and goes to a white high school. Her friends on the reservation call her a red apple, red on the outside, white on the inside, and rotten to the core. Her "friends" at the high school just call her Pocahantaus, and insulting names. She feels as though she doesn't belong in either world, and wonders which one she should be.
So, there are two things going on her, her sister off in foreign lands, and her coming to know herself. The first part of the book is that. The second book is her finding herself, when she goes off to the Sheep Camp with her grandmother (who is pretty hip, and wears green tennis shoes along with her native clothes). There she gets more in touch with herself and with the land.
The book is sprinkled with Navaho words, and the part of the book that happens at Sheep Camp is deeply moving and very well described. I keep wondering if the author had seen this, and was Navaho herself, it was that good. (Nancy Bo Flood is a teacher on the reservation). I was tottering between a three and a four star, until I got to the second half of the book. If there had been more of that, more of the beautiful vistas, and such, it could have even gone to five.
The book reminds me a little bit of "The Absolutley True Diary of a Part Time Indian, except it didn't go that way. We only hear a little bit about the school, and how hard it is to be there. As I said, it is almost as though it is two books, which isn't bad.
I want to thank NetGalley for providing this book for an honest review.
wren_in_black's review
4.0
This book is an excellent message on how to resolve two parts of you, in this case two races and identities, into one whole person. It's a very quick read. I didn't expect to enjoy it as much as I did.
backonthealex's review
4.0
Tess, 13, is having a hard time trying to come to terms with just who she is. Part Navajo, part white, she doesn’t feel like she belongs in either world. Despite being a champion-fast runner, Tess’s teammates at the white school she attends in Flagstaff, Arizona, call her names like ‘Pokeyhontas,’ never seeing her as anything other than an Indian. But when she returns home to the Rez, she never feels Navajo enough.
Tess has been annoyed at her sister Gaby, 19, for joining the Army after her friend Lori Piestewa was killed in Iraq, the first Native American woman to fall in combat. Now, however, Tess can’t wait for Gaby to come home on a two week leave. Maybe Gaby can help Tess sort things out for herself. But Gaby is no sooner home, than she must tell her family that her two week leave has been cancelled, she is being deployed to Iraq, and only has a few days home.
Tess is beyond angry at her sister for leaving, an anger that is compounded when Gaby asks her to take care of Blue, her spirited stallion, and a horse that Tess simply does not like - and the feeling seems to be mutual.
For the first time, Gaby won’t be going with their grandmother to sheep camp at the bottom of the canyon for the summer. Tess, who has never spent the whole summer in the canyon with them, decides to accompany her grandmother, her sheep and mares, and Blue this year. Tess has never ridden Blue by herself, always just leading him by the reins. But on day, while out exploring the canyon with him, a cold, soaking rain begins and, remembering her grandmother’s words that a galloping horse is the fastest way home, Tess rides Blue back to camp. From then on, the two begin to make friends with each other. Now, Tess determines to find the secret waterfall where she and Gaby spent precious time together, and to send some sand from it to her sister - a reminder of those times.
Little by little, Tess begins to come to terms with who she is as she develops more confidence riding Blue and through serious talks getting to really know her grandmother, a woman who knows a lot about who she is and the people who see her a just an Indian.
When tragedy strikes, Tess is faced with a difficult decision, one that will require all the strength she has, but one that will ultimately allow Tess to begin to discover just who she really is.
Soldier Sister, Fly Home is more than just a good coming of age story about family, tradition, culture. It is also a story about 'home' in the literal and metaphorical sense. Above the canyon, the mesa, is home to the Tess who lives there in the world of school, cell phones, malls. As the summer goes by, the canyon, a world of hogans, animals, unfettered nature, slowly begins to feel like home to the Tess, who loves the beauty of it. And it is her grandmother who helps Tess reconcile these two different worlds within herself, to feel at home in both.
But it is Blue who finally takes Tess 'home.' Gaby has told Tess that if she ever got lost riding Blue, he would always find his home if she loosened the reins and let him. And he literally does, twice when they are out riding in the canyon. But Blue also takes Tess home in the figurative sense when she is forced to make a decision about him that will determine who she is from than on.
All of this is told in Nancy Bo Flood's beautiful lyrical storytelling style. I lived in Arizona for four years, and really fell in love the land. I think you will find some of the most breathtaking places on earth there. Flood's beautiful descriptions really made me feel an acute homesickness for the Arizona landscape. Flood has made her setting every bit as much a well-developed main character as she has Tess and her grandmother.
