Books

Books by Terra Trevor, and containing her work

WE WHO WALK THE SEVEN WAYS: A Memoir

University of Nebraska Press

We Who Walk the Seven Ways is Terra Trevor’s memoir about seeking healing and finding belonging. After she endured a difficult loss, a circle of Native women elders embraced and guided Trevor (mixed-blood Cherokee, Lenape, Seneca, and German) through the seven cycles of life in their Indigenous ways. Over three decades, these women lifted her from grief, instructed her in living, and showed her how to age from youth into beauty. 

With tender honesty, Trevor explores how the end is always a beginning. Her reflections on the deep power of women’s friendship, losing a child, reconciling complicated roots, and finding richness in every stage of life show that being an American Indian with a complex lineage is not about being part something, but about being part of something. 

University of Nebraska PressHarvard Book Store

Birchbark Books, Barnes and NobleBookshop, Amazon

PUSHING UP THE SKY: A MOTHER’S STORY

KAAN: Korean American Adoptee Adoptive Family Network; First Edition

New eBook Edition

“Terra Trevor’s Pushing up the Sky is a revelation of the struggles and triumphs packed into the hyphens between Korean and Native American and American. From her, we learn that adoption can best be mutual, that the adoptive parent needs acculturation in the child’s ways. With unflinching honesty and unfailing love, Trevor details the risks and heartaches of taking in, the bittersweetness of letting go, and the everlasting bonds that grow between them all. With ‘Pushing up the Sky’, the ‘literature of adoption’ comes of age as literature, worthy of an honored place in the human story.” Read More

—Robert Bensen, editor of Children of the Dragonfly: Native American Voices on Child Custody and Education

UNPAPERED: WRITERS CONSIDER NATIVE AMERICAN IDENTITY AND CULTURAL BELONGING 

University of Nebraska Press

Unpapered, edited by Diane Glancy and Linda Rodriguez, is a collection of personal narratives by Indigenous writers exploring the meaning and limits of Native American identity beyond its legal margins. 

TENDING THE FIRE: NATIVE VOICES AND PORTRAITS 

University of New Mexico Press 

Tending the Fire by photographer Christopher Felver with an introduction by Linda Hogan and a foreword by Simon J. Ortiz, celebrates the poets and writers who represent the wide range of Native American voices in literature today.

CHILDREN OF THE DRAGONFLY: NATIVE AMERICAN VOICES ON CHILD CUSTODY AND EDUCATION

The University of Arizona Press 

Children of the Dragonfly, edited by Robert Bensenis the first anthology to document this struggle for cultural survival on both sides of the U.S.-Canadian border. Invoking the dragonfly spirit of Zuni legend who helps children restore a way of life that has been taken from them, the anthology explores the breadth of the conflict about Native childhood, taking readers from the boarding school movement of the 1870s to the Sixties Scoop in Canada and the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 in the United States, and spotlight the tragic consequences of racist practices of suppression of Indian identity in government schools and the campaign against Indian childbearing.

THE PEOPLE WHO STAYEDSOUTHEASTERN INDIAN WRITING AFTER REMOVAL 

University of Oklahoma Press 

Edited By Geary Hobson, Janet McAdams And Kathryn Walkiewicz

Native literature, composed of western literary tradition is packed into the hyphens of the oral tradition. It is termed a “renaissance” but contemporary Native writing is both something old emerging in new forms and something that has never been asleep. The two-hundred-year-old myth of the vanishing American Indian still holds some credence in the American Southeast, the region from which tens of thousands of Indians were relocated after passage of the Indian Removal Act in 1830. Yet, a significant Indian population remained behind after those massive relocations. 

TAKE A STAND: ART AGAINST HATE A Raven Chronicles Anthology

Take a Stand: Art Against Hate, contains poems, stories and images from 117 writers, 53 artists, divided into five fluid and intersecting sections: Legacies, We Are Here, Why?, Evidence, and Resistance. We begin with Legacies because the current increased climate of hate in this country didn’t begin with the 2016 election, and to find its roots we must look to U.S. history.

BIRTHED FROM SCORCHED HEARTS: WOMEN RESPOND TO WAR

Fulcrum Publishing

Writers from around the world were asked to consider the devastating nature of conflict-inner wars, outer wars, public battles, and personal losses. Their answers, in the form of poignant poetry and essays, examine war in all its permutations, from Ireland to Iraq and everywhere in between, this moving anthology encompasses a wide range of voices. Edited by MariJo Moore.

VOICES CONFRONTING PEDIATRIC BRAIN TUMORS

Johns Hopkins University Press 

“Deeply moving and fierce, with hope on every page. This is a publication to cherish and pull out again, and again.” —Terra Trevor, Author, Contributor, and Patient Advocate

UNRAVELING THE SPREADING CLOTH OF TIME: INDIGENOUS THOUGHTS CONCERNING THE UNIVERSE

Renegade Planets Publishing

“All the tribes say the universe is just the product of mind… It fits perfectly with the quantum. Indians believe the universe is mind, but they explore the spiritual end of it, not the physical end.” —Vine DeLoria Jr.

POETS & WRITERS: TEN QUESTIONS FOR TERRA TREVOR

Ten Questions features Terra Trevor, author of We Who Walk the Seven Ways (University of Nebraska Press) with the inside story of how her new book was written, edited, and published with insights into her creative process.

Terra Trevor