Yellow Bird: Oil, Murder, and a Woman's Search for Justice in Indian Country

Yellow Bird: Oil, Murder, and a Woman's Search for Justice in Indian Country

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  • Create Date:2021-02-18 04:17:09
  • Update Date:2025-09-06
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  • Author:Sierra Crane Murdoch
  • ISBN:9780399589171
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Summary

Notes From Your Bookseller

Sierra Crane Murdoch constructs a deep and affecting work of research in her depiction of Lissa Yellow Bird。 In turn, Lissa Yellow Bird's search for both murder victim and killer has us reading with fascination。 Lissa Yellow Bird is complex and dynamic。 Her dedication to finding a missing oil worker is matched perfectly to her dedication to her family, her reservation and her own salvation。 A truly rewarding read。

The gripping true story of a murder on an Indian reservation, and the unforgettable Arikara woman who becomes obsessed with solving it—an urgent work of literary journalism。
 
“I don’t know a more complicated, original protagonist in literature than Lissa Yellow Bird, or a more dogged reporter in American journalism than Sierra Crane Murdoch。”—William Finnegan, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Barbarian Days

NOMINATED FOR THE EDGAR® AWARD • NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY The New York Times Book Review • NPR • Publishers Weekly 

When Lissa Yellow Bird was released from prison in 2009, she found her home, the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation in North Dakota, transformed by the Bakken oil boom。 In her absence, the landscape had been altered beyond recognition, her tribal government swayed by corporate interests, and her community burdened by a surge in violence and addiction。 Three years later, when Lissa learned that a young white oil worker, Kristopher “KC” Clarke, had disappeared from his reservation worksite, she became particularly concerned。 No one knew where Clarke had gone, and few people were actively looking for him。
 
Yellow Bird traces Lissa’s steps as she obsessively hunts for clues to Clarke’s disappearance。 She navigates two worlds—that of her own tribe, changed by its newfound wealth, and that of the non-Native oilmen, down on their luck, who have come to find work on the heels of the economic recession。 Her pursuit of Clarke is also a pursuit of redemption, as Lissa atones for her own crimes and reckons with generations of trauma。 Yellow Bird is an exquisitely written, masterfully reported story about a search for justice and a remarkable portrait of a complex woman who is smart, funny, eloquent, compassionate, and—when it serves her cause—manipulative。 Drawing on eight years of immersive investigation, Sierra Crane Murdoch has produced a profound examination of the legacy of systematic violence inflicted on a tribal nation and a tale of extraordinary healing。

Editor Reviews

★ 12/23/2019

Investigative reporter Murdoch debuts with a powerful portrayal of an unusual sleuth whose dogged pursuit of a missing person inquiry led to justice。 Lissa Yellow Bird received a degree in criminal justice from the University of North Dakota, “though rather than working for the police, she spent much of her adult life evading them。” Despite that checkered background and a history of substance abuse, Lissa became an advocate in tribal court and a go-to resource when people went missing on Native American lands。 After Kristopher Clarke, who worked for a trucking company based on the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation, vanished in 2012, Lissa became interested in the mystery。 Her investigations contributed to the arrest and conviction, in 2016, of James Henrikson, who had feared that Clarke was going to start his own trucking firm and steal Henrikson’s employees。 Murdoch deepens her narrative with a searing look at the deficiencies of law and order on Native American land, corruption, and the abrogation of responsibility by the federal government。 Admirers of David Grann’s Killers of the Flower Moon will be drawn to this complex crime story with similar themes and settings。 Agent: Kent Wolf, Neon Literary。 (Feb。)

Publishers Weekly

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1

The Brightest Yellow Bird

Lissa Yellow Bird cannot explain why she went looking for Kristopher Clarke。 The first time I asked her the question, she paused as if I had caught her by surprise, and then she said, “I guess I never really thought about it before。” For someone so insatiably curious about the world, she is remarkably uncurious about herself。 She is less interested in why she has done something than in the fact of having done it。 Once, she asked me in reply if the answer even mattered。 People tended to wonder all kinds of things about her: Why did she have five children with five different men? Why had she become an addict and then a drug dealer when she was capable of anything else?

