Discover Concord Logo
Toggle Mobile MenuToggle Mobile Menu
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Current Issue
  • Back Issues
    • Fall 2025
    • Spring 2025
    • Winter 2025
    • 2024 Back Issues
    • 2023 Back Issues
    • 2022 Back Issues
    • 2021 Back Issues
    • 2020 Back Issues
    • 2019 Back Issues
  • Browse Topics
    • Abolitionism in Concord
    • American Revolution
    • Arts & Culture
    • Celebrity Profiles
    • Civil War
    • Concord History
    • Concord Writers
    • First Nations People of Concord
    • Historic Sites in Concord
    • Parks & Nature
    • Patriots of Color
    • Things to See & Do
    • Transcendentalism
    • Trivia
    • Untold Stories of Concord
  • Plan Your Visit
  • Events
  • Purchase Subscriptions and Back Issues
  • Discover the Battle Road
  • 250 Collectibles
  • More
    • About Us
    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
Toggle Mobile MenuToggle Mobile Menu
Home » Events » Telling the Wampanoag Story: Writing Race to the Truth in Troubled Times

Find Events

or
Telling the Wampanoag Story: Writing Race to the Truth in Troubled Times

Telling the Wampanoag Story: Writing Race to the Truth in Troubled Times

Registration

Register For This Event

When

9/28/25 2:00 pm to 3:00 pm EDT

Information

Location: Concord Free Public Library- Goodwin Forum
129 Main Street
Concord, MA 01742
United States
Contact: Anke Voss

Event Description

Co-sponsored with Thoreau Farm and The Thoreau Society. Join Linda Coombs (Aquinnah Wampanoag) as she discusses her ground-breaking Young Adult book, Colonization and the Wampanoag Story, part of the Race to the Truth Series published by Penguin Random House that seeks to correct some of the long-standing myths about American history. The book has attracted many readers for its compelling story of a young girl's life in a Wampanoag family and community long before any contact with Europeans. This is juxtaposed in the following chapters with documented accounts of European exploration, settlement, the institution of colonization, as well as its many impacts, which carry through to the present day. The book has also attracted controversy, including a book ban in Texas. Coombs will discuss her work with the Wampanoag scholar Joyce Rain Anderson as part of the broader project of Native American revitalization. Linda Coombs. Linda Coombs is a citizen of the Aquinnah Wampanoag tribe of Martha's Vineyard, and has lived in Mashpee with the Mashpee Wampanoag tribe for than 48 years. Her two grandchildren are enrolled with the Mashpee tribe, as was their father and grandfather. She has worked as a museum educator for 51 years, spending 11 years at the Boston Children's Museum, 30 years in the Wampanoag Indigenous Program at Plimoth Plantation, and 9 years at the Aquinnah Cultural Center, a small house museum dedicated to the Aquinnah Wampanoag. She has been an interpreter, an artisan, a researcher; led workshops and teacher institutes; written children's stories and articles on various aspects of Wampanoag history and culture; and developed and worked on all aspects of a wide variety of exhibits. In 2023, her book Colonization and the Wampanoag Story was published. The goal of all her work remains the communication of accurate and appropriate representations about the history, cultures, and people of the Wampanoag and other Indigenous nations. Joyce Rain. Joyce Rain Anderson is a professor of rhetoric and composition at Bridgewater State University, where she directs the Native American and Indigenous Studies program. She has published widely on cultural rhetorics and Indigenous pedagogy.
Add to Google CalendarDownload iCal
KEYWORDS colonization and the wampanoag story , concord free public library , linda coombs
Back To Top

Featured Stories

  • 100411_ConcordHarvard_007.jpg

    Harvard’s Year of Exile

    Lexington and Concord. April 19, 1775. Where and when the Revolutionary War started is well known. Not so well known is the fact that Harvard played an important, if odd, role afterward in the early days of the Revolution, turning its campus over to the nascent American army. On May 1, 1775, undergraduates were dismissed and given an early summer vacation. Classes resumed on Oct. 5 in Concord, 20 miles away — the beginning of a wartime academic sojourn.
  • Cover Spring26.jpg

    The Spring Issue is Here!

    Patriots' Day is almost here, and this issue of Discover Concord brings you a list of events, the parade route, and much more to make your celebration special.  Also in this issue is an in-depth look at the new PBS documentary "Henry David Thoreau," a fascinating piece on how the Concord Lyceum came to be, and a look at how Massachusetts civilians on the homefront managed the challenging months of January - May 1776. Freedom's Way National Heritage Area is launching an exciting program you won't want to miss called "Declaring Independence: Then & Now" in more than 20 towns across Massachusetts. With two special fold-out inserts,  maps, lists of shops, and so much more, you'll want to get your copy early!
  • B2_Fish-market--photo-1200.jpg

    From a New Eden in Concord to Little Women: New Alcott Family Collections

    The William Munroe Special Collections at the Concord Free Public Library has recently expanded one of the nation’s most significant archives devoted to Louisa May Alcott and her remarkable family. With the acquisition of several newly discovered letters by Alcott and two important collections assembled over decades, the Library has added new layers of insight into the life, work, and legacy of the author of Little Women.
©2026. All Rights Reserved. Content: Voyager Publishing LLC. Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development: ePublishing
Facebook Instagram