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53 Rare Books Native American Indian Myth Legend Folklore CD - B51

$ 7.89

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    Description

    The Historical Archive Sample Page
    53 Rare Historic Books Detailing
    Native American Indian Religions On CD
    This auction is for a CD containing 53 Rare and Fascinating Historic books detailing Native Ameriycan Religions and Mythologies.
    Below is a breakdown of the books and their contents by region. The book titles are bolded and the contents are in the bullet points below each book. All books are complete - including any illustrations that were in the original hardcopy books. In many cases, we list the chapters in the books but we also list many books just by title and publication date in an effort to keep the ad a reasonable size. If you have a question about the contents of any book, please ask us.
    All books are supplied in PDF format and are fully searchable.
    General
    Tales of the North American Indians by Stith Thompson [1929]
    Chapter I: Mythological Stories
    Chapter II: Mythical Incidents
    Chapter III: Trickster Tales
    Chapter IV: Hero Tales
    Chapter V: Journeys to the Other World
    Chapter VI: Animal Wives and Husbands
    Chapter VII: Miscellaneous Tales
    Chapter VIII: Tales Borrowed From Europeans
    Chapter IX: Bible Stories
    Walam Olum excerpt from The Lenâpé and Their Legends, by Samuel G. Brinton. Brinton's Library of Aboriginal Literature number V. Phildelphia [1885].
    The Soul of the Indian by Charles Eastman [1911]
    I. THE GREAT MYSTERY
    II. THE FAMILY ALTAR
    III. CEREMONIAL AND SYMBOLIC WORSHIP
    IV. BARBARISM AND THE MORAL CODE
    V. THE UNWRITTEN SCRIPTURES
    VI. ON THE BORDER-LAND OF SPIRITS
    Indian Why Stories by Frank Linderman [1915]
    WHY THE CHIPMUNK'S BACK IS STRIPED
    HOW THE DUCKS GOT THEIR FINE FEATHERS
    WHY THE KINGFISHER ALWAYS WEARS A WAR-BONNET
    WHY THE CURLEW S BILL IS LONG AND CROOKED
    OLD-MAN REMARKS THE WORLD
    WHY BLACKFEET NEVER KILL MICE
    HOW THE OTTER SKIN BECAME GREAT "MEDICINE"
    OLD-MAN STEALS THE SUN'S LEGGINGS
    OLD-MAN AND HIS CONSCIENCE
    OLD-MAN'S TREACHERY
    WHY THE NIGHT-HAWK'S WINGS ARE BEAUTIFUL
    WHY THE MOUNTAIN-LION IS LONG AND LEAN
    THE FIRE-LEGGINGS
    THE MOON AND THE GREAT SNAKE
    WHY THE DEER HAS NO GALL
    WHY INDIANS WHIP THE BUFFALO-BERRIES FROM THE BUSHES
    OLD-MAN AND THE FOX
    WHY THE BIRCH-TREE WEARS THE SLASHES IN ITS BARK
    MISTAKES OF OLD-MAN
    HOW THE MAN FOUND HIS MATE
    DREAMS
    RETROSPECTION
    Old Indian Legends by Zitkala-Sa [1901]
    IKTOMI AND THE DUCKS
    IKTOMI'S BLANKET
    IKTOMI AND THE MUSKRAT
    IKTOMI AND THE COYOTE
    IKTOMI AND THE FAWN
    THE BADGER AND THE BEAR
    THE TREE-BOUND
    SHOOTING OF THE RED EAGLE
    IKTOMI AND THE TURTLE
    DANCE IN A BUFFALO SKULL
    THE TOAD AND THE BOY
    IYA, THE CAMP-EATER
    MANSTIN, THE RABBIT
    THE WARLIKE SEVEN
    Myths and Legends of the Sioux by Marie L. McLaughlin [1916]
    The Forgotten Ear of Corn
    The Little Mice
    The Pet Rabbit
    The Pet Donkey
    The Rabbit and the Elk
    The Rabbit and the Grouse Girls
    The Faithful Lovers
    The Artichoke and the Muskrat
    The Rabbit, and the Bear with the Flint Body
