An autobiographical novel about the author's drug/sex/oh-wow-heavy '60s friendship with Jim Morrison of The Doors."You and me, they are really going to dig us when we're dead. You can't hope to arrive without exile."--JIM MORRISON"Burn Down the Night...
Eleven-year-old Jimmy is angry and homesick when he and his mother move from the pueblo to Grandfather Whitefeather's house in the city. Grandfather is a wise and patient guide, but Jimmy hates the city anyway. He doesn't understand -- or really want...
Little chameleon sits on a brown branch, in the green leaves, in the tan sand, and on a golden rock. A snake, an owl, a fox and a boy all think they've seen him, but the chameleon never seems to be where they think he is. Craig Kee Strete and the pop...
An Indian chief and his wise wife are not eager to hear the news that they had to move from their land and become farmers, so they devise a plan to cleverly outwit the gullible government man and, in the end, manage to stay right where they are....
Not wanting to clean his fur or listen to his mother, Little Coyote runs far away and is determined to live on his own, but when he finds himself in trouble, he quickly realizes that he really should be back home with his mother after all....
Crowboy is going to school for the very first time, and he's scared. So scared that when he wakes up he feels as bad as a mean old rattlesnake. When he slithers around the bus, girls scream and boys try to kick him. That's okay. Rattlesnakes are used...
The story of the bond between an Indian boy and his grandfather--by turns wry and melodramatic, at once fervent and prosy. At the start, a bantering camaraderie is established between Little Thunder and old Tayhua--which, however, is heavy with irony...