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The Education of Little Tree by Forrest…
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The Education of Little Tree (original 1976; edition 2001)

by Forrest Carter (Author)

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3,120524,680 (3.84)1 / 60
The Education of Little Tree tells of a boy orphaned very young, who is adopted by his Cherokee grandmother and half-Cherokee grandfather in the Appalachian mountains of Tennessee during the Great Depression.
Member:MommaO
Title:The Education of Little Tree
Authors:Forrest Carter (Author)
Info:University of New Mexico Press (2001), Edition: 25th anniversary, 216 pages
Collections:Your library
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The Education of Little Tree by Forrest Carter (1976)

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» See also 60 mentions

English (49)  Spanish (2)  Norwegian (1)  All languages (52)
Showing 1-5 of 49 (next | show all)
The greatest story about a Native American child ever written. I was given this book as a gift from my father, Louis E Dallara. Thank you dad. ( )
  ldallara | Dec 14, 2024 |
One of those books I've heard about for years but never got around to reading.[return]The ending made me cry. I could have rated it higher but the dialect sometimes felt too much. I can see how it was needed, to illustrate Grampa's lack of education & allow for the times when he confused words' meanings.[return]After his parents die, a young boy lives with his grandparents somewhere in southeastern hill country. They are Cherokee, and foster his love of nature, knowledge of plants and animal ways, and moral values. Even tho it is told in a fairly simplistic style, and could be read to children of a young age, the values are important for those of us of any age.[return]It could also serve as a good introduction to the history of White-Indian relations, as we meet Willow John and learn he's had "dead eyes" since coming back from the long walk to Oklahoma, and as Little Tree stays strong through the abuse dealt him at the orphanage. Little Tree is such a loving-hearted child, he brightened the lives of these old folks he lived with.[return]2011 review. ( )
  ClydeWILibrary | Sep 22, 2024 |
One of those books I've heard about for years but never got around to reading.
The ending made me cry. I could have rated it higher but the dialect sometimes felt too much. I can see how it was needed, to illustrate Grampa's lack of education & allow for the times when he confused words' meanings.
After his parents die, a young boy lives with his grandparents somewhere in southeastern hill country. They are Cherokee, and foster his love of nature, knowledge of plants and animal ways, and moral values. Even tho it is told in a fairly simplistic style, and could be read to children of a young age, the values are important for those of us of any age.
It could also serve as a good introduction to the history of White-Indian relations, as we meet Willow John and learn he's had "dead eyes" since coming back from the long walk to Oklahoma, and as Little Tree stays strong through the abuse dealt him at the orphanage. Little Tree is such a loving-hearted child, he brightened the lives of these old folks he lived with.
2011 review. ( )
  juniperSun | Aug 3, 2024 |
Beautiful. Buy this book for people.
  kevindern | Apr 27, 2023 |
Story of a young boy who is left orphaned and raised by his grandparents in Appalachia. His grandmother is Cherokee and his grandfather half Cherokee. They live in a small house up on a mountainside, with a bunch of hound dogs that protect their corn patch and trail foxes (for amusement). They mostly live off the land, gathering herbs, acorns and wild greens, hunting deer, catching fish etc. But the grandfather also makes whiskey in an attempt to earn some cash, and young Little Tree is learning this skill. Something I never thought I’d read the details of, making moonshine! Most of the story takes place while Little Tree is six years old (he seems older than that though), and there’s other stories told by visitors and friends, or shared family history. The kid does his best to learn what his grandparents teach him- not only to live off what the land gives them, but also to read (his grandmother reads Shakespeare from the library, and has him studying the dictionary) and do simple math. He’s pretty well taught for a kid who’s never gone to school, but when out in public with his grandfather- at the store, on the bus, or sitting in church- it’s apparent that the white folks around them look down on his family for being poor in material goods, for going barefoot or wearing deerskin clothing. Although the kid himself never really catches on that he’s being mocked. Different kinds of people come to their little house- those representing authorities that have good interests at heart, are given the runaround (in some very hilarious scenes). Relatives, friends, and one Jewish peddler however, are welcomed into their home, and Little Tree learns compassion, patience, and other bits of wisdom from them.

Things happen, up and down the mountainside, and I was settling into the rhythm of their days, the picture of life in the backwoods this gave me, when suddenly authorities find out this kid is living with his grandparents and not in school. They pull him out of his home and send him to a religious boarding school. Where things are very unpleasant and oppressive, to say the least. I’m glad the kid made it out of there, but the ending had me feeling really sad.

This book brought two others to mind while I was reading it: Where the Red Fern Grows (because of the hound dogs) and Where the Lilies Bloom (the setting and overall style). But once again, it also makes me grit my teeth when I look about online after and learn some facts. When this book was first published the author said it was autobiographical. Nope. He’s not even Native American. Before I was aware, I was enjoying the read and thought it a good story, but now I cringe at the things I didn’t question in the narrative, that are so blatantly wrong or stereotypical. Have to read with doubt in mind now: American Indians in Children’s Literature made me aware of some issues with this one. I feel like I should remove it from my personal collection.

from the Dogear Diary ( )
1 vote jeane | Nov 28, 2021 |
Showing 1-5 of 49 (next | show all)
This is an engaging story of a Cherokee boy's childhood in the 1930s. The richness of the informal education and wisdom provided by the boy's grandparents is in striking contrast to that of the white-run school the boy is subsequently forced to attend. This book was originally published as autobiographical reminiscences, but has been reclassified as fiction. Controversy surrounds this moving work. Some believe author Forrest Carter to be the late Asa Earl Carter, a white supremacist. Carter, nevertheless, could have had Cherokee heritage and still have held racist beliefs.
 
Part of Little Tree’s strong appeal, I suspect, is its tone of moral certainty. If Grandpa’s folksy wisdom feels a bit heavy-handed at times, it also serves as a touching reminder of a more innocent era. For young and old alike, Forrest Carter’s memoir brings alive once more, in luminously remembered detail, the shape and spirit of a world we had lost.
 
A Cherokee boyhood of the 1930s remembered in generous, loving detail...an unbelievably rich young life. A felicitous remembrance of a unique education.
added by ArrowStead | editKirkus Reviews (Oct 1, 1976)
 
There's humor, tragedy, tenderness, and, most of all, love....A lot of people receive a lot of education from their grandparents that schools don't offer. But few have expressed it as well as Little Tree has. Very good reading.
added by ArrowStead | editAbilene Reporter
 
I cannot recall a book that has moved me from laughter to tears and back again, with the frequency that this one has....If I could have but one book this year this would be my choice, for it is a deeply felt work which satisfies and fills.
added by ArrowStead | editChattanooga Times
 

» Add other authors (12 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Forrest Carterprimary authorall editionscalculated
Strickland, RennardForewordsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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The Education of Little Tree tells of a boy orphaned very young, who is adopted by his Cherokee grandmother and half-Cherokee grandfather in the Appalachian mountains of Tennessee during the Great Depression.

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