    Story of the Lost Wife
    The Raccoon and the Crawfish
    Legend of Standing Rock
    Story of the Peace Pipe
    A Bashful Courtship
    The Simpleton's Wisdom
    Little Brave and the Medicine Woman
    The Bound Children
    The Signs of Corn
    Story of the Rabbits
    How the Rabbit Lost His Tail
    Unktomi and the Arrowheads
    The Bear and the Rabbit Hunt Buffalo
    The Brave Who Went on the Warpath Alone and Won the Name of the Lone Warrior
    The Sioux Who Married the Crow Chief's Daughter
    The Boy and the Turtles
    The Hermit, or the Gift of Corn
    The Mysterious ButteThe Wonderful Turtle
    The Man and the Oak
    Story of the Two Young Friends
    The Story of the Pet Crow
    The "Wasna" (Pemmican Man) and the Unktomi (Spider)
    The Resuscitation of the Only Daughter
    The Story of the Pet Crane
    White Plume
    Story of Pretty Feathered Forehead
    The Four Brothers or Inyanhoksila (Stone Boy)
    The Unktomi (Spider), Two Widows and the Red Plums
    Californian Indians
    Religion of the Indians of California by A. L. Kroeber. University of California Publications in American Ethnography and Ethnology (UCPAAE) Vol. 4, No. 6, pp. 319-356. [1907]
    Customary Observances by Individuals
    Shamanism
    Public Ceremonies
    Ceremonial Structures and Paraphernalia
    Mythology and Beliefs
    Special Characteristics of Different Tribes
    Myths and Legends of California and the Old Southwest Compiled and edited by Katherine Berry Judson. [1912]
    The Beginning of Newness - Zuni (New Mexico)
    The Men of the Early Times - Zuni (New Mexico)
    Creation and Longevity - Achomawi (Pit River, Cal.)
    Old Moles Creation - Shastika (Cal.)
    The Creation of the World - Pima (Arizona)
    Spider's Creation - Sia (New Mexico)
    The Gods and the Six Regions
    How Old Man Above Created the World - Shastika (Cal.)
    The Search for the Middle and the Hardening of the World - Zuni (New Mexico)
    Origin of Light - Gallinomero (Russian River, Cal.)
    Pokoh, the Old Man - Pai Ute (near Kern River, Cal.)
    Thunder and Lightning - Maidu (near Sacramento Valley. Cal.)
    Creation of Man - Miwok (San Joaquin Valley, Cal.)
    The First Man and Woman - Nishinam (near Bear River, Cal.)
    Old Man Above and the Grizzlies - Shastika (Cal.)
    The Creation of Man-kind and the Flood - Pima (Arizona)
    The Birds and the Flood - Pima (Arizona)
    Legend of the Flood - Ashochimi (Coast Indians, Cal.)
    The Great Flood - Sia (New Mexico)
    The Flood and the Theft of Fire - Tolowa (Del Norte Co., Cal.)
    Legend of the Flood in Sacramento Maidu Valley - (near Sacramento, Cal.)
    The Fable of the Animals - Karok (near Klamath River, Cal.)
    Coyote and Sun - Pai Ute (near Kern River, Cal.)
    The Course of the Sun - Sia (New Mexico)
    The Foxes and the Sun - Yurok (near Klamath River, Cal.)
    The Theft of Fire - Karok (near Klamath River, Cal.)
    The Theft of Fire - Sia (New Mexico)
    The Earth-hardening after the Flood - Sia (New Mexico)
    The Origins of the Totems and of Names - Zuni (New Mexico)
    Traditions of Wanderings - Hopi (Arizona)
    The Migration of the Water People - Walpi (Arizona)
    Coyote and the Mesquite Beans - Pima (Arizona)
    Origin of the Sierra Nevadas and Coast Range - Yokuts (near Fresno, Cal.)
