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My Name Is Not Easy
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About the Author

Debby Dahl Edwardson has lived at the northern most tip of North America in Barrow, Alaska, for over thirty years. She married into the I'nupiaq community and most of what she writes about is set within this culture. It's not the culture she was born into, but it's the one she feels she belongs to in every sense of the word. While My Name Is Not Easy is fiction, it was inspired by real stories from a number of boarding schools that once operated throughout Alaska.

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Gr 7 Up-In the early 1960s, children from Inupiaq, Athabaskan, and Caucasian backgrounds are enrolled at a Catholic boarding school in Alaska in Debby Dahl Edwardson's National Book Award finalist (Marshall Cavendish, 2011). Luke (white people can't pronounce his Inupiaq name) and his brothers Bunna and Isaac are flown to Catholic sponsored Sacred Heart School far from their village. Six-year-old Isaac is too young to be enrolled in the school, so he's put into foster care without his family's consent. Thus begins the brothers' struggles central to this compelling story. Racial tensions between Eskimo (sic), Indian, and white students percolate at the school, which advocates assimilation. The brothers as well as students Amiq, Chickie, and Junior describe their efforts to adjust, convincingly voiced by Nick Podehl and Amy Rubinate. Meanwhile, the world outside is tumultuous. President John F. Kennedy's assassination, nuclear testing along the Alaskan coast, radioactive exposure, aboriginal hunting rights being invalidated, and forced adoption swirl like a cold Alaskan wind. The cadence of the dialogue is accurate, and some profanity is used. Edwardson presents profound historical events but artfully refrains from moralizing. An excellent look at an important part of history that is usually not covered in conventional high school history sources.-Robin Levin, Fort Washakie School/Community Library, WY (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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