
The Water Remembers
my indigenous family's fight to save a river and a way of life
$48.00
- Hardcover
320 pages
- Release Date
29 December 2025
Summary
The Water Remembers: An Indigenous Fight for the Klamath River
The Yurok Tribe and an Indigenous family share a moving multigenerational story of their fight to undam the Klamath river - the largest river restoration project in history - and save the planet.
The Water Remembers is the story of Indigenous resistance and an American family’s fight to preserve its legacy.
For more than half a century, between 1905 and 1962, the Federal governme…
Book Details
ISBN-13: | 9780316568951 |
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ISBN-10: | 0316568953 |
Author: | Amy Bowers Cordalis |
Publisher: | Little, Brown & Company |
Imprint: | Little, Brown & Company |
Format: | Hardcover |
Number of Pages: | 320 |
Release Date: | 29 December 2025 |
Weight: | 0g |
Dimensions: | 241mm x 159mm |
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What They're Saying
Critics Review
“Her tribe’s resistance is rendered here in potent prose. Bowers Cordalis moves fluidly between her own story, personal accounts of her family and tribe, and the mighty river itself. A moving and empowering account of an Indigenous tribe’s tenacity in the face of injustice.”–Kirkus, starred review“Amy Bowers Cordalis proves determination can save a river. The Water Remembers is an important record of how the Klamath became a battleground and a blueprint for action for future generations.”–Yvon Chouinard, founder of Patagonia“Amy Bowers Cordalis story tells us how Yurok values are lived. The Water Remembers details how and why she assumed her responsibility to protect our homelands and all that we value. Her story can guide us all to meet our shared responsibilities to the world we have been gifted.”–Judge Abby Abinanti, Yurok Tribal Court Judge (and first Indigenous woman licensed to practice law in California)
“Water is family and activism is generational in Amy Bowers Cordalis’s moving account of the Yurok Nation’s long battle to save the Klamath River and enable unprecedented environmental restoration. Her own role in that story is bravely fought and beautifully told in The Water Remembers, which is a summons for more courage, connection, and community to save the places we hold dear.”
–Tara Lohan, environmental journalist and author of Undammed“Like Amy Bowers, I grew up learning the stories and values that have sustained my community for generations. In the high desert of New Mexico, we know water is precious, but nationwide, the exploitation of lands and waters and sidelining Indigenous Knowledge throughout history have dealt a heavy blow to the resources that sustain us. Our future requires a drastic shift to the generational world view like the one Amy Bowers presents in The Water Remembers. Her personal story intertwines with the river, the salmon, history, and the present moment in a beautiful narrative that invites us all into the mission of protecting our waters and lands.”–Deb Haaland, Former United States Secretary of the Interior“A Civil Action meets Braiding Sweetgrass, a story of Indigenous survival and triumph from an Indigenous perspective.”–Ash Davidson, author of Damnation Spring“The Water Remembers is a powerful, poetic testament to Indigenous resilience and reverence for the natural world. Amy Bowers Cordalis weaves history, activism, and sacred connection into a compelling narrative of communities fighting to protect what is most vital. This book is not just a call to action; it’s a song of survival and restoration.”–Leah Thomas, environmental educator and author of The Intersectional Environmentalist“A brightly written, driving narrative of tribal voices and many other people… this important book is a joyous and uplifting story.”–Charles Wilkinson, author of Blood Struggle“A powerful interweaving of memory, history, and activism, The Water Remembers is a lyrical and uncompromising account of Amy Bowers Cordalis’s fight to protect the Klamath River and the sovereignty of the Yurok Nation. Told through a Yurok storytelling lens, this book traverses ancestral knowledge, ecological devastation, and legal resistance, revealing the sacred bond between people and river. Bowers Cordalis, an attorney and lifelong fisherwoman, writes with the clarity of lived experience and the heart of a riverkeeper. This is a vital work of Indigenous resurgence and environmental justice, brimming with spirit, truth, and unstoppable resolve.”–Terese Marie Mailhot, author of Heart Berries“Amy’s writing sings with urgency and purpose.”–Josh “Bones” Murphy, Filmmaker/Director of Patagonia’s Artifishal“In this moving memoir, Amy Bowers Cordalis shows what happens when ancestral memory joins forces with the law. The fight for the Klamath River is an important fight for tribal and environmental justice in the American West.”–David Owen, author of Where the Water Goes“Triumphant story and ever widens the awareness of the dangers that threaten Indigenous people and their historic lands.”–Congressman Jared HuffmanAbout The Author
Amy Bowers Cordalis
Amy Bowers Cordalis is a mother, fisherwoman, attorney, and a member and former General Counsel of the Yurok Tribe—the largest tribe in California. Formerly a staff attorney at the Native American Rights Fund, she is currently the Co-Founder and Co-Director of the Ridges to Riffles Conservation Indigenous Group, a nonprofit representing Native American tribes in natural and cultural resource matters, where she works on advancing tribal sovereignty, water rights, fisheries, and the undamming of the Klamath River.
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