AltaMira Press
Pages: 160
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-0-7591-0689-5 • Hardback • June 2004 • $120.00 • (£92.00)
978-0-7591-0690-1 • Paperback • June 2004 • $42.00 • (£35.00)
978-0-7591-1550-7 • eBook • June 2004 • $39.50 • (£30.00)
Lois Beardslee has been a teacher and writer for 25 years. She is also an accomplished artist whose works are in public and private collections worldwide. She is the author of Lies to Live By (Michigan State University Press, 2003).
Chapter 1 1: On a Clear Day Indians Can See Forever
Chapter 2 2: The Life Expectancy Myth
Chapter 3 3: The Practical Side of Being Married to the West Wind
Chapter 4 4: Us versus Them
Chapter 5 5: If You Find Something That Works, Stick With It
Chapter 6 6: Maple Syrup
Chapter 7 7: Jam
Chapter 8 8: The Sock Pile From Hell
Chapter 9 9: No Rest for the Wicked
Chapter 10 10: Flooding the Ice Rink
Chapter 11 11: Skate
Chapter 12 12: The Dog Story
Chapter 13 13: Crispy Fish
Chapter 14 14: The Fine Art of Trash
Chapter 15 15: Compost
Chapter 16 16: Community Property
Chapter 17 17: Freezing Rain
Chapter 18 18: Liars and Fakers
Chapter 19 19: Dogs, Horses, and Indians are Defenseless
Chapter 20 20: Separate is Not Equal
Chapter 21 21: Benefit of the Doubt
Chapter 22 22: The Stalking
Chapter 23 23: Cultural Appropriation
Chapter 24 24: The Social Worker
Chapter 25 25: Equinox
Chapter 26 26: A Single Feather
Chapter 27 27: Deodorant Before Columus
Chapter 28 28: Boys Will Be Boys
Chapter 29 29: Holes-in-the-Sky
Chapter 30 30: Math and Snakes
Chapter 31 31: The Wiindigoog
Chapter 32 32: Manaboozhou's Children
Using contemporary stories that put to test the values of the traditional stories, Rachel's Children is a collection of laugh-out-loud narratives and a searing indictment of racism in the United States.
— Beverly Slapin, Oyate
Rachel's Children is gripping. It starts at a gallop and reads fast, pulling the reader along.
— Sault Area Arts Council
I am not aware of any other book quite like this one, neither from the point of view of illuminating American Indian women's lives in such personal detail, nor of a more didactic approach that explores contemporary Ojibwa, or American Indian, issues. It is unique and refreshing in both style of presentation and content. . . . A number of times while reading it I laughed out loud because Beardslee had perfectly captured some of the crazy absurdities and ironies of life as perceived from an Indian point of view.
— Susan Lobo, author of Native American Voices