Posted in Biography (Saturday, November 22, 2008)
Written by Charles A. Eastman. By In Audio.
The regular list price is $61.00.
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No comments about An Indian Boyhood: Learning Literature.
Posted in Biography (Saturday, November 22, 2008)
Written by Carter Revard. By University of Arizona Press.
The regular list price is $40.00.
Sells new for $39.86.
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1 comments about Winning the Dust Bowl (Sun Tracks).
- Winning The Dust Bowl is an impressive collection of Native America writer Carter Revard's poetry and prose memorializing Oklahoma Dust Bowl era bootleggers and bankrobbers, Oxford proctors and punters, American Indian Movement activists and agitators; all interwoven and augmented with his own life experiences on the Osage reservation in rural Oklahoma, his academic success as a Rhodes Scholar, Yale Ph.D., and tenure as a professor of medieval literature. Winning The Dust Bowl is both a compelling memoir and a compendium of superb poetry that can be very highly recommended for students of American literature, Native American culture, as well as an heroic and erudite reconciliation of disparate influences and heritages in the life of an exemplary scholar.
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Posted in Biography (Saturday, November 22, 2008)
Written by Melissa Jayne Fawcett. By University of Arizona Press.
Sells new for $35.00.
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1 comments about Medicine Trail: The Life and Lessons of Gladys Tantaquidgeon.
- Received the book right away. I am pleased with the service. Thank you
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Posted in Biography (Saturday, November 22, 2008)
Written by Virginia Sutter. By University Press of Colorado.
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1 comments about Tell Me, Grandmother: Traditions, Stories, And Cultures Of Arapaho People (Women's West).
- "Tell Me Grandmother...." is a very touching work for those of us who are Native American. Since Dr. Sutter is a long time friend, it adds much to my experience and appriciation for the stories from our people. I can relate to the context of the stories. This is one more personal story or our Native American (Arapaho) people. Hohou.
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Posted in Biography (Saturday, November 22, 2008)
Written by Gabriel Horn. By Professional Careers, Inc..
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3 comments about Native Heart: An American Indian Odyssey.
- As a sociologist with a specialization in power relations and most particularly racial and ethnic relations in the United States, I should probably have been aware of Gabriel Horn's books a long time ago. That I wasn't is a testimony to the door our culture shuts in the face of its history and continued treatment of and attitude toward indigenous people, including the native nations of North America. That I came across Mr. Horn's work now-finally-is a function, I believe, of being in the right place at the right time thinking the right thoughts to put me in touch with an increasing level of important Truth. Native Heart is a story of survival, strength, and glory in the face of odds that have been truly insurmountable physically, but powerless spiritually. It is also a poem to and about Gabriel Horn's people. It holds back nothing, baring the core of his Being in a way that must have been painful, indeed. I am immensely grateful to have been allowed to walk the earth with Mr. Horn and those he introduces us to-past and present-in his books. If you're at all like me, you will be greatly saddened by Native Heart, but quieted, too, in the ultimate knowledge that where there is life, there is, in fact, hope for all who seek it. And if you, like I did, finish Native Heart with a yen for a second helping, Contemplations of a Primal Mind continues both the story and the reader's education.
- Gabe Horn's Native Heart is written in the voice of a man who walks his path with clear eyes and a loving heart. He does not hesitate to speak the truth, but does so in a way that clearly respects our need as real human beings to accept past (and current) injustices, learn from them and move on to a brotherhood of working together for the good of the People and the Land. Plan to have a highlighting pen near when reading this book to capture the wisdom and burn it into your heart. Once having read the true history of our nation and the continuing bias against any culture which defers from the one in power, there is no excuse for inaction. My personal library of books regarding american indian history, culture and spirit is extensive, and Native Heart now holds a place on honor. I am privileged to be the first person to write a review for this inspired offering and plan to purchase additional copies for my loved ones. We are indeed all related. Walk in Balance. Marsha Anisoquili (Many Ponies) Raymond -
- 'Native Heart' for me offered great depth of insight into Native Amercian spirituality, and the difficulties faced in modern US society preserving that culture. It also highlighted the bigotry Native peoples face here, and the misguided sterotypes other Americans may often work from when dealing with Native Americans.
