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A review by laplatts
The Inconvenient Indian: A Curious Account of Native People in North America by Thomas King
5.0
The Inconvenient Indian is a rather circuitous history of indigenous peoples in North America since contact.
King writes with a voice that is clear, concise and forceful without sledgehammering the reader with facts. There are times he uses satire extremely effectively to underscore a point and the use of his wife, Helen, as a voice of reason, encouragement and dissent is exceptional!
I believe that this book serves as an excellent primer to understanding White-Indigenous relations as they stand today. Even for those who have (or think they have) a grasp on this kind of history can benefit from reading this book. There is much to learn, and King's presentation is certainly unique.
I would recommend this to anyone who is socially minded, who enjoys reading historical non-fiction, and who has read works by Bob Joseph and Tanya Talaga.
King writes with a voice that is clear, concise and forceful without sledgehammering the reader with facts. There are times he uses satire extremely effectively to underscore a point and the use of his wife, Helen, as a voice of reason, encouragement and dissent is exceptional!
I believe that this book serves as an excellent primer to understanding White-Indigenous relations as they stand today. Even for those who have (or think they have) a grasp on this kind of history can benefit from reading this book. There is much to learn, and King's presentation is certainly unique.
I would recommend this to anyone who is socially minded, who enjoys reading historical non-fiction, and who has read works by Bob Joseph and Tanya Talaga.