The Princess Curse
Heart & Soul: The Story of America and African Americans
Guys Read: Thriller
Every Thing on It
Are You ‘Normal’? More Than 100 Questions That Will Test Your Weirdness
How Rabbit Tricked Otter and Other Cherokee Trickster Stories
Pepere Played the Fiddle
Which Way Should I Go?
Proud to be Inuvialuit
A River Lost
Bruchac frames 11 legends of Native American sacred places with a conversation between Little Turtle and his uncle, Old Bear, who says, “There are sacred places all around us…They are found in the East and in the North, in the South and in the West, as well as Above, Below, and the place Within.”…The text is printed in stanzas, enhancing the image of prose poems.
Between Earth and Sky: Legends of Native American Sacred Places
The Moccasins
In this traditional Crow story, a great big monster climbs out of the lake and up the cliff to steal the mother Thunderbird’s young chicks each spring. This year she is determined to save them, but she needs human help. So she snatches up Brave Wolf while he is out hunting and carries him to her nest, where he comes up with a plan. (Tales of the People)
Brave Wolf and the Thunderbird
Songs of Shiprock Fair
Wish Wind
Where Only the Elders Go: Moon Lake Loon Lake
Red Parka Mary
Little Voice
Ice Man
The Birth of Nanabosho
Ancient Thunder
Baby Learns About Seasons
The Porcupine Year
In this coming-of-age story, the children of the longhouse are 11-year-old Ohkwa’ri and Itsi:tsia. Twin brother and sister, they live in a Mohawk town in the traditional homelands of what is now eastern New York State in 1491. Reflecting the balance between male and female roles in Iroquois society, the book’s chapters alternate between the events and perspectives of Ohkwa’ri and Itsi:tsia, who very definitely see things differently. Bruchac seamlessly incorporates an impressive amount of information about pre-contact Mohawk culture, society, and beliefs, and tells a good story as well. — Oyate