    Yosemite Valley and its Indian Names
    Legend of Tu-tok-a-nu'-la (El Capitan) - Yosemite Valley
    Legend of Tis-se'-yak (South Dome and North Dome) Yosemite Valley
    Historic Tradition of the Upper Tuolumne - Yosemite Valley
    California Big Trees - Pai Ute (near Kern River, Cal.)
    The Children of Cloud - Pima (Arizona)
    The Cloud People - Sia (New Mexico)
    Rain Song - Sia (New Mexico)
    Rain Song
    Rain Song - Sia (New Mexico)
    The Corn Maidens - Zuni (New Mexico)
    The Search for the Corn Maidens - Zuni (New Mexico)
    Hasjelti and Hostjoghon - Navajo (New Mexico)
    The Song-hunter - Navajo (New Mexico)
    Sand Painting of the Song-hunter - Navajo
    The Guiding Duck and the Lake of Death - Zuni (New Mexico)
    The Boy who Became a God - Navajo (New Mexico)
    Origin of Clear Lake - Patwin (Sacramento Valley, Cal.)
    The Great Fire - Patwin (Sacramento Valley, Cal.)
    Origin of the Raven and the Macaw - Zuni (New Mexico)
    Coyote and the Hare - Sia (New Mexico)
    Coyote and the Quails - Pima (Arizona)
    Coyote and the Fawns - Sia (New Mexico)
    How the Bluebird Got its Color - Pima (Arizona)
    Coyote's Eyes - Pima (Arizona)
    Coyote and the Tortillas - Pima (Arizona)
    Coyote as a Hunter - Sia (New Mexico)
    How the Rattlesnake Learned to Bite - Pima (Arizona)
    Coyote and the Rattlesnake - Sia (New Mexico)
    Origin of the Saguaro and Palo Verde Cacti - Pima (Arizona)
    The Thirsty Quails - Pima (Arizona)
    The Boy and the Beast - Pima (Arizona)
    Why the Apaches are Fierce - Pima (Arizona)
    Speech on the Warpath - Pima (Arizona)
    The Spirit Land - Gallinomero (Russian River, Cal.)
    Song of the Ghost Dance - Pai Ute (Kern River, Cal.)
    Additional books for the Californian Indians
    Indian Myths Of South Central California. By A. L. Kroeber. UCPAAE Vol. 4 No. 4, pp. 167-250. [1907].
    Myths of the Miwok By Edward Winslow Gifford. UCPAAE Vol. 12, No. 8, pp. 283-338. [1917]
    The Dawn of the World Myths and Weird Tales Told by the Mewan [Miwok] Indians of California, by C. Hart Merriam [1910]
    Maidu Texts by Roland B. Dixon, Publications of the American Ethnological Society, vol. IV [1912]
    Hupa Texts by Pliny Earle Goddard. UCPAAE Vol. 1 No. 2 [1904]
    Yana Texts by Edward Sapir UCPAAE Vol. 9 No. 1, pp. 1-235. [1910]
    Achomawi and Atsugewi Tales and Achomawi Myths by Roland B. Dixon JAFL Vol. 22, no. 81, pp. 159-77 [1908] and JAFL Vol. 23, no. 85, pp. 283-7 [1909].
    Chinigchinich by Friar Geronimo Boscana; tr. by Alfred Robinson; [1846]
    The Mythology of the Diegeños by Constance Goddard Du Bois, The Journal of American Folk-Lore (JAFL) Vol. XIV, No. 54, pp. 181-5 [1901]
    A Saboba Origin-Myth by George Wharton James; JAFL Vol. XV, No. 61, pp. 36-9 [1902]
    The Legend of Tauquitch and Algoot by George Wharton James; JAFL Vol. XVI, No. 62, pp. 153-9 [1903]
    The Story of the Chaup; A Myth of the Diegueños by Constance Goddard Du Bois; JAFL Vol. XVII, No. 67 pp. 217-42 [1904]
    Mythology of the Mission Indians by Constance Goddard Du Bois; JAFL Vol. XVII, No. 66. p.. 185-8 [1904]; Vol. XIX. No. 72 pp. 52-60 and 73. pp. 145-64. [1906].
