Traci Sorell

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Traci Sorell is an Indigenous author of fiction and nonfiction works for children and teens. She is an enrolled citizen of the Cherokee Nation.

Sorell has spent much of her life living within the Cherokee Nation tribe's reservation in northeastern Oklahoma and currently resides with her family by Fort Gibson Lake.[1] Her mother's family has lived in the area since 1838 when Cherokee people were removed from their homelands.[2] She has a younger brother and sister.[2]

As a child, Sorell learned about her ancestors from her grandmother, fishing with her family, and caring for animals and the land.[2] She also enjoyed reading, singing, and performing in theater productions.[2]

When Sorell was a teenager, she and her family moved to Southern California, and she became the first person in her family to graduate from college.[3] Her mother, sister, and brother later received degrees as well.[2]

Sorell's second language is Spanish, though she is learning the Cherokee language.[2]

Education

Sorell majored in Native American Studies and minored in Ethnic Studies at the University of California, Berkeley graduating with a Bachelor of Arts in 1994.[1] During her time at Berkeley, Sorell lived in Madrid and taught English and Spanish to children and adults.[2]

In 1996, she received a Master of Arts from the University of Arizona, where she studied American Indian Studies with a concentration in Federal Indian Law & Policy.[1]

Later, Sorell returned to school and received a Juris Doctor degree from the University of Wisconsin Law School in 2001.[1]

Career

Sorell began her career by helping Native Nations and their citizens by writing "legal codes, testimony for Congressional hearings, federal budget requests, grants and reports."[2]

Since beginning her writing career, Sorell has continued to focus on incorporating culturally accurate books about Cherokee and other Indigenous people into the canon of literature for children and young adults.[2]

Sorell was a Tulsa Artist Fellow in 2021 and 2022.[1]

Awards and honors

Seven of Sorell's books are Junior Library Guild selections, including Powwow Day,[4] We Are Still Here!,[5] We Are Grateful: Otsaliheliga,[6] and Classified.[7]

Awards and honors for Sorell's books
Year Title Award/Honor Result Ref.
2018 We Are Grateful: Otsaliheliga Reading the West Book Award Winner [8]
2019 Boston Globe–Horn Book Award Honor [9][10]
Orbis Pictus Award Honor [11]
Robert F. Sibert Informational Book Award Honor [12]
ALA Notable Children's Books Selection [13]
2020 At the Mountain's Base ALA Notable Children's Books Selection [14][15]
American Indian Youth Literature Award Honor [16][17]
Rise: A Feminist Book List Top 10 [18][19]
Indian No More ALA Notable Children's Books Selection [20]
American Indian Youth Literature Award Winner [16]
We Are Grateful: Otsaliheliga American Indian Youth Literature Award Honor [16][17]
Audie Award for Young Listeners' Title Finalist [21]
Odyssey Award Honor [22][23]
2022 At the Mountain's Base ALA Notable Children's Recordings Selection [24]
We Are Still Here! ALA Notable Children's Recordings Selection [24]
American Indian Youth Literature Award Honor [25][17]
Robert F. Sibert Informational Book Award Honor [25]
Classified American Indian Youth Literature Award Honor [25][17]
Orbis Pictus Award Honor [26]
Rise: A Feminist Book List Selection [27]
2024 Contenders: Two Native Baseball Players, One World Series Carter G. Woodson Book Award Winner [28]
American Indian Youth Literature Award Honor [29]
Mascot American Indian Youth Literature Award Honor
She Persisted: Wilma Mankiller Honor

Publications

References

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