Reviewed by Jean Mendoza
Review Source: American Indians in Children’s Literature
Book Author: Thomas Peacock
I’m very happy to add a title to our 2021 Recommended Books list: Thomas Peacock’s The Fire. This is my “short and sweet” review. As you may remember, “short and sweet” reviews are not in-depth; they cover four reasons for our decision about a particular book.
Here’s how the publisher, Black Bears & Blueberries, describes The Fire.
This story is a fictionalized account of the Great Fire of 1918 based on an interview of Elizabeth (Betty) Gurno, a Fond du Lac Reservation elder. Betty was a little girl when the fire swept the area. The Fire of 1918 destroyed the city of Cloquet, Minnesota, and surrounding communities, including the Fond du Lac Reservation, and resulted in the loss of many lives.
Author Thomas Peacock frames Betty’s telling of the story within a later-day classroom scene in Minnesota. Betty has come to her grandchild’s classroom to share her memories of the fire.
First reason to recommend The Fire: It focuses on Indigenous people’s experience during a catastrophic event, and joins a fairly small pool of exciting and moving historical fiction picture books told from an Indigenous perspective. In The Fire, Ojibwe oral history is at the center. The author uses some words in Ojibwemowin and refers to Ojibwe traditions (such as offering asemaa, tobacco, to an elder who shares wisdom). Continue reading.
The Fire by Thomas Peacock
Published by Black Bears and Blueberries Publishing on 2021
Genres: American Indians First Nations Metis Inuit
Reading Level: Grades 3-5, Grades 6-8
Review Source: American Indians in Children's Literature
Publisher's Synopsis: This story is a fictionalized account of the Great Fire of 1918 based on an interview of Elizabeth (Betty) Gurno, a Fond du Lac Reservation elder. Betty was a little girl when the fire swept the area. The Fire of 1918 destroyed the city of Cloquet, Minnesota and surrounding communities, including the Fond du Lac Reservation, and resulted in the loss of many lives.
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