Raising Ourselves

Velma Wallis
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Raising Ourselves

Velma Wallis
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Overview

218 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details
  • Published date: Sep 01, 2003
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 218
  • Publisher: Epicenter Press (WA)
  • ISBN: 9780972494472
  • Dimensions: 6.06" W x 0.63" L x 9.04" H

Velma Wallis was born in Fort Yukon, a remote village of about 650 people in Interior Alaska, near where the Porcupine River flows into the Yukon. Wallis was raised in a tradtional Athabaskan family, one of thirteen children. When she was thirteen, her father died and she left school to help her mother raise her younger brothers and sisters. Later, she passed her high school equivalency exam and moved to a trapping cabin twelve miles from the village, where she learned to live off the land by hunting, fishing, and trapping. Wallis based her first two books,�Two Old Women�and�Bird Girl and the Man Who Followed the Sun, on the Athabaskan stories her mother told her when she was growing up.

RAISING OURSELVES is sad but never bitter. What it describes is harsh and wrenching. Yet, ultimately, this is a book about hope and survival.-Kenai Peninsula Clarion

"...Told with integrity and a powerful reality. This is a riveting account of Gwich'in village life, revealing peril and hardship as well as innocence and mysticism."-Jan Harper-Haines, author of COLD RIVER SPIRITS

As deftly as her mother revealed the inside of the marten den, Wallis reveals the complex, often dysfunctional world of her family and rural community.-Juneau Empire

Writing from the inside with heart and a keen eye, Wallis creates a nuanced and intimate picture of rural Native village life.-Homer News

"Once more, Velma Wallis shows her deep understanding of the traditional cultures of the North and reveals the heart of a true storyteller.--Joseph Bruchac, author of SACAJAWEA

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