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Cloudwalker

ebook
5 of 5 copies available
5 of 5 copies available

Cloudwalker, describing the creation of the rivers, is the second in a series of Northwest Coast legends by Roy Henry Vickers and Robert Budd. Their previous collaboration, Raven Brings the Light (2013), is a national bestseller.
On British Columbia's northwest coast lies the Sacred Headwaters—the source of three of British Columbia's largest salmon-bearing rivers. These rivers are the source of life for all creatures in the area. But what gave life to the rivers themselves?
Astace, a young Gitxsan hunter, is intent on catching a group of swans with his bare hands. He is carried away by the birds' powerful wings and dropped in the clouds. With only a cedar box of water Astace wanders the clouds, growing weaker, stumbling and spilling the contents. When he finally returns to earth he discovers lakes, creeks, and rivers where there were none before. The Gitxsan rejoice at having him home, and name the new river they live alongside Ksien—“juice from the clouds."
Roy Henry Vickers' vibrant artwork, including 18 new prints, accompany this new retelling of an ancient story—readers of all ages will be captivated.

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    • Kirkus

      June 15, 2014
      This pourquoi tale from British Columbia's Tahltan nation is greatly enhanced by vibrant, imaginative woodblock prints, one for every page of text.Co-author and illustrator Vickers notes that this was a "short little story" when he first encountered it, but over the years, he learned more. Perhaps this is why some of the many interesting bits of Cloudwalker's story do not quite coalesce. For example, early in the tale, there is a full paragraph about the "one thing Cloudwalker could not do." The detailed description of his yearning for a life partner appears to be a plot point but is never again mentioned. The strength of the text lies in its ability to weave into this legend about the creation of three rivers facts about the natural resources of the region and the traditions of its native people. It is unfortunate that there is no appendix or glossary; some elements are explained, but readers outside the culture will likely not figure out the meaning of "potlatch" from this story's context. And how should those readers pronounce "Ksien" and "Gitxsan" and "guloonich"? The artwork, in contrast, elegantly combines spiritual and physical worlds, partly by the use of pale, skeletal imagery over solid blocks of landscape and living figures.Though the text makes few compromises to readers outside of its culture, the illustrations shine brightly for all. (Picture book/folk tale. 6-12)

      COPYRIGHT(2014) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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