    Two Myths of the Mission Indians by A. L. Kroeber; JAFL Vol. XIX, No. 75 pp. 309-21 [1906]
    Ceremonies and Traditions of the Diegueño Indians by Constance Goddard Du Bois; JAFL XXI, No. 82 pp. 228-36 [1908].
    Inuit
    Tales and Traditions of the Eskimo by Henry Rink [1875]
    Eskimo Folk-tales collected by Knud Rasmussen, translated and edited by W. Worster [1921]
    THE TWO FRIENDS WHO SET OFF TO TRAVEL ROUND THE WORLD
    THE COMING OF MEN, A LONG, LONG WHILE AGO
    NUKÚNGUASIK, WHO ESCAPED FROM THE TUPILAK
    QUJÂVÂRSSUK
    KÚNIGSEQ
    THE WOMAN WHO HAD A BEAR AS A FOSTER-SON
    ÍMARASUGSSUAQ, WHO ATE HIS WIVES
    QALAGÁNGUASÊ, WHO PASSED TO THE LAND OF GHOSTS
    ISIGÂLIGÂRSSIK
    THE INSECTS THAT WOOED A WIFELESS MAN
    THE VERY OBSTINATE MAN
    THE DWARFS
    THE BOY FROM THE BOTTOM OF THE SEA, WHO FRIGHTENED THE PEOPLE OF THE HOUSE TO DEATH
    THE RAVEN AND THE GOOSE
    WHEN THE RAVENS COULD SPEAK
    MAKÍTE
    ASALÔQ
    UKALEQ
    ÍKARDLÍTUARSSUK
    THE RAVEN WHO WANTED A WIFE
    THE MAN WHO TOOK A VIXEN TO WIFE
    THE GREAT BEAR
    THE MAN WHO BECAME A STAR
    THE WOMAN WITH THE IRON TAIL
    HOW THE FOG CAME
    THE MAN WHO AVENGED THE WIDOWS
    THE MAN WHO WENT OUT TO SEARCH FOR HIS SON
    ATUNGAIT, WHO WENT A-WANDERING
    KUMAGDLAK AND THE LIVING ARROWS
    THE GIANT DOG
    THE INLAND-DWELLERS OF ETAH
    THE MAN WHO STABBED HIS WIFE IN THE LEG
    THE SOUL THAT LIVED IN THE BODIES OF ALL BEASTS
    PAPIK, WHO KILLED HIS WIFE'S BROTHER
    PÂTUSSORSSUAQ, WHO KILLED HIS UNCLE
    THE MEN WHO CHANGED WIVES
    ARTUK, WHO DID ALL FORBIDDEN THINGS
    THE THUNDER SPIRITS
    NERRIVIK
    THE WIFE WHO LIED
    KÂGSSAGSSUK, THE HOMELESS BOY WHO BECAME A STRONG MAN
    QASIAGSSAQ, THE GREAT LIAR
    THE EAGLE AND THE WHALE
    THE TWO LITTLE OUTCASTS
    ATDLARNEQ, THE GREAT GLUTTON
    ÁNGÁNGUJUK
    ÂTÂRSSUAQ
    PUAGSSUAQ
    TUNGUJULUK AND SAUNIKOQ
    ANARTEQ
    THE GUILLEMOT THAT COULD TALK
    KÁNAGSSUAQ
    Plains Indians
    Jicarilla Apache Texts by Pliny Earle Goddard. [1911]
    (Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History, Vol. VIII.)