Lissa stands five feet and four inches tall, moonfaced and strong-­shouldered, a belly protruding over hard, slender legs。 Her teeth are white and perfectly straight。 Her hair is lush and dark。 She has a long nose, full lips, and brows that arch like crescents above her eyes。 When I met Lissa, she was forty-­six years old and looked about her age—though, given the manner in which she lives, one might expect her to look older。 She has a habit of going days without sleep, of sleeping upright in chairs。 She rarely cooks, subsisting largely on avocados, tuna, croissants, mangoes, and candied nuts, and smokes like a fish takes water into its gills。 She often loses things, particularly her lighters。 One night, I watched as Lissa searched for one, nearly gutting her kitchen, until she gave up, bent over the countertop, and lit her cigarette with the toaster。

She is a member of the Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara Nation, an assembly of “Three Affiliated Tribes” who once farmed the bottomlands of the Missouri River and now call a patch of upland prairie in western North Dakota their home。 The Fort Berthold Indian Reservation is three times the area of Los Angeles。 The tribe has more than sixteen thousand members。 Like a majority of these members, Lissa has not lived on Fort Berthold in some time, but she keeps in her possession an official document establishing her tribal citizenship:

Arikara Blood Quantum: 23/64

Mandan Blood Quantum: 1/4

Hidatsa Blood Quantum: 3/16

Sioux (Standing Rock) Blood Quantum: 1/8

Total Quantum This Tribe: 51/64

Total Quantum All Tribes: 59/64

“What’s the other 5/64ths?” I once asked。

“I don’t know,” Lissa replied, “but somebody f***ed up。”

It was a joke。 As far as she knew, at least two fathers of her children were white, and if anyone had f***ed up her blood quantum, Lissa thought, it was the United States government。 The fractions were controversial and arbitrary, assigned to her great-­grandparents in the 1930s by the Bureau of Indian Affairs to determine how many individuals belonged to the tribe and how much federal assistance the tribe thus deserved。 One could be a whole Indian, a fraction of an Indian, or no Indian。 The idea was that a person’s Indian-­ness could be defined solely by race。 It was the Bureau’s way of applying order to the mess it had made, though to Lissa the fractions had always seemed superficial。 In reality, she believed, there was no clear order to her life。 She had worked as a prison guard, bartender, stripper, sex worker, advocate in tribal court, carpenter, bondsman, laundry attendant, and welder。 She studied corrections and law enforcement at the University of North Dakota, where she graduated from the criminal justice program, though rather than working for the police, she spent much of her adult life evading them。 She was arrested six times, charged twice for possessing meth “with intent to deliver,” and given two concurrent prison sentences—ten and five years—two years of which she served。 When Kristopher Clarke went missing in 2012, Lissa was on parole。 Her interest in his disappearance may have seemed misplaced were it not for the fact that it made as much sense as every other random interest she had taken in her lifetime。

Lissa was born on June 13, 1968, to Irene Yellow Bird and Leroy Chase, both members of the MHA Nation。 Leroy had joined the Air Force and was not present for her birth, nor was he present for the rest of her life except on a rare phone call。 Irene’s mother, Madeleine, was Catholic and, since Irene was twenty-­one and unmarried, arranged for a relative to take Lissa。 The arrangement lasted seven months before Irene, swayed by the new radicalism of the era, decided she would not be shamed into giving up her daughter and asked for Lissa back。

