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0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
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Wait time: About 2 weeks
« Ce livre est à la fois une danse, un chant et un éclat de lune, mais par-dessus tout, l'histoire qu'il raconte est, et restera à jamais, celle de la Petite Indienne. »
La Petite Indienne, c'est Betty Carpenter, née dans une baignoire, sixième de huit enfants. Sa famille vit en marge de la société car, si sa mère est blanche, son père est cherokee. Lorsque les Carpenter s'installent dans la petite ville de Breathed, après des années d'errance, le paysage luxuriant de l'Ohio semble leur apporter la paix. Avec ses frères et soeurs, Betty grandit bercée par la magie immémoriale des histoires de son père. Mais les plus noirs secrets de la famille se dévoilent peu à peu. Pour affronter le monde des adultes, Betty puise son courage dans l'écriture : elle confie sa douleur à des pages qu'elle enfouit sous terre au fil des années. Pour qu'un jour toutes ces histoires n'en forment plus qu'une, qu'elle pourra enfin révéler.
Betty raconte les mystères de l'enfance et la perte de l'innocence. À travers la voix de sa jeune narratrice, qu'Audrey d'Hulstère incarne à la perfection, Tiffany McDaniel chante le pouvoir réparateur des mots et donne naissance à une héroïne universelle.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Narrator Dale Dickey portrays Betty, a young woman raised in the Appalachian region of Ohio. Betty is often called Little Indian by her father, a Cherokee. Her mother is white. With dark skin and a pure, bright spirit, Betty endures cruel racism, a dysfunctional family, and a variety of other heartbreaking tragedies as she goes through life. Dickey captures the innocence and hurt of a young woman who is doing her best to appreciate the magic around her, even while suffering. Dickey perfectly delivers the poetic mood of this audiobook, giving a believable performance with an Appalachian accent. Her narration captures the beauty of the story, while still embracing Betty's struggles. V.B. © AudioFile 2020, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 22, 2020
      McDaniel bases her raw if overwrought bildungsroman (after The Summer That Melted Everything) on the life of her mother. Born in 1954, narrator Betty is one of eight siblings whose cherished father, Landon Carpenter, a Cherokee, tells wondrous tales, and whose mother, Alka Lark, shares cruel truths (“God hates us,” she says, referring to women). Betty recounts poverty, puberty, and the tragic loss of one sibling after the other. Betty looks like Landon and is abused at school by the prejudiced children and teachers of Breathed, Ohio. The episodic narrative revolves around Betty’s struggles over whether to divulge a family secret involving incest and rape at the story’s rotten core. Along the way, Landon, a finely rendered character, dispenses most of the wisdom (“Some people are as beautiful and soft as peonies, others as hard as a mountain”), but McDaniel gives Betty exceedingly precocious insights (at nine: “William Shakespeare wrote my father a Romeo heart and a Hamlet mind at the same time Henry David Thoreau composed him to have sympathy toward nature and a longing for paradise to be regained”). Still, she brilliantly describes Betty’s self-image based on her father’s stories of their ancestors. McDaniel is an ambitious and sincere writer, and occasionally her work transcends.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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  • French

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