A diary of a birder's ideal year follows the author and his wife on their birding trips to the Arctic, the Everglades, the Northeast, the Southwest, and Canada.
Compiled in one book, the essential collection of books by James Branch Cabell:The Certain HourChivalryThe Cords of VanityDomneiThe Eagle's ShadowFigures of EarthGallantryThe Jewel MerchantsJurgen a Comedy of JusticeThe Line of LoveThe Rivet in Grandfather's NeckTaboo
In Peyote and the Yankton Sioux, Thomas Constantine Maroukis focuses on Yankton Sioux spiritual leader Sam Necklace, tracing his family’s history for seven generations. Through this history, Maroukis shows how Necklace and his family shaped and were shaped by the Native American Church. Sam Necklace was chief priest of the Yankton Sioux Native American Church from 1929 to 1949, and the four succeeding generations of his family have been members of the Church. As chief priest, Necklace helped establish the Peyote religion firmly among the Yankton, thus maintaining cultural and spiritual autonomy even when the U.S. government denied them, and American Indians generally, political and economic self-determination. Because the message of peyotism resonated with Yankton pre-reservation beliefs and, at the same time, had parallels with Christianity, Sam Necklace and many other Yankton supported its acceptance. The Yanktons were among the first northern-plains groups to adopt the Peyote religion, which they saw as an essential corpus of spiritual truths.
The year 2031 is and computing is at a stage where players use reality suits in order to physically enter the gaming world. Paul Wilson is a research professor and gaming is not just a job, but his life. His life have been dedicated to creating this technology but when a transition between the real world and the game world goes wrong, their his life is forever, and a fight for survival begins.
John Two-Feather and his two cousins, Samuel and Joseph King, are the grandsons of Navajo singer and medicine man John King. As boys growing up on the reservation in New Mexico, they listened to their grandfather’s heroic tales of the heroes of the Navajo or Diné. Their most favorite story of all was called “The Two Who Come to Their Father,” the story of the Navaho twin heroes known as the Feather Keepers. In the myth, the hero twins journeyed out to find their father, the Sun, so that he will give them the skills and weapons to protect their people. Overcoming many trials along the way, the twins find their father and convince him to give them the gifts to combat their enemies. Returning to their village as powerful warriors, the twins undertake the destruction of the monsters that plague their people. But what John and his cousins did not know as they listened to the childhood tales was that their grandfather, the existing Feather Keeper, was preparing them for their hero’s journey. Now, armed with the “gifts of ages,” the three work as part of a clandestine U.S. government program known as AGHIA. After a failed U.S. operation to capture terrorist Hussein Al Rahabi, the three Navajo cousins adventure into the war-torn wilds of Zabul, Afghanistan, to find Al Rahabi and stop his uncle’s powerful Taliban army from retaking the province and overrunning the tiny military outpost built there. In the process, the new Feather Keeper will be made.
The word tsawalk, literally one, expresses the ancient Nuu-chah-nulth view that all living things – human, plant, and animal – form part of an integrated whole brought into harmony through constant negotiation and mutual respect. In Principles of Tsawalk, Umeek argues that contemporary environmental and political crises reflect a world out of balance. Building upon his first book, Tsawalk: A Nuu-chah-nulth Worldview, Umeek weaves together indigenous and Western worldviews into an alternative framework for responding to global environmental and political crises and to the dispossession and displacement of indigenous peoples. These problems, the author shows, stem from an historical and persistent failure to treat all peoples and life forms with respect and accord them constitutional recognition. As this book demonstrates, the Nuu-chah-nulth principles of recognition, consent, and continuity, embodied in songs, language, and ceremonies, hold the promise of achieving sustainable lifeways in this shared struggle for balance.