
In this intimate collection, a storyteller gathers the fading whispers of the Northwest’s ancient oral tradition, rescuing the “why” tales that once explained the world’s quirks for generations of Blackfeet, Chippewa and Cree listeners. Each story begins with a simple observation—a striped back on a chipmunk, the bright plumage of a duck, the kingfisher’s war‑bonnet—and unfolds into a vivid, almost poetic explanation rooted in the rhythms of nature and the lived experience of a people whose lives were once intertwined with the buffalo‑filled plains.
At the heart of the anthology is Napa, the enigmatic “Old‑Man” who drifts between god‑like creator, mischievous clown and hapless thief. His larger‑than‑life exploits, from stealing the sun’s leggings to puzzling over the otter’s healing skin, reveal a culture that sees the universe as a tapestry of stories rather than facts. Listeners will feel the crackle of the lodge fire and the hush of the moonlit night as these timeless legends unfold, preserving a voice that the modern world has all but silenced.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (156K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Judith Boss. HTML version by Al Haines.
Release date
1996-07-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1869–1938
Drawn from a life of trapping, mining, politics, and ranching in the American West, these works carry the voice of someone who knew Montana firsthand. They also reflect a lasting effort to record Native stories and frontier life with warmth, curiosity, and a strong sense of place.
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