White Indians

White Indians

White Indians

White Indians

eBook

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Overview

In this book of creative non-fiction essays Gills tells us stories from his life. The title piece, "White Indians," is a “visionary memoir” that recounts Gills' experience as a participant at a Native American Sundance ceremony on Zuni Territory, New Mexico during July 2005. The ceremony unfolds on a wolf refuge and at night, tending fire, the howling is startling music that informs this text throughout. Sixty men and women dance and pierce themselves during four days, offering flesh to a ninety-feet tall cottonwood, wrapped and glimmering with thousands upon thousands of prayer ties. The breathtaking pageantry of the dance is offset by the shock of seeing flesh offerings taken in the splendor of elaborate costumes and the continuous drumbeat and singing under an enormous sky.

As firekeeper, the narrator is responsible for heating stones for the sacred inipi. Later in the dance, a scarred old heyoka (backward/forward man) ushers him into the arena where for some time he moves among the dancers under the tree. His perspective is an insider’s, riveted by every detail. The result is the first of a two-book work, seldom if ever seen in American Literature, that places this ceremony in the larger context of Native American prophecy—the return of lost white brother, and the end of the fourth world.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940148379072
Publisher: Raw Dog Screaming Press
Publication date: 10/23/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 341 KB

About the Author

A first generation college student, Michael Gills earned his B.A. from the University of Arkansas. He was Randall Jarrell Fellow at the M.F.A. Program at the University of North Carolina-Greensboro, and received his Ph.D. in fiction writing from the University of Utah. His first collection of short fiction, Why I Lie, was published by University of Nevada Press in 2002. It won a Utah Book Prize and was chosen as a top literary debut by The Southern Review. Raw Dog Screaming Press released a novel, Go Love, in 2011. A second story collection, The Death of Bonnie and Clyde, was published by Texas Review Press in 2012; the title story won Southern Humanities Review’s Hoepfner Prize for the best story published in 2010. Currently Gills is Associate Professor/Lecturer of Writing for the Honors College at the University of Utah.
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