It was her mother whom Lissa would later blame for the patternlessness of her life—her mother’s ambition, to be exact。 After they reunited, Irene dedicated herself to academic pursuits。 They left North Dakota for California, where Irene enrolled again in school, then returned to North Dakota, then left for Wisconsin, where Irene pursued another degree before returning, again, to North Dakota, where she served for a while as the only Native American professor in the state。 The longest Lissa and her mother remained anywhere was three years, when they lived in Bismarck, a few hours south of the reservation。 They moved to the city in 1972, when Lissa was four years old, into an apartment with a single bedroom where Lissa kept a pet fish。 One day, the fish died, and Irene flushed it down the toilet。 Lissa could not forgive her mother for this。 It seemed unfair to her that something living, which she had loved, should end up in the sewer。 Her sensitivity exasperated Irene, who supposed her daughter had wanted a full burial, with a procession and drums and star quilts draped over a casket。 She supposed her daughter even wanted a priest。 Lissa had acquired certain habits in church, such as fashioning bowls out of paper and placing them around the apartment。 “Alms for the poor!” she called when anyone came to visit。 Sometimes the visitors were her mother’s white, wealthier friends, but often they were family。 “Alms for the poor!” she called nonetheless, shaking her bowls piously, until one day her mother had enough and scolded, “Lissa, we are the poor。”

Lissa had always been like this, Irene later told me—a fanatic with a bleeding heart, giving weight to weightless things。 I supposed it was a kind way of explaining her daughter’s passionate tendencies, since Shauna, Lissa’s own daughter, explained them to me differently。 “My mom is an addict,” Shauna said。 She meant this in the broadest sense。

Shauna is the oldest of her mother’s five children, only nineteen years younger than Lissa, a generational closeness that pressed her up against her mother’s faults and made her feel them more acutely than her siblings。 When Lissa started smoking crack, Shauna was eight years old。 Six years later, Lissa turned to meth。 But even in the years before she got high, Lissa, Shauna believed, had been prone to obsession。

Among the first of these obsessions Shauna recalled were plants。 When she was in preschool, her mother had discovered an interest in growing things, and after that they kept all kinds of plants—leafy, tropical, sun-­starved plants spilling from the windows of their apartment in Grand Forks, where Lissa attended college, as well as trays of vegetable starts Lissa grew from seed, though they never had any space for a garden。 After that, her mother’s obsessions came in all forms, sudden and indiscriminate, but each one Lissa had taken on with the faith and focus of a zealot。 For a while, it had been music—Lissa taught herself to play piano—before she purchased a camera and became an ardent documentarian。

If these obsessions sounded like hobbies, Shauna insisted they were not。 It had never been enough for her mother to take an interest in something。 Rather, Lissa was set on being the best at everything she did。 The best drug dealer。 The most dogged bondswoman。 The eventual leader of each organization she joined。 After Lissa emerged from prison sober, she still found plenty of things to obsess about and, in fact, it seemed that sobriety intensified her fixations。 According to Shauna, the only difference between the things that occupied her mother when she was sober and the things that made her high was that Lissa often abandoned the sober things with the same swiftness and ease with which they came to her。 In one of their many moves, they had left the plants behind。 This was one thing Shauna expected as a child, that whatever life they were living at one moment would last only so long。 Always they had kept moving, from hotels to shelters, from apartments they rented to the houses of friends, and from the papery walls of all the places they lived, her mother had hatched, again and again, changed and yet the same。

And so when Lissa first told Shauna about the oil worker who was missing—and how she planned on finding him—Shauna assumed this obsession would also pass。 She thought it would last weeks or months until the young man was found。 She did not think it would go on for years。 “I don’t know what it was about that boy,” Shauna would say, but Kristopher Clarke was different。

Reviews

B&NJulesH

There are several deep and important stories running through this book。 Memoir, biography, history and true crime。 The last being the thread that holds the BOOK together。 Although the search for both a body and a killer is how Murdoch takes us on the journey。 It is Lissa Yellow Bird who keeps the STORY together。 Murdoch reveals to us a dynamic personality in Lissa Yellow Bird。 Complex with years of "life" in her blood Lissa's search for Kristopher Clarke is more than detective work。 It is dedication to honor a lost life。 Ultimately Yellow Bird details the lives and livelihoods of people many of us will never likely encounter but would do well to understand better。

Kate Webb

Five stars for the story, trauma, native american life and history, perseverance and determination。 The narrative was sometimes confusing as to who was speaking but still a great story。

