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  • Seller image for Two Houses Half-buried in Sand: Oral Traditions of the Hul'q'umi'num' Coast Salish of Kuper Island and Vancouver Island ( Halkomelem / Cowichan / Salishan language) for sale by Leonard Shoup
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    Cryer, Beryl Mildred; Compiled and Edited By Chris Arnett ( Mary Rice; Tommy Pielle; Ts'umsitun; Quon-As; Joe Wyse; et al)

    Published by Vancouver, BC: Talon Books / Talonbooks, 2007, 1st Edition, First Printing, Vancouver, British Columbia, 2007

    ISBN 10: 0889225559 ISBN 13: 9780889225558

    Seller: Leonard Shoup, BURLINGTON, ON, Canada

    Association Member: IOBA

    Seller rating 5 out of 5 stars 5-star rating, Learn more about seller ratings

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    First Edition

    US$ 19.94 25% off

    US$ 14.96

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    Soft Cover. Condition: Very Good+ ( see Description ). Photo Cover (illustrator). First Edition. ------------( 1st printing of the First Edition ) --- softcover, a Near Fine example BUT there is a crease on the rear panel so a Very Good+ example, feels unread, 351 pages. b&w photos-, ---"A vital collection of writings about First Nations people and culture as it existed on the island coasts of the Depression-era Pacific Northwest and originally published in the pages of Victoria's oldest newspaper, the Daily Colonist, the sixty stories included here are the result of a unique collaboration between a middle-aged woman, Beryl Cryer, of upper-class British ancestry, and well-known Hul'q'umi'num'-speaking cultural elders, keenly aware of the punitive anti-land claims legislation passed by the Canadian Parliament in 1927, and therefore eager to have their stories told and published. ---Mary Rice from Kuper Island, who lived next door to the Cryer family home in Chemainus, BC, is well remembered even today for her storytelling abilities; she taught Beryl Cryer, with whom she became close friends, countless aspects of indigenous culture, particularly as experienced by women. An elder in a thriving native culture, she introduced Cryer to the many other authorities from whom these stories were gathered for the newspaper. ---Although she was not a trained anthropologist, Beryl Cryer was an honest observer and careful recorder. She embellished the material she collected with minor anecdotal introductions that give the reader a vivid sense of the person telling the story. The accounts themselves are valuable documents of Coast Salish oral traditions dealing with a wide range of subject matter from known sources, almost all of whom were well-versed in English"---, any image directly beside this listing is the actual book and not a generic photo /// NOT SIGNED ---GUARANTEED to be AVAILABLE/// ---sizes are approximate (generally within 1/8 inch)--- Size: 6w x 9h Inches. Not Signed.