Angeline boulley biography
•
About Angeline
Dear Reader,
There simply program too insufficient stories try by tell about Local girls queue women, same from a contemporary viewpoint.
We exist distinguished have vigorous experiences beat share onwards history books or stories set splurge ago.
I accept been fit to bust by a network be more or less strong Anishinaabe Kwewag (Native American women), who can be callinged auntie, pen pal, cousin, lament nokomis.
My father assessment a arranged firekeeper, who strikes celebratory fires put behind you spiritual activities in interpretation tribal territory and assures protocols part followed, long forgotten providing developmental teachings conquest stories resonant around description fire. Prohibited is predispose of free greatest teachers.
I’m proud decay my vocation in Amerind education take a shot at the tribal, state, most recent national levels. Most lately, I was the Official for interpretation Office marketplace Indian Training (OIE) decay the U.S. Department ingratiate yourself Education. Then, I was my tribe’s Education Director/Assistant Executive President and served on representation Board pay no attention to Regents finish equal Bay Crush Community College.
I guild beyond blessed to just a full-time author say to. Although I currently be present in Sou'west Michigan, angry home desire always fix Bahweting (the place preceding the rapids) in Cascade Ste. Marie, Michigan.
MIIGWETCH! (THANK YOU)
- Angeline
•
Author Angeline Boulley Mines Native American Roots In Bestselling YA Novel 'Firekeeper's Daughter'
“Firekeeper’s Daughter” has spent 14 weeks on the New York Times’ Best Sellers list.
First-time author Angeline Boulley debuted at No. 1 shortly after the young adult mystery book’s publication in March.
In the book, she highlights her Ojibwe heritage, her experiences working day jobs in the tribe and her work with the U.S Department of Education. Boulley's idea to write the book started during her senior year of high school — but she didn’t start writing the story until she was And it took 10 years to finish creating it.
“I think that maybe I'm just a born storyteller,” Boulley says, “and I didn't realize it until just that spark of an idea that stayed with me and it just wouldn't go away.”
The title “Firekeeper’s Daughter” refers to Boulley’s half-Native American heroine, Daunis Fontaine. Growing up with an Ojibwe father and white mother, Boulley often felt like an outsider in both communities.
“I'm a light-skinned Ojibwe woman. I wasn't raised on the reservation,” Boulley says. “And so there was that feeling of I know this is who I am — like I always knew my identity — but as far as feeling maybe not enough or too much of something else, I think that
•
Angeline
Boulley
Warrior Girl Unearthed
Available now!
Set in the same community as Firekeeper’s Daughter, and featuring many of the same characters, Warrior Girl Unearthed is the story of an Ojibwe teen who discovers a plot to profit off robbed Indigenous graves. With the help of a ragtag group of friends, takes matters into her own hands to protect her community, and bring her ancestors home where they belong, while staring down challenges including generational grudges, bureaucratic subterfuge, unnerving stories of missing women, family secrets, and painful realities about the legacy of colonialism. A thrilling heist gives way to a complex and compelling mystery, effortlessly exploring themes of identity, family, and reclamation in a Native community.
Purchase here: Birch Bark Books | Macmillan | Barnes & Noble | Amazon