    The Sun Dance and Other Ceremonies of the Oglala Division of The Teton Dakota. by J. R. Walker. [1917]
    (Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History Vol. XVI, Part II)
    Death and Funeral Customs among the Omahas by Francis La Flesche [1889]
    Old Indian Legends by Zitkala-Sa [1901]
    IKTOMI AND THE DUCKS
    IKTOMI'S BLANKET
    IKTOMI AND THE MUSKRAT
    IKTOMI AND THE COYOTE
    IKTOMI AND THE FAWN
    THE BADGER AND THE BEAR
    THE TREE-BOUND
    SHOOTING OF THE RED EAGLE
    IKTOMI AND THE TURTLE
    DANCE IN A BUFFALO SKULL
    THE TOAD AND THE BOY
    IYA, THE CAMP-EATER
    MANSTIN, THE RABBIT
    THE WARLIKE SEVEN
    Myths and Legends of the Sioux by Marie L. McLaughlin [1916]
    The Forgotten Ear of Corn
    The Little Mice
    The Pet Rabbit
    The Pet Donkey
    The Rabbit and the Elk
    The Rabbit and the Grouse Girls
    The Faithful Lovers
    The Artichoke and the Muskrat
    The Rabbit, and the Bear with the Flint Body
    Story of the Lost Wife
    The Raccoon and the Crawfish
    Legend of Standing Rock
    Story of the Peace Pipe
    A Bashful Courtship
    The Simpleton's Wisdom
    Little Brave and the Medicine Woman
    The Bound Children
    The Signs of Corn
    Story of the Rabbits
    How the Rabbit Lost His Tail
    Unktomi and the Arrowheads
    The Bear and the Rabbit Hunt Buffalo
    The Brave Who Went on the Warpath Alone and Won the Name of the Lone Warrior
    The Sioux Who Married the Crow Chief's Daughter
    The Boy and the Turtles
    The Hermit, or the Gift of Corn
    The Mysterious ButteThe Wonderful Turtle
    The Man and the Oak
    Story of the Two Young Friends
    The Story of the Pet Crow
    The "Wasna" (Pemmican Man) and the Unktomi (Spider)
    The Resuscitation of the Only Daughter
    The Story of the Pet Crane
    White Plume
    Story of Pretty Feathered Forehead
    The Four Brothers or Inyanhoksila (Stone Boy)
    The Unktomi (Spider), Two Widows and the Red Plums
    Iroquois
    The Code of Handsome Lake by Arther C. Parker [1913]
    The Iroquois Book of Rites by H.E. Hale [1883]
    Northwestern
    Coos Texts by Leo Frachtenberg. [1913] (Columbia University Contributions to Anthropology, Vol. I.)
    Chinook Texts by Franz Boas. [1894] (U.S. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin, no 20.)
    CikLa
    Okulâ'm
    AnêktcXô'lEmiX
    The Salmon
    Raven and Gull
    Coyote
    The Crane
    Ênts!X
    The Crow
    Câ'xaL
    Stikua'
    The Skunk
    Robin and Blue-Jay
    Blue-Jay and Iô'i
    Blue-Jay and Iô'i
    Blue-Jay and Iô'i
    Ckulkulô'L
    The Panther
    The Soul and the Shamans
    How Cultee's Grandfather Acquired a Guardian Spirit
    The Four Cousins
    The GiLâ'unaLX
    The Elk Hunter
    Pregnancy and Birth
    Puberty
    Marriage
    Death
    Whaling
    Elk Hunting
    The Potlatch
    War
    War Between Quileute and Clatsop
    The First Ship Seen by the Clatsop
    Kwakiutl Tales by Franz Boas. [1910] (Columbia University Contributions to Anthropology, Vol. II.)
    Haida Songs by John R. Swanton. [1912] (Publications of the American Ethnological Society Volume III, Part 1.)
    Tsimshian Texts (Nass River Dialect) by Franz Boas. [1902] (U.S. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin no. 27.)
    Txä'msEm and Lôgôbola'
    Txä'msEm
    Txä'msEm
    The Stone and the Elderberry Bush
    The Porcupine and the Beaver
    The Wolves and the Deer
    The Stars
    Rotten-feathers
    K*?eLku
    The Sealion Hunters
    Smoke-hole
    Ts?ak*
    Growing-Up-Like-One-Who-Has-A-Grandmother
    Little-eagle
    She-Who-Has-A-Labret-On-One-Side
    The Grizzly Bear
    Squirrel
