Search Results: Returned 9 Results, Displaying Titles 1 - 9
-
-
2022., Pre-adolescent, Little, Brown and Company Call No: 741.5 973 Edition: First U.S. Trade paperback edition. Availability:1 of 1 At Location(s) Summary Note: A boy and his mother refuse to identify themselves as American or Canadian at the border and become caught in the limbo between nations when they claim their citizenship as Blackfoot.
-
-
2022., Pre-adolescent, Boston : Little, Brown and Company Call No: GN Borders Edition: First U.S. trade paperback edition. Availability:1 of 1 At Location(s)Click here to view Summary Note: A boy and his mother leave their reservation in Canada to visit the boy's sister in Salt Lake City. But when his mother refuses to identity themselves as American or Canadian at the border, and instead claims their citizenship as Blackfoot, they become caught between the two borders.
-
-
2021., Pre-adolescent, Little, Brown and Co. Call No: 741.5 971 Edition: 1st U.S. ed. Availability:1 of 1 At Location(s) Summary Note: A boy and his mother refuse to identify themselves as American or Canadian at the border and become caught in the limbo between nations when they claim their citizenship as Blackfoot.
-
-
2009., Primary, Groundwood Books Call No: E KIN Availability:1 of 1 At Location(s) Summary Note: After a little girl, who is dressed like a reindeer, crashes Coyote's solstice party, she brings them to a mall where Coyote has fun shopping--until he realizes he needs to pay for everything.
-
-
2017., Primary, Groundwood Books/House of Anansi Press Call No: 398.2 KIN Availability:1 of 1 At Location(s) Summary Note: Two tales, set in a time "when animals and human beings still talked to each other," display Thomas King's cheeky humor and master storytelling skills.
-
-
1994, Bantam Books Call No: NL FANTASY F KIN Edition: Bantam trade paperb Availability:1 of 1 At Location(s)Click here to watch Click here to view Summary Note: A magical realism novel by Cherokee author Thomas King in which four Indian elders and the trickster Coyote change the lives of several individuals who come to the Blackfoot reservation for the Sun Dance.
-
-
2013., University of Minnesota Press Call No: NL 970 KIN Availability:1 of 1 At Location(s) Summary Note: In this book the author offers a deeply knowing, darkly funny, unabashedly opinionated, and utterly unconventional account of Indian-White relations in North America since initial contact; in the process, he refashions old stories about historical events and figures. Ranging freely across the centuries and the Canada-U.S. border, he debunks fabricated stories of Indian savagery and White heroism, takes an oblique look at Indians (and cowboys) in film and popular culture, wrestles with the history of Native American resistance and his own experiences as a Native rights activist, and articulates a profound, revolutionary understanding of the cumulative effects of ever-shifting laws and treaties on Native peoples and lands. At once a "history" and the complete subversion of a history, this is a critical and personal meditation that the author has conducted over the past 50 years about what it means to be "Indian" in North America. This book distills the insights gleaned from that meditation, weaving the curiously circular tale of the relationship between non-Natives and Natives in the centuries since the two first encountered each other.