Children of the Turtle
Word Sketches of the Native Peoples of Turtle Island
by
Book Details
About the Book
From Aztec to Zuni, here are portraits of the daily lives of the First Nations people who lived and still live on the continent of North America; the great floating island the Northeastern woodland tribes called Turtle Island. Songs, chants and legends from the tip of southern Mexico to Alaska and Arctic Canada are included. Covering a time span of a thousand years, the book includes tribes now decimated or who are a nearly forgotten and rarely mentioned part of history.
This book of word-sketches paints a picture of their world: at times harsh and cruel, at other times spiritual and filled with beauty. These word-sketches convey the humanness of the original inhabitants of Turtle Island, the Native American Indians; paints them as neither noble nor savage, but simply as people who learned to live with nature's challenges and hardships and to endure.
To read these portraits of tribes and individuals, their land and customs, their needs, both physical and spiritual, is to understand the magnificent heritage that is the gift to the world from Native American Indian people.
About the Author
Jacques L. Condor (Maka Tai Meh) lived in Alaska and Canada for fifty years, taught and lectured about his Native American Heritage in museums, colleges, universities and public and private schools in the States, Canada and the Far East. Condor?s books on Native Americans include: Condor Tales and Children of the Raven.
Condor can be reached at: makataimeh@earthlink.net