Meachamlak

Interesting book。 A bit choppy but I liked it。

Susan

I couldn’t put this book down。 I was fascinated with the mystery element and learning about the oil field and Indian culture。

Dawn Marie

3。75

Laura

Well written, although it does get bogged down in some of the big-picture oil details and some of Lissa's, like, million billion facebook posts/text messages/etc。 Well written, although it does get bogged down in some of the big-picture oil details and some of Lissa's, like, million billion facebook posts/text messages/etc。 。。。more

Cheryl Schibley

This is a true-crime book and so much more。 It's really about the history of the Arikara, Mandan, and Hidatsa tribes in North Dakota and it's heartbreaking。 From the early 1800's when they started getting pushed off their lands to the modern-day oil/fracking boom that's poisoning them and the unwanted Canadian pipeline running through their sacred lands。 Lissa, a member of the Arikara tribe helps a mother try to find her missing son who is an oil worker。 All manner of illegal activities are taki This is a true-crime book and so much more。 It's really about the history of the Arikara, Mandan, and Hidatsa tribes in North Dakota and it's heartbreaking。 From the early 1800's when they started getting pushed off their lands to the modern-day oil/fracking boom that's poisoning them and the unwanted Canadian pipeline running through their sacred lands。 Lissa, a member of the Arikara tribe helps a mother try to find her missing son who is an oil worker。 All manner of illegal activities are taking place and it's easy to disappear someone in the vast wilderness。 Great reading in every way。 。。。more

Loriwatson98gmail。Com

This book, while telling the story of Lissa Yellow Bird's attempt to solve crimes does an even better job of telling the story of the oil boom on an Indian reservation。 She tells about greed and looking the other way, about alcoholism and addiction and how it affects generations of families。 She tells of the utter hopelessness of some reservation families and how others can climb out of that。 It might sound like a preachy, self-righteous book, but it most certainly isn't。 The author (who isn't L This book, while telling the story of Lissa Yellow Bird's attempt to solve crimes does an even better job of telling the story of the oil boom on an Indian reservation。 She tells about greed and looking the other way, about alcoholism and addiction and how it affects generations of families。 She tells of the utter hopelessness of some reservation families and how others can climb out of that。 It might sound like a preachy, self-righteous book, but it most certainly isn't。 The author (who isn't Lissa Yellow Bird) spent years doing research, consulting "authorities" and probably most importantly getting to know the families involved。 She doesn't attempt to make the natives she meets noble or downtrodden。 She struggles with telling a story that isn't hers to tell。 She works hard not to embed herself in the story while embedding herself in the community and homes of those in the story。 It's just a really good book。 I read it in one day。 。。。more

Vivienne

An unfolding of a complicated situation as it was discovered by the writer - this frustrates a lot of reviewers it seems and certainly adds a lot of detail。 Detail extraneous to a thriller, but mosaic like for the real life tableau。 Never gets preachy either。

ashwini

Highly recommend also listening to the This American Life podcast episode about Lisa Yellow Bird, where she records herself talking on the phone with a man she publicly accused of murder。 Really shows what her whole process is like for getting to the truth。

Angela

Fascinating !

Mia Quagliarello

I liked this book best when it focused on Lissa and Native American life during the oil boom。 The particular details around KC’s murder were not that interesting, so this book was not as much of a page turner as I was expecting。

Bea Lathrop

I really liked this book a lot--well-written & a very interesting true story。 I recommend it!

