About the Author:
Of Athapaskan and Tlingit ancestry,Angela Sidney, Kitty Smith,andAnnie Nedlived in the southern Yukon Territory for nearly a century. They collaborated withJulie Cruikshank, an assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia, to produce this unique kind of autobiography. Cruikshank's books includeThe Stolen Woman: Female Journeys in Tagish, Tutchone Narrative(1982) andDo Glaciers Listen?
Review:
This is an exemplary work ... It is thorough, clear, and wonderfully detailed. What’s more, it is co-authored in a real, rather than fictive sense, bringing to the reader a kind of authenticity and bite that is rarely available ... Certainly specialists will be fascinated with this study, but it is so readable, so interesting, so innovative, that I think it will appeal to a wide audience ... [It] should be a cornerstone in Native American studies, and essential reading in women’s studies, northern studies, and to anyone curious about alternative ways of seeing the world and living a life. It ultimately stands alone, proof that there is progress in anthropological method and description. (Michael Dorris, author of The Broken Cord)
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