The Yurok people are a fishing people. Since time immemorial, the Klamath River provided for the Yurok, with salmon, eels, eulachon, and other food. Colonization fundamentally upset the balance that existed. The Yurok faced genocide, and those that survived were confined to a small portion of their territory. The Klamath, once a mighty salmon stronghold, was choked by fish-killing dams. But the Yurok persisted. In her new book, The Water Remembers: My Indigenous Family’s Fight to Save a River and a Way of Life, Amy Bowers Cordalis details the long struggle by her family and people to resist, restore and renew tribal sovereignty and the Klamath River. 

Come see Amy and get a copy of her new book signed at Cal Poly Humboldt on Thursday, November 13 from 4:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. at the Behavioral & Social Sciences building, room 162, as part of their Decolonizing Sustainability Speaker Series.