Read after Gabriel Horn's second book - 'Contemplations of a Primal Mind (****), this was the perfect reading sequence for me, as one led directly into the other. I would strongly recommend this book to ALL Americans (and non-Americans), as a way to dispel the 'John Wayne' type sterotypes created about Native Americans, and to really understand them as a people, their culture and enlightening spirituality.
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Posted in Biography (Saturday, November 22, 2008)
By Minnesota Historical Society Press.
The regular list price is $29.95.
Sells new for $43.27.
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1 comments about Honor the Grandmothers: Dakota and Lakota Women Tell Their Stories.
- "Honoring the Grandmothers" is a slim book, barely bigger than your average sized pamphlet. Edited by Sarah Penman, a video and radio commentator living in Minnesota, the book is a collection of musings by four Dakota/Lakota grandmothers about traditional Indian knowledge and customs and how they relate to today's fast paced world. Penman captured the stories on tape over a period of years, working hard to overcome many obstacles to get the stories to us, the reader. There is little commentary on the stories; Penman allows them to speak for themselves. Two of the grandmothers have since passed away, but their words do continue to speak about maintaining dignity and culture in a world that likes to forget about the Indians and their way of life.
Celane Not Help Him is the first speaker presented in the book. Celane did not have an easy life; she lived in poverty for most of her life, with little formal education. Her family lost their property when the United States Air Force confiscated it during WWII for use as an artillery range. Celane is the granddaughter of Iron Hail, a Lakota who survived the Battle of Little Big Horn and the Wounded Knee massacre of 1890. Celane provides an oral history of Wounded Knee that is both enlightening in historical terms and depressing in an emotional sense. It is hard to read Celane's account, as her speaking skills do not land easily on an English-speaking ear. It is best to read the account straight through, and then think about it for a time. When this is done, Celane comes across as clear as a star in the sky. The next set of stories comes from Stella Pretty Sounding Flute, a Wahpekute-Hunkpati Dakota. The Dakota people, like most Indians, had difficulties dealing with the burgeoning white population of America in the 19th century. After years of declining fortunes, an 1862 uprising in Minnesota brought down every bit of force the American government could muster on the Dakotas. The Dakota did not disappear, but scattered throughout Missouri, Nebraska, South Dakota, and Minnesota. Stella does not concern herself with these events as much as she does with the traditions she learned from her own grandparents. Her grandmother passed on skills and knowledge that no school can teach. Stella discusses the loss of the Black Hills, the traditions of pipe carrying, and spiritual beliefs. The third storyteller is Cecilia Hernandez Montgomery. Cecilia is part Mexican, part Oglala Sioux, and part firecracker. This is one tough dame. Cecilia spent time in a Catholic school (back when they REALLY used the ruler), studied music, and worked herself dizzy at a series of low paying jobs. Cecilia really came into her own when she started a career as an activist in South Dakota, working hard to improve the living conditions of poor people (all poor people, not just Indians). She sits on many boards, committees, and still pounds the pavement when problems arise. She did all of this into her seventies and beyond, not only exploding the myth of the lazy Indian but also causing irreparable harm to the conception that old people cannot do anything of value. The last narrative comes from Iola Columbus, a Sisseton-Wahpeton Dakota. Like many other Indians, Columbus spent time in an Indian boarding school, where military discipline combined with strict adherence to corporeal punishment attempted to erase the "Indian" from the Indians. Columbus's story is different from the others because she went on to become the first woman elected to tribal chair in the state of Minnesota. She later founded a grandmother's society, where women elders can gather to share traditional knowledge with new generations. "Honoring the Grandmothers" is really a book about the elderly and their marginalized role in American society. This is occurring not only in white society but in Indian society as well. A couple of the grandmothers lament the fact that their knowledge is not passed on, but disappearing as older members of Indian tribes pass away. In short, the same mentality (of the doddering old fool who is well past his/her prime) that leads whites to toss the elderly into nursing homes happens in Indian society as well. The elderly are rich sources of knowledge and culture in every society. We ignore them at our own peril.