Isabel

Loved it。 At once a gritty true crime novel and an exploration of the Fort Berthold Reservation before and during the oil boom。 Lissa, the main character, is one of the most complicated, compelling characters I've read about。 Loved it。 At once a gritty true crime novel and an exploration of the Fort Berthold Reservation before and during the oil boom。 Lissa, the main character, is one of the most complicated, compelling characters I've read about。 。。。more

Abigail Carney

Tore through this book。 Lissa Yellow Bird is an incredible woman and I appreciated how many pages were devoted to her story and family history。 The murder(s) at the center of this book occurred within the confluence of U。S。 and tribal politics, of an exploitative oil industry and an economic boom for the Fort Berthold Reservation。 Murdoch provides that necessary context along with gripping portraits of Lissa and her family members。Before reading, I'd listened to the This American Life profile of Tore through this book。 Lissa Yellow Bird is an incredible woman and I appreciated how many pages were devoted to her story and family history。 The murder(s) at the center of this book occurred within the confluence of U。S。 and tribal politics, of an exploitative oil industry and an economic boom for the Fort Berthold Reservation。 Murdoch provides that necessary context along with gripping portraits of Lissa and her family members。Before reading, I'd listened to the This American Life profile of Lissa (reported by the author of this book), so I could hear Lissa's voice while reading her dialogue and that made my reading experience even more immersive。 The radio profile goes deeper into a disappearance covered only briefly at the end of this book and I recommend it: https://www。thisamericanlife。org/706/。。。 。。。more

Kathleen

I would love to say I loved this book。 I abandoned it despite my great personal interest in the subject matter, having lived in North Dakota during the oil boom。 I found it numbingly unreadable。 What am I missing?

Michael Robinson

good book and story the names and flow of the story were confusing at times and I think it could have been laid out in a more coherent manner in order to make it clearer what was happening。 I also think the story of Lissa could have been told in a more linear and understandable fashion。 Overall though a well reported story that also weaved in the personal story of Lissa in a compelling and interesting manner。

Cristina

I listened to the author read this book and didn't love her voice, but it's a journalistic format, so no special voices or other emotional reading skills were needed; she was fine。 My biggest complaint was the length, maybe lack of tight editing; I understand the writer did a ton of research and had way more material than fit so had to do tough cutting, but there were still long passages I wasn't sure why were included。 This book is one of those that takes a historic event (the oil boom) and bui I listened to the author read this book and didn't love her voice, but it's a journalistic format, so no special voices or other emotional reading skills were needed; she was fine。 My biggest complaint was the length, maybe lack of tight editing; I understand the writer did a ton of research and had way more material than fit so had to do tough cutting, but there were still long passages I wasn't sure why were included。 This book is one of those that takes a historic event (the oil boom) and builds the story around a dramatic event (the disappearance of KC, one of the workers on an oil project in South Dakota), and interweaves it with a personal story (Lissa Yellow Bird's life and involvement in said events。) And this is a daunting, big task for many authors to really make work。 I'm not sure Murdoch fully succeeded either, as the mystery part was less interesting than Lissa's story to me, but without the obsessive searching, maybe Lissa wasn't interesting enough。 But the story of corruption within the dirty oil boom biz was a good education for me, and the story of the Indians and their history of oppression and being taken advantage of was valuable for me and all readers to hear about。 。。。more

Wendi

Repetitive and meandering, but a fascinating story at it's heart。 Repetitive and meandering, but a fascinating story at it's heart。 。。。more

Melody

I gave up on this book。 I just realized that I wasn't paying attention and thinking about other things。 I wanted to like it, but it just didn't hold my attention。 I gave up on this book。 I just realized that I wasn't paying attention and thinking about other things。 I wanted to like it, but it just didn't hold my attention。 。。。more

Darcy

Very deep story but there was was too much unnecessary side story。 It took away from the heart of the message。

Jessie Juarez

Lissa Yellow Bird is a superhero。 Despite this book being written by a white woman, the storytelling of the reservation is excellent。 I learned so much and I am so sad many of this was new to me。

Giovanna Forsyth

While I’m so glad that more stories are being told about the generational trauma experienced by indigenous people and laxity with which crimes are prosecuted, this book could have done with a healthy edit。 It’s far too long。 The author gave us every scrap of info but also tried to set a mood and in doing so created something meandering。

