Blue Dawn, Red Earth

New Native American Storytellers

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Paperback
$16.95 US
5.51"W x 8.24"H x 1.19"D  
On sale Jan 01, 1996 | 448 Pages | 978-0-385-47952-3
| Grades 9-12 + AP/IB
These 30 varied and powerful short stories by Native American storytellers incorporate traditional oral tales into modern narratives. The writers, most of whom are new, featured in this collection represent a wide range of tribes and cultural backgrounds, and demonstrate the vibrancy and diversity of Native American writing. The characters in these stories are as enduring as those that have been passed down in legend, as they capture the spirit of Native America, past and present.

“Cliff Trafzer has put together a stunning collection of Native American voices in a works that shimmer with wit and erupt with rage while, most crucially, demonstrating the astonishing complexity and richness of Native American storytelling past and present. In these thitry stories, the contemporary Native Amerian world of the magical and mundane, outraged and outrageous, timeless and timely is shown to be very much alive and very much essential to what American and world literature are about. These are stories of survival for five hundred years against enormous odds through humor and grace, through courage and luck, and, most of all, through language—the power of story.” —Louis Owens, author of Other Destinies and Wolfsong

“Enchanting, moving, colorful! Through fiction characters, the authors offer a slice of contemporary Native American life. Blue Dawn, Red Earth is skillfully edited and magnificently written by some fo the best Indian storytellers of our time.” —Larry Myers, Executive Secretary, Native American Heritage Commission

“Featuring the work of new young talents and established masters, the stories in Blue Dawn, Red Earth celebrate the lives of contemporary Native Americans. While never denying the often harsh realities faced by native peoples, the stories express a confidence that native peoples, their spirituality and their sense of humor very much intact, will survive.” —Rebecca Kugel, Professor of History, American Indian Studies, University of California, Riverside
Clifford E. Trafzer is the Director of Native American Studies and the Costo Native American Research Center at the University of California, Riverside, where he is also Professor of History and Ethnic Studies. He is the author and editor of over a dozen books on the history, lives, and experiences of Native American peoples, including Earth Song, Sky Spirit and Blue Dawn, Red Earth. Trafzer is Vice-Chair of the California Native American Heritage Commission, an agency that protects sacred sites and American Indian burial grounds. He live in Yucaipa, California. View titles by Clifford E. Trafzer
Introduction
Clifford E. Trafzer

The Witches of Eufaula, Oklahoma
Craig S. Womack

Names
Lorne Simon

Darlene and the Dead Man
Anita Endrezze

The Reapers
Jim Barnes

Spirit Curse
Annie Hansen

What’s in a Song
Maurice Kenny

Wisteria
Patricia Riley

Sky Burial
Richard Van Camp

Midnight at the Graveyard
Penny Olson

Memekwesiw
Misha

Cooking Woman
E. K. Caldwell

The Raleigh Man
Eric L. Gansworth

Bagattaway
Chris Fleet

Growing Things
Kimberly M. Blaeser

Oshkiwiinag: Heartlines on the Trickster Express
Gerald Vizenor

So I Blow Smoke in Her Face
Laura Tobe

Beets
Tiffany Midge

The Last Rattlesnake Throw
Ralph Salisbury

Never Again
D. L. Birchfield

Talking Things Over with the Boiler Man
Duane Niatum

A Jingle for Silvy
Richard G. Green

Roma and Julie:  Indians in Duality
Barney Bush

Rocking in the Pink Light
Gloria Bird

El Sol
Guadalupe J. Solis, Jr.

The Mystery of the White Roses
Vee F. Browne

A Belated Letter to Christopher Columbus
Georges E. Sioui

The Atsye Parallel
Lee Francis

Grampa Pamsey and the Great Canyon
Darryl “Babe” Wilson

Looking for Hiawatha
Andrew Connors

Dreamland
Jason B. Edwards
"Cliff Trafzer has put together a stunning collection of Native American voices in a works that shimmer with wit and erupt with rage while, most crucially, demonstrating the astonishing complexity and richness of Native American storytelling past and present. In these thitry stories, the contemporary Native Amerian world of the magical and mundane, outraged and outrageous, timeless and timely is shown to be very much alive and very much essential to what American and world literature are about. These are stories of survival for five hundred years against enormous odds through humor and grace, through courage and luck, and, most of all, through language–the power of story." –Louis Owens, author of Other Destinies and Wolfsong

"Enchanting, moving, colorful! Through fiction characters, the authors offer a slice of contemporary Native American life. Blue Dawn, Red Earth is skillfully edited and magnificently written by some fo the best Indian storytellers of our time." –Larry Myers, Executive Secretary, Native American Heritage Commission

"Featuring the work of new young talents and established masters, the stories in Blue Dawn, Red Earth celebrate the lives of contemporary Native Americans. While never denying the often harsh realities faced by native peoples, the stories express a confidence that native peoples, their spirituality and their sense of humor very much intact, will survive." –Rebecca Kugel, Professor of History, American Indian Studies, University of California, Riverside

About

These 30 varied and powerful short stories by Native American storytellers incorporate traditional oral tales into modern narratives. The writers, most of whom are new, featured in this collection represent a wide range of tribes and cultural backgrounds, and demonstrate the vibrancy and diversity of Native American writing. The characters in these stories are as enduring as those that have been passed down in legend, as they capture the spirit of Native America, past and present.