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Posted in Biography (Saturday, November 22, 2008)
Written by A. N Blazer and A. R Pruit. By Clear Light Publishers.
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No comments about Santana: The Last War Chief of the Mescalero Apaches.
Posted in Biography (Saturday, November 22, 2008)
Written by Carl Waldman. By Facts on File.
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1 comments about Biographical Dictionary of American Indian History to 1900.
- Now in a newly revised and expanded edition, Carl Waldman's Biographical Dictionary Of American Indian History To 1900 provides accurate and informative summaries of more than one thousand men and women of significance to Native American history. Organized alphabetically, these succinct profiles include not only the chiefs and war leaders, but the traders, prophets, religious leaders, statesmen, artists, photographers, medicine men an women, scholars, and educators that have helped to shape and mold the spectrum and variety of Native American cultures. This outstanding edition is enhanced with expanded subject indexes, a bibliography/reading list, and a new general index. Also highly recommended for personal, academic, and community library Native American reference collections are the revised editions of Carl Waldman's early works: Atlas Of The North American Indian and Encyclopedia Of Native American Tribes; as well as his definitive, authoritative linguistic study, Word Dance: The Language Of Native American Culture.
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Posted in Biography (Saturday, November 22, 2008)
Written by James Houston. By Houghton Mifflin.
The regular list price is $24.95.
Sells new for $12.00.
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4 comments about Confessions of an Igloo Dweller: Memories of the Old Arctic.
- This book was a delight to read. Mr. Houston's admiration for the Inuit culture is evident on every page. Many of the passages and stories are thought provoking and educational. I especially enjoyed his descriptions of bewilderment turned to enlightenment by such unassuming teachers.
- Really enjoyable. This man's interraelationship with a disappearing culture and the hurdles he faced in the Arctic wilderness are tangible and detailed. Mostly this book is about a youth (his own) - lost but still remembered. I read Joseph Conrad's Youth at the same time and the themes were quite similar.
- First this is a book about art. If you have ever wondered how those most beautiful Eskimo sculptures and prints have found their way to your local gallery; this book tells you how.
Mr. Houston was the first artist to recognize and search out the Inuit artforms and to deliver them to the art markets "outside". In every detail, name by name, you can read about the Inuit art culture from the very first stone figures and bone scluptures, to the latest prints. Second this is a book about Arctic. Adventure on a epic scale. Mr. Houstons' honeymoon was one of the very few trips from east to west across Baffin Island by sled. Mr and Mrs. Houston spent years in the Arctic living in the Inuit way; both their sons spoke Inuktitut in preference to English and preferred raw seal meat to... well that was all there was to eat. Sadly there are in this book no prints of the Inuit art, nor photos of the artists, nor any example of the art described in the text. For all the journeys by sled, boat, plane, and on foot there are no suitable maps. For a book about a culture that is so completely linked to geography, there are no maps for the reader to follow nor plates for the art lover to love. The most astonsihing event of the book occurs on page 9. A very young Mr. Houston steps off of a plane in the Hudson's Bay Arctic, looks around, and flatly refuses to live any place else; He stays for 15 years. You can add Mr. Houston to the list with Barry Lopez, William Vollmann , Farley Mowat, and John McPhee; thoes writers that get the Arctic Expericence
- This is one of the finest first-person, historical
narratives I've read for many years. Mr. Houston
provides a unique, non-judgemental series of
observations and first-hand stories about the
Inuit and his own experiences living among them
and working with them and, most importantly,
learning from them.
He is very honest in relating his own foibles
and potentially life-threatening mistakes. His
style is very easy to read and personal and I could not put this book down after starting it.
Mr. Houston lived a highly privileged and unique
life among a pre-literate but very evolved group
during a crucial turning point for their culture.
This is a rare and wonderful narrative.
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Posted in Biography (Saturday, November 22, 2008)
Written by Robert Mjollnir. By Xlibris Corporation.
Sells new for $20.99.
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No comments about Stink Bug Wild Indian Dog.
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