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The Water Remembers: My Indigenous Familys Fight to Save a River and a Way of Life Audiobook, by Amy  Bowers Cordalis Play Audiobook Sample

The Water Remembers: My Indigenous Family's Fight to Save a River and a Way of Life Audiobook

The Water Remembers: My Indigenous Familys Fight to Save a River and a Way of Life Audiobook, by Amy  Bowers Cordalis Play Audiobook Sample
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Read By: Amy Bowers Cordalis, Geneva Mattz, Lavina Bowers Publisher: Little, Brown & Company Listen Time: at 1.0x Speed 6.83 hours at 1.5x Speed 5.13 hours at 2.0x Speed Release Date: October 2025 Format: Unabridged Audiobook ISBN: 9781668643907

Quick Stats About this Audiobook

Total Audiobook Chapters:

28

Longest Chapter Length:

53:52 minutes

Shortest Chapter Length:

39 seconds

Average Chapter Length:

22:15 minutes

Audiobooks by this Author:

1

Publisher Description

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. Includes exclusive audio content!

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 government constructed one of the largest reclamation projects in the country at the headwaters of the Klamath River, comprised of four dams. They did not include salmon ladders and this denied fish access to hundreds of miles of historical habitat. This oversight and other decisions not to release water for the endangered species of fish and Tribal water rights led to increased water temperatures and toxic algae pollution, which killed hundreds of thousands of salmon. This ecocide destroyed the fishing, hunting, and gathering lifestyle of the Yurok Tribe—the largest in Northern California—preventing them from making a dignified living.

A blend of memoir and history, The Water Remembers speaks passionately to environmental justice and conservation, as well as responsible stewardship. Engrossing, Amy Bowers Cordalis recounts her twenty-year fight against the United States government, chronicling how she evolved from a naïve Westernized 22-year-old to an advocate for her people. As General Counsel for the Yurok Tribe, she ensured the removal of the dams in December 2024.  

This is a story that should be in American history books. Cordalis shares her family’s generational fight for Indigenous respect that resulted in federal recognition of their cultural and ceremonial water rights. Her great uncle sued the State of California for the Yurok people to retain fishing rights and jurisdiction to regulate its own fishery. A case that made it all the way to the Supreme Court and involved the federal government putting a moratorium on all Yurok fishing, and physical enforcement from federal marshals.

The Water Remembers involves genocide, assimilation, and oppression, but victory, in protecting one’s home, environment, and way of life.  

The audiobook edition features original Yurok songs and interwoven archival and newly recorded oral histories, preserving generations of Indigenous storytelling and cultural memory.

 

Download and start listening now!

“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 Reviews (starred review)

Quotes

  • “A remarkable story…Bowers Cordalis eloquently describes her people’s deep connection to the river.”

    — Los Angeles Times
  • “Bowers Cordalis’ account of the scientific data and many court battles leading to the dam’s reversal…What lifts this production above the ordinary is the inclusion of Yurok songs and recorded oral histories.”

    — AudioFile
  • “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

Awards

  • A #1 Amazon Bestseller in Environmental Law

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About 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. She is the recipient of the United Nation’s highest environmental honor, Champion of the World Laureate, and has been named to the second annual Time100 Climate list, 2024, featuring the 100 most influential leaders driving business to real climate action. Formerly a staff attorney at the Native American Rights Fund, she is 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.