Sarah

I think this book could have benefited from choosing a singular focus: on the oil boom and its connection to the US legacy of oppressing native peoples; about Lissa Yellow Bird and her journey; or about the case around which this book is formed。 I felt it tired to do so many things that it was hard to follow the threads and some things didn't really get fully explored or explained。 I also would recommend adding a list of characters - I had a lot of trouble remembering who folks were, because th I think this book could have benefited from choosing a singular focus: on the oil boom and its connection to the US legacy of oppressing native peoples; about Lissa Yellow Bird and her journey; or about the case around which this book is formed。 I felt it tired to do so many things that it was hard to follow the threads and some things didn't really get fully explored or explained。 I also would recommend adding a list of characters - I had a lot of trouble remembering who folks were, because they would disappear for a hundred pages and then be mentioned again。 I'm sure I missed a lot of the nuances。 。。。more

Paul Womack

At times a slow read。 And, I kept finding myself unsure of the people named and their place in the story。 Also, many stories made this quite a tapestry。 But several things merit commendation。 Lissa Yellow Bird is quite a remarkable woman, and if I ever get lost I hope she will come and look for me。 The story of oil extraction is a tragic one, filled with immoral or amoral manipulators, and compels me to believe in original sin。 And, there is the irony that the greed of caucasian conquerors now e At times a slow read。 And, I kept finding myself unsure of the people named and their place in the story。 Also, many stories made this quite a tapestry。 But several things merit commendation。 Lissa Yellow Bird is quite a remarkable woman, and if I ever get lost I hope she will come and look for me。 The story of oil extraction is a tragic one, filled with immoral or amoral manipulators, and compels me to believe in original sin。 And, there is the irony that the greed of caucasian conquerors now enables some recovery of lands and rights taken。。。 read casino profits。 I found facebook helpful in looking up some of those in the book, google earth in viewing the towns and geography of the area, and yahoo for checking out news reports。 A sad story given attention and care。。。 。。。more

Elicia

Very interesting and appreciated the depth of research about the reservation and the oil boom。

Jessica Roberts

This book had too much going on at once。 Not enough about oil and murder and way too much about the woman。

Emily

Window into a world I knew almost nothing about。 I appreciated the Author's Note at the end。 Lissa sounds like an incredible human, and I wanted to know more about her after the This American Life story about her。 Window into a world I knew almost nothing about。 I appreciated the Author's Note at the end。 Lissa sounds like an incredible human, and I wanted to know more about her after the This American Life story about her。 。。。more

BK

What a story! I first heard about Yellow Bird on This American Life。 The book is well written but at times drags。 Either way, it offers historical perspectives from the people who lived it that helped me understand。 Lissa is amazing!

Noah Sanders

Sierra Crane Murdoch’s exploration of the death of an oil worker on the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation in North Dakota has the sort of microcosmic focus that opens into a full on exploration of the generational trauma Indian communities have weathered for centuries。 It’s core character - Lissa Yellow Bird - is fascinating。 An ex-con turned amateur detective who discovers a passion and gift (perhaps spiritually derived) for finding missing people。 In prose occasionally dry, Murdoch digs deep in Sierra Crane Murdoch’s exploration of the death of an oil worker on the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation in North Dakota has the sort of microcosmic focus that opens into a full on exploration of the generational trauma Indian communities have weathered for centuries。 It’s core character - Lissa Yellow Bird - is fascinating。 An ex-con turned amateur detective who discovers a passion and gift (perhaps spiritually derived) for finding missing people。 In prose occasionally dry, Murdoch digs deep into the life of Lissa, her extended family, her tribe and the history of Native exploitation in America。 With characters as eclectic as Lissa (and disgraced tribal chairman Tex Hall) rooting the book, Murdoch’s coverage of the actual crime at the center of the book strangely becomes the least interesting part。 Kudos to the author for finding a sliver of light in what can often be grim reading material。 。。。more

Natalie Samenuk

A book that pulls you into Native country, Murdoch does an exceptional job at describing the hardships and daily lives of natives on a reservation。 Nothing is sugar coated。 Each person is described with such detail that makes you think you know them。 At times the pacing was a little slow, and at other times certain people were not introduced as well as they should have been。 An amazing read for true crime fans。