Praise For This Book
Zibby Media, A Most Anticipated Title for Fall/Winter
"A must-read." —People
"Readers who engage will be well rewarded with a meaningful collection centering Indigenous people. Written in a woven style, integrating past and present, the stories often end at deft, surprising, and important moments . . . Stunning . . . Peters' award-winning debut created an audience ready for anything she writes, and they won't be disappointed by her memorable stories." —Booklist (starred review)
"Peters delivers a skillful set of tales featuring Indigenous characters in contemporary and historical settings . . . Peters casts an unflinching eye on the suffering of her characters, resulting in the heightened emotions of stories like 'Three Billion Heartbeats,' in which a young woman leaves home for the city to score drugs and faces mortal danger. It’s an affecting and wide-ranging collection." —Publishers Weekly
"An impactful collection of short stories . . . Many of the stories deal with grief—both spoken and unspoken; personal and generational; physical and spiritual—and how to survive in a world that’s trying to erase you. An impressive collection rooted in the grief, trauma, tradition, resilience, and hope of Indigenous peoples." —Kirkus Reviews
“Amanda Peters masterfully takes on complex and challenging subjects such as grief, loss, love, rage and resistance with a range of confident prose, from the subtle and understated to the poetic and resonant." —Michelle Good, author of Five Little Indians
“A sharp and compassionate collection that navigates the topographies of loss and resistance, never losing sight of how the land returns our senses, and heals.” —Carleigh Baker, author of Last Woman
"In the follow-up to her debut, national bestselling novel The Berry Pickers, Amanda Peters returns, this time with a collection of stories: Waiting for the Long Night Moon. The stories in this collection captivate with a blend of traditional Indigenous storytelling and Peters’s signature spare, evocative prose. Both heart-wrenching and triumphant, these stories span an astonishingly wide spectrum of the Indigenous experience—from the humiliations of systemic racism to the enduring strength and dignity of Indigenous life. Peters reminds us, time and again, that where there is trauma, there is resilience, where there is grief, there is joy, and where there is loss, there is love and the promise of a future that rises from within the human experience. These are stories at their best, stories that will turn any reader’s preference of the novel to that of the short story form—this is a collection where each short story is its own explosion of the heart that puts itself back together again for the better. Peters has given us a gift, and while it is this book, it her time and energy she spends to create such brilliance on the page." —Morgan Talty, national bestselling author of Night of the Living Rez and Fire Exit: A Novel