A review by bookishwithbug
Wandering Stars by Tommy Orange

emotional hopeful inspiring reflective sad tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0


📚Book review📚 :: WANDERING STARS by Tommy Orange
Story premise: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Character development: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Writing style: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Ending: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Wandering Stars takes us back in order to move us forward. Tommy Orange first gave us the Pulitzer Prize finalist There, There, where we meet 12 characters in various stages of life, all from Native communities. They all converge at the Big Oakland Powwow, where 14 year old Orvil Red Feather finds himself clinging to life after a robbery goes awry. 

But Wandering Stars doesn't start there. No, Tommy Orange carries us all the way back to 1864 to the Sand Creek Massacre where we meet a teenager named Jude Star. He escapes narrowly with his life but is captured and sent to prison where he is forced to shed his native culture by the man who would go on to found the Carlisle Indian Industrial School -- an infamous boarding school created to force the assimilation of Native children. This man and his school would go on to brutalize thousands of children, including Jude Star's son. And it is this history, this lineage of ancestral trauma and systematic violence that trickles down through the years and lands squarely on Orvil Red Feather, his grandmas and his brothers. 

There, There was a groundbreaking novel but Wandering Stars is earth shattering. 

I usually start a review with what I think the heart of the book is but for this one, the only place I can even think to start is with the writing. Orange is a master of his craft. There were sentences, single sentences, that drew tears from my eyes. The chapters of the book change perspective, narrator and even style. The structure, the voice -- everything -- changes in such a beautiful way depending on whose story is being told. Orange writes with equal brilliance as a high schooler in the throes of addiction as he does an elderly woman trying to wade through her regrets. 

Orange uses his near perfect prose to provide insight into the struggles of a people who are not a monolith but who are all crawling out from under the weight of American history. Like in There, There, the characters of Wandering Stars are consumed by the day to day of their lives. But in Wandering Stars, we have been handed a road map to travel back in time to witness the pain that will be carried on in the blood of the Star, later Red Feather, family. In doing so, we as the readers can look at their lives from a unique perspective. It's this sweeping view and it's insight into breaking generational cycles that makes this book so powerful.

Wandering Stars is about what being Native means to Native people. It's about their constant search for an identity as identities are stripped away from them and then forced upon them. Where does the land fit into their identity? Community? Language? Feathers? Addiction? They're questions Orange doesn't have answers to but the questions in themselves and the characters' search for resolution provides a kind of healing. 

I'm grateful that Orange has given the world this opportunity to better understand the lived experiences of some Native people. We are all better off because of books like Wandering Stars, not only because of the beauty it is made out of but for the knowledge it is willing to impart.