The Marsh That Remembers

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Bol The Marsh That Remembers is a deeply personal memoir of identity, ancestry, and return-a journey from the streets of San Diego to the bayous of south Louisiana, where one man searches for the people, history, and land that had been calling him all his life.Born in San Diego, California, and raised far from his father's Louisiana roots, Dave Ellis Forét grew up with a quiet longing he could not explain. He struggled in school, felt different from those around him, and carried questions about his name, his father, and the place his blood seemed to remember before he ever understood why. When he finally received genealogical records tracing his family back through the marshes of Terrebonne and Lafourche Parish, the search became more than personal-it became a calling.Part memoir, part testimony, and part cultural history, this book follows a fifteen-year journey of discovery, memory, and belonging.Through family records, oral history, research, and a filmmaker's eye for place and detail, Forét follows the story of his father, Morris Forét, a French-speaking Native man from Dulac, Louisiana, and the larger story of a people shaped by bayous, shrimp boats, Catholic faith, Cajun French, Indigenous survival, land loss, and the long struggle to be seen and remembered.The book moves between California and Louisiana, between childhood wounds and ancestral memory, between government records and the deeper truth carried by land, family, and community. Along the way, Forét explores the history of the Grand Caillou/Dulac people, Pointe-au-Chien, Isle de Jean Charles, and the Native and Cajun families whose lives were often misnamed, divided, or erased by official paperwork-but never forgotten by the marsh itself.This is a story for anyone who has ever asked: Where do I come from? Who are my people? What does it mean to belong?With honesty, reverence, and a cinematic sense of place, The Marsh That Remembers speaks to readers interested in memoir, Louisiana history, Native American and Indigenous identity, Cajun culture, genealogy, family roots, land loss, and the power of remembering what was almost lost.At its heart, this is not only the story of one man finding his people. It is the story of a land that remembered them first.

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The Marsh That Remembers is a deeply personal memoir of identity, ancestry, and return-a journey from the streets of San Diego to the bayous of south Louisiana, where one man searches for the people, history, and land that had been calling him all his life.Born in San Diego, California, and raised far from his father's Louisiana roots, Dave Ellis Forét grew up with a quiet longing he could not explain. He struggled in school, felt different from those around him, and carried questions about his name, his father, and the place his blood seemed to remember before he ever understood why. When he finally received genealogical records tracing his family back through the marshes of Terrebonne and Lafourche Parish, the search became more than personal-it became a calling.Part memoir, part testimony, and part cultural history, this book follows a fifteen-year journey of discovery, memory, and belonging.Through family records, oral history, research, and a filmmaker's eye for place and detail, Forét follows the story of his father, Morris Forét, a French-speaking Native man from Dulac, Louisiana, and the larger story of a people shaped by bayous, shrimp boats, Catholic faith, Cajun French, Indigenous survival, land loss, and the long struggle to be seen and remembered.The book moves between California and Louisiana, between childhood wounds and ancestral memory, between government records and the deeper truth carried by land, family, and community. Along the way, Forét explores the history of the Grand Caillou/Dulac people, Pointe-au-Chien, Isle de Jean Charles, and the Native and Cajun families whose lives were often misnamed, divided, or erased by official paperwork-but never forgotten by the marsh itself.This is a story for anyone who has ever asked: Where do I come from? Who are my people? What does it mean to belong?With honesty, reverence, and a cinematic sense of place, The Marsh That Remembers speaks to readers interested in memoir, Louisiana history, Native American and Indigenous identity, Cajun culture, genealogy, family roots, land loss, and the power of remembering what was almost lost.At its heart, this is not only the story of one man finding his people. It is the story of a land that remembered them first.

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Pages: 146, Paperback, Marshlight Press


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Merk Marshlight Press
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  • 9798234098795
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