Broken : A Love Story (Hardcover)
by Lisa Jones
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Overview
Writer Lisa Jones went to Wyoming for a four-day magazine assignment and came home four years later with a new life.
At a dusty corral on the Wind River Indian Reservation, she met Stanford Addison, a Northern Arapaho who seemed to transform everything around him. He gentled horses rather than breaking them by force. It was said that he could heal people of everything from cancer to bipolar disorder. He did all this from a wheelchair; he had been a quadriplegic for more than twenty years.
Intrigued, Lisa sat at Stanford's kitchen table and watched. She saw neighbors from the reservation and visitors from as far away as Holland bump up the dirt road to his battered modular home, seeking guidance and healing for what had broken in their lives. She followed him into the sweat lodge -- a framework of willow limbs covered with quilts -- where he used prayer and heat to shrink tumors and soothe agitated souls. Standing on his sun-blasted porch, pit bulls padding past her, she felt the vibration from thundering bands of Arabian horses that Stanford's young nephews brought to the ring to train.
And she listened to his story. Stanford spent his teenage years busting broncs, seducing girls, and dealing drugs. At twenty, he left the house for another night of partying. By morning, a violent accident had robbed him of his physical prowess and left in its place unwelcome spiritual powers -- an exchange so shocking that Stanford spent several years trying to kill himself. But eventually he surrendered to his new life and mysterious gifts.
Over the years Lisa was a frequent visitor to Stanford's place, the reservation and its people worked on her, exposing and healing the places where she, too, was broken.
"Broken" entwines her story with Stanford's, exploring powerful spirits, material poverty, spiritual wealth, friendship, violence, confusion, death, and above all else,"a love that comes before and after and above and below romantic love."
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Related Categories:
Books > Biography & Autobiography > Personal Memoirs
- ISBN-13: 9781416579069
- ISBN-10: 1416579060
- Publisher: Scribner Book Company
- Date: May 2009
- Page Count: 275
Customer Reviews
Publishers Weekly® Reviews
- Reviewed in: Publishers Weekly, page 55.
- Review Date: 2009-03-23
- Reviewer: Staff
Freelance journalist Jones tells the story of Arapaho medicine man Stanford Addison, a quadriplegic and gifted horse trainer and his effect on animals: “The horses would gather around, their liquid brown eyes fixed on him. He’d roll away across the dirt. They’d put their noses down and follow him until he stopped rolling.” Jones chronicles the Addison family’s triumphs and losses on the Wind River Indian Reservation in Wyoming, a place plagued by poverty and “defined by struggle.” Along the way, Jones takes in lost souls, like “the half-melted cowboy” Moses. At a crossroads in her life, Jones—much like those she cares for—is spiritually lost, but while in Wyoming, she stumbles upon her own journey of self-discovery. With an eye for detail, Jones brings each character to life; she describes Addison as “[t]his paralyzed, six-toothed, one-lunged Plains Indian [who] would take a drag of his KOOL Filter King, sigh, and say something like 'I guess the thing I miss most since the accident is ski jumping.’ ” At the book’s core are the themes of healing, redefining family and home, and “finding your center.” In the end, Jones reveals the beauty, ruin—and spirituality—of life on the “rez.” (May 12)
- ISBN-13: 9781416579069
- ISBN-10: 1416579060
- Publisher: Scribner Book Company
- Date: May 2009
- Page Count: 275







