Friday, September 11, 2020

Canyon Dreams: A Basketball Season on the Navajo Nation by Michael Powell

Canyon Dreams by Michael Powell was my latest read, and I was just blown away.  Powell's storytelling is beautiful and stunning and heartbreaking.  While this book tells of one season of the Chinle High School basketball team, this is a story about so much more than basketball.  It is really a novel about the Navajo people and the struggles they often face living on the reservation.  It is about the history and traditions of the Navajo and how their lives have evolved over the years.  This is a human interest story that will have you cheering for this group of boys as they navigate not only the long basketball season, but lives full of heartache and hope.  I loved this novel so much.  I really can't say enough good things about it.

Note: There is a series on Netflix to accompany this novel.  It is called Basketball or Nothing. 

From Amazon:

The moving story of a Navajo high school basketball team, its members struggling with the everyday challenges of high school, adolescence, and family, and the great and unique obstacles facing Native Americans living on reservations.

Deep in the heart of northern Arizona, in a small and isolated patch of the vast 17.5-million-acre Navajo reservation, sits Chinle High School. Here, basketball is passion, passed from grandparent to parent to child. Rez Ball is a sport for winters where dark and cold descend fast and there is little else to do but roam mesa tops, work, and wonder what the future holds. The town has 4,500 residents and the high school arena seats 7,000. Fans drive thirty, fifty, even eighty miles to see the fast-paced and highly competitive matchups that are more than just games to players and fans.

Celebrated Times journalist Michael Powell brings us a narrative of triumph and hardship, a moving story about a basketball team on a Navajo reservation that shows how important sports can be to youths in struggling communities, and the transcendent magic and painful realities that confront Native Americans living on reservations. This book details his season-long immersion in the team, town, and culture, in which there were exhilarating wins, crushing losses, and conversations on long bus rides across the desert about dreams of  leaving home and the fear of the same.

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