“Cliff Trafzer has put together a stunning collection of Native American voices in a works that shimmer with wit and erupt with rage while, most crucially, demonstrating the astonishing complexity and richness of Native American storytelling past and present. In these thitry stories, the contemporary Native Amerian world of the magical and mundane, outraged and outrageous, timeless and timely is shown to be very much alive and very much essential to what American and world literature are about. These are stories of survival for five hundred years against enormous odds through humor and grace, through courage and luck, and, most of all, through language—the power of story.” —Louis Owens, author of Other Destinies and Wolfsong

“Enchanting, moving, colorful! Through fiction characters, the authors offer a slice of contemporary Native American life. Blue Dawn, Red Earth is skillfully edited and magnificently written by some fo the best Indian storytellers of our time.” —Larry Myers, Executive Secretary, Native American Heritage Commission

“Featuring the work of new young talents and established masters, the stories in Blue Dawn, Red Earth celebrate the lives of contemporary Native Americans. While never denying the often harsh realities faced by native peoples, the stories express a confidence that native peoples, their spirituality and their sense of humor very much intact, will survive.” —Rebecca Kugel, Professor of History, American Indian Studies, University of California, Riverside

Author

Clifford E. Trafzer is the Director of Native American Studies and the Costo Native American Research Center at the University of California, Riverside, where he is also Professor of History and Ethnic Studies. He is the author and editor of over a dozen books on the history, lives, and experiences of Native American peoples, including Earth Song, Sky Spirit and Blue Dawn, Red Earth. Trafzer is Vice-Chair of the California Native American Heritage Commission, an agency that protects sacred sites and American Indian burial grounds. He live in Yucaipa, California. View titles by Clifford E. Trafzer

Table of Contents

Introduction
Clifford E. Trafzer

The Witches of Eufaula, Oklahoma
Craig S. Womack

Names
Lorne Simon

Darlene and the Dead Man
Anita Endrezze

The Reapers
Jim Barnes

Spirit Curse
Annie Hansen

What’s in a Song
Maurice Kenny

Wisteria
Patricia Riley

Sky Burial
Richard Van Camp

Midnight at the Graveyard
Penny Olson

Memekwesiw
Misha

Cooking Woman
E. K. Caldwell

The Raleigh Man
Eric L. Gansworth

Bagattaway
Chris Fleet

Growing Things
Kimberly M. Blaeser

Oshkiwiinag: Heartlines on the Trickster Express
Gerald Vizenor

So I Blow Smoke in Her Face
Laura Tobe

Beets
Tiffany Midge

The Last Rattlesnake Throw
Ralph Salisbury

Never Again
D. L. Birchfield

Talking Things Over with the Boiler Man
Duane Niatum

A Jingle for Silvy
Richard G. Green

Roma and Julie:  Indians in Duality
Barney Bush

Rocking in the Pink Light
Gloria Bird

El Sol
Guadalupe J. Solis, Jr.

The Mystery of the White Roses
Vee F. Browne

A Belated Letter to Christopher Columbus
Georges E. Sioui

The Atsye Parallel
Lee Francis

Grampa Pamsey and the Great Canyon
Darryl “Babe” Wilson

Looking for Hiawatha
Andrew Connors

Dreamland
Jason B. Edwards

Praise

"Cliff Trafzer has put together a stunning collection of Native American voices in a works that shimmer with wit and erupt with rage while, most crucially, demonstrating the astonishing complexity and richness of Native American storytelling past and present. In these thitry stories, the contemporary Native Amerian world of the magical and mundane, outraged and outrageous, timeless and timely is shown to be very much alive and very much essential to what American and world literature are about. These are stories of survival for five hundred years against enormous odds through humor and grace, through courage and luck, and, most of all, through language–the power of story." –Louis Owens, author of Other Destinies and Wolfsong

"Enchanting, moving, colorful! Through fiction characters, the authors offer a slice of contemporary Native American life. Blue Dawn, Red Earth is skillfully edited and magnificently written by some fo the best Indian storytellers of our time." –Larry Myers, Executive Secretary, Native American Heritage Commission

"Featuring the work of new young talents and established masters, the stories in Blue Dawn, Red Earth celebrate the lives of contemporary Native Americans. While never denying the often harsh realities faced by native peoples, the stories express a confidence that native peoples, their spirituality and their sense of humor very much intact, will survive." –Rebecca Kugel, Professor of History, American Indian Studies, University of California, Riverside

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