Desert Hawk Books |
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Tanaina
Tales from Alaska |
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127
pages |
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A young Chippewa
Indian from Minnesota collected these legends and stories told by
the Tanaina Indians of southwestern Alaska. Called suk-tus
("legend-stories") and stemming from the seventeenth century,
they are anecdotal narratives centered on a particular animal or
animals common to the Tanaina country. Thus the tales are peopled
with foxes, beavers, wolverines, porcupines, and other animals,
some of which disguise themselves in human form for sinister purposes
and all of which have human desires and weaknesses. "When you're tired of the tortured complexities of modern fiction, tired of city anguish and the hang-ups of your neighbors, sit down and open this book. You'll be a child of the land again."-Vancouver Province. "The language and telling of the tales captures the primitive's sense of immediacy, relevance, vitality, and sheer joy in the story-telling art."-Choice. Bill
Vaudrin, as a student in Alaska Methodist University, wintered
several years with the Tanaina Indians of Pedro Bay and Nondalton
villages, hunting, fishing, and trapping with them. Later he lived
in Eagle River, Alaska, and taught English in Anchorage Community
College. |
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