A review by bioniclib
Elatsoe by Darcie Little Badger

4.0

I am seeing more Sci-Fi/Fantasy books by BIPOC authors. I love the genre but have always been uncomfortable with how white and male it is. It's a bigger issue that I want to get into here, but it was great to read about a minority group, in this case the Lipan Apache from a member of the tribe instead of a well-meaning but problem-fraught white dude. And it's a well-written book to boot!

Here are some of my takeaways:

The breaking down of boundaries, specifically between the living and the dead, is a major trickster trope; and the reason the book was recommended to me.

I wonder if the story about Coyote person in the Bat person's cave was a real Apache story.

Not really a spoiler, but I'm going to cover it up because it is tangentially related to the ending.
Spoiler Another trickster trope is Coyote always being on the move. When Elatsoe and her fam pic up a coyote on their way home, the coyote doesn't have a destination in mind, she's just looking to travel.


Is Vivian's storytelling style, the deliberate pace and intentionally including many details, a Native American storytelling style?

The author's take on vampires is that they're cursed men. They still have the same inability to enter someone's home.
SpoilerWhich is marvelously used when Vivian says one is unwelcome in her home and since the entire land in the ancestral home of her people, he's forced to flee not just the city but the state, many states, because the original spread of the Apache covered more than one.


There's a ghost doggo!

I highly recommend this book.