Praise for I Love You So Many:
"Terria Smith's I Love You So Many expands the travel writing genre with her unflinching honesty and insightful observations on modern travel. She weaves together exciting international adventures and the complex realities of her indigenous identity. This book is like a letter from your best friend telling you what really happened during her trip." Ursula Pike, author of An Indian Among los Indígenas
"I Love You So Many is both the deeply personal story of author Terria Smith's coming of age into her Indigenous Californian identity and a migratory travelogue that takes readers to international destinations. Smith beautifully weaves together stories from her life as a Desert Cahuilla woman on the Torres-Martinez Indian Reservation in the Coachella Valley desert with her travels around the world. She is an engaged and intrepid traveler who represents her deep, desert-based Indigenous roots while also seeking to learn and connect with Indigenous people and cultures everywhere she goes. Please read this book. It is a journey you need to travel along with, learn from, and celebrate with, and your life will be all the richer for it." Ruth Nolan, editor of No Place for a Puritan: The Literature of California's Deserts
"I Love You So Many is an Indigenous memoir that chronicles Terria Smith's journey of self-discovery and acceptance through global travel, relationality, and family history. Moving from Alaska to Cuba, Iceland, Guyana, and beyond, Smith explores themes of Indigenous identity, resilience, and love while navigating personal challenges such as divorce, migration, and loss. Embedded in a beautifully chronicled travelogue of her unfolding life, her unflinching truths become touchstones, illuminated and validated with each stamp on her passport. Joining the ranks of Deborah Miranda's Bad Indians and Therese Marie Mailhot's Heart Berries, this memoir celebrates healing, empowerment, and the enduring strength of Indigenous mobility in an accessible and interconnected world." Theresa Gregor, professor of American Indian Studies, California State University Long Beach
"Terria Smith has gifted us something we dont see so much of: a Native travel narrative that is more than just the fish-out-of-water, 'Indian leaves the rez and is overwhelmed' trope. I can almost hear the gasps of readers marveling at the idea that Indians travel at all! Smith is a wonderful guide in showing that we absolutely do, and that our experiences at home provide us insights beyond what most American travelers may bring with them when they go abroad. At the core of this quarter-century unfolding is Smith's personal origin story as a mighty, independent Indigenous woman with a deep love for her traditional land finding her power in a broader, borderless world; in worlds, really, both inner and outer varieties of them. Smiths journey is full of heart and humor, and a different version of Native memoir from what we usually get and I am grateful for the opportunity to travel with her." Chris La Tray (Anishinaabe), author of Becoming Little Shell: A Landless Indians Journey Home