And while I loved Soldier Sister, Fly Home, I did think it was not without one flaw that really bothered me. I felt that Tess's grandmother was perhaps too stereotypical, sounding like the wise Indian speaking in aphorisms. Ironically, this seems to happen in the canyon than up on the mesa, where she seems more like a real character and less like a stereotype.
I should mention also that there are scenes in Soldier Sister, Fly Home that may upset readers sensitive to animals being killed, though it is never done gratuitously or cruelly in this novel.
A Writing Prompt Guide has been prepared by Nancy Bo Flood and can be download HERE
This book is recommended for readers age 11+
This review was originally posted on Randomly Reading
Tess has been annoyed at her sister Gaby, 19, for joining the Army after her friend Lori Piestewa was killed in Iraq, the first Native American woman to fall in combat. Now, however, Tess can’t wait for Gaby to come home on a two week leave. Maybe Gaby can help Tess sort things out for herself. But Gaby is no sooner home, than she must tell her family that her two week leave has been cancelled, she is being deployed to Iraq, and only has a few days home.
Tess is beyond angry at her sister for leaving, an anger that is compounded when Gaby asks her to take care of Blue, her spirited stallion, and a horse that Tess simply does not like - and the feeling seems to be mutual.
For the first time, Gaby won’t be going with their grandmother to sheep camp at the bottom of the canyon for the summer. Tess, who has never spent the whole summer in the canyon with them, decides to accompany her grandmother, her sheep and mares, and Blue this year. Tess has never ridden Blue by herself, always just leading him by the reins. But on day, while out exploring the canyon with him, a cold, soaking rain begins and, remembering her grandmother’s words that a galloping horse is the fastest way home, Tess rides Blue back to camp. From then on, the two begin to make friends with each other. Now, Tess determines to find the secret waterfall where she and Gaby spent precious time together, and to send some sand from it to her sister - a reminder of those times.
Little by little, Tess begins to come to terms with who she is as she develops more confidence riding Blue and through serious talks getting to really know her grandmother, a woman who knows a lot about who she is and the people who see her a just an Indian.
When tragedy strikes, Tess is faced with a difficult decision, one that will require all the strength she has, but one that will ultimately allow Tess to begin to discover just who she really is.
Soldier Sister, Fly Home is more than just a good coming of age story about family, tradition, culture. It is also a story about 'home' in the literal and metaphorical sense. Above the canyon, the mesa, is home to the Tess who lives there in the world of school, cell phones, malls. As the summer goes by, the canyon, a world of hogans, animals, unfettered nature, slowly begins to feel like home to the Tess, who loves the beauty of it. And it is her grandmother who helps Tess reconcile these two different worlds within herself, to feel at home in both.
But it is Blue who finally takes Tess 'home.' Gaby has told Tess that if she ever got lost riding Blue, he would always find his home if she loosened the reins and let him. And he literally does, twice when they are out riding in the canyon. But Blue also takes Tess home in the figurative sense when she is forced to make a decision about him that will determine who she is from than on.
All of this is told in Nancy Bo Flood's beautiful lyrical storytelling style. I lived in Arizona for four years, and really fell in love the land. I think you will find some of the most breathtaking places on earth there. Flood's beautiful descriptions really made me feel an acute homesickness for the Arizona landscape. Flood has made her setting every bit as much a well-developed main character as she has Tess and her grandmother.
And while I loved Soldier Sister, Fly Home, I did think it was not without one flaw that really bothered me. I felt that Tess's grandmother was perhaps too stereotypical, sounding like the wise Indian speaking in aphorisms. Ironically, this seems to happen in the canyon than up on the mesa, where she seems more like a real character and less like a stereotype.
I should mention also that there are scenes in Soldier Sister, Fly Home that may upset readers sensitive to animals being killed, though it is never done gratuitously or cruelly in this novel.
A Writing Prompt Guide has been prepared by Nancy Bo Flood and can be download HERE
This book is recommended for readers age 11+
This review was originally posted on Randomly Reading
nikimarion's review
4.0
This narrative is an animal story that feels very familiar, a la Gary Paulsen's The Haymeadow or Wilson Rawls's Where the Red Fern Grows, but it's also very unfamiliar, in that it focuses on a 13 yo half-Navajo, half-white protagonist whose older sister has just been deployed to Iraq. I welcome this blend of old- and newness.
It's a book that says 10+ on its flap copy, but I am definitely keeping it in my middle grade section.
It's a book that says 10+ on its flap copy, but I am definitely keeping it in my middle grade section.
1tolkienfan's review against another edition
5.0
What to say... a young lady, 1/2 white and 1/2 Navajo coming of age story -- discovering herself and what it means to be yourself; parts of a whole