An Own Voices Native American story.
Suzanne Greenlaw (Orono, ME) is Maliseet and a citizen of the Houlton Band of Maliseet Indians. A PhD candidate in the School of Forest Resources at the University of Maine, she works to restore Wabanaki stewardship practices across various land tenure systems throughout Maine. Gabriel Frey (Orono, ME) is Passamaquoddy and a citizen of Passamaquoddy at Sipayik. He is an awarded-winning basket maker, artist, and cultural knowledge keeper. His mother and Suzanne and Gabriel’s two daughters, Musqon and Alamossit, helped inspire The First Blade of Sweetgrass. Nancy Baker (Thomaston, ME) is a Maine artist, illustrator, and muralist whose landscapes, still lifes, and figurative works in oils and pastels are represented by Mars Hall Gallery in Tenants Harbor, Maine. While visiting the sweetgrass meadows of Mount Desert Island and Acadia National Park with Suzanne and Gabriel, authors of The First Blade of Sweetgrass, Nancy learned the ecology and cultural importance of sweetgrass and witnessed the majesty of the landscape in which it grows, qualities that she has worked to convey in her illustrations.
"PW Starred Review - Emphasizing the importance of conservation and
tradition in Native culture, married authors Greenlaw (who is
Maliseet) and Frey (who is Passamaquoddy) expertly craft a sweet
story that centers a Wabanaki grandmother and
granddaughter...Baker’s earth-toned illustrations feature soft
edges, subtle colors, and braided sweetgrass borders, while lyrical
text renders experience in evocative sensory prose (“the thin whine
of mosquitos grew distant”). The result is a deeply personal,
thoughtfully detailed account."
*PW*
"While hunting for summer’s sweetgrass, a young Wabanaki girl
learns patience from her grandmother... Greenlaw (Houlton Band of
Maliseet) and Frey (Passamaquoddy), a basket maker himself, pen a
tender ode to a treasured tradition. Muted illustrations rendered
in pastels on brown paper evoke the coastal Maine landscape and fit
nicely with the tranquil pace of this lyrical tale. Quiet text
shows how careful observation and the respect of nature can provide
unexpected gifts."
*Kirkus*
"The First Blade of Sweetgrass is simply heartwarming. The simple
tale of a young girl going out with her grandmother to learn the
traditional art of harvesting sweetgrass from the marshes for
basketmaking, it melds the enchantment of the natural world with
deep principles such as tradition, ecological responsibility,
mindfulness, and cultural legacy.Illustrated in the soft earth
tones of the sweetgrass meadows of Maine’s Mount Desert Island and
Acadia National Park, this book is grounded in the Indigenous
traditions of the region. The two authors are active citizens
within the Wabanaki Confederacy. Suzanne Greenlaw works to restore
Wabanaki ecological stewardship practices throughout Maine, while
Gabriel Frey is an award-winning Passamaquoddy basket maker,
artist, and cultural knowledge keeper. Together, they taught
illustrator Nancy Baker of the ecology and cultural importance of
sweetgrass.Little Musquon’s grandmother teaches her two lessons to
begin harvesting sweetgrass from the marshes:Do not pick the first
blade, so there will never be a last blade for future generations.
Sweetgrass has a shiny green tassel and blades and a purple stem,
and it gives itself to you. If it does not give itself, it is not
sweetgrass. But it is only when Musquon learns to slow down, pay
attention, and connect with the ancestors who picked sweetgrass
before her that she is able to follow in their footsteps.For
Indigenous children, the book offers a deep affirmation of
tradition and connection to ancestry. For non-Native children, the
book offers a rare and sweet experience of the land and its gifts
from a more mindful, respectful, relational perspective. It is an
invaluable gift in these days of virtual reality and nature deficit
disorder. Heartily recommended!"
*Phila Hoopes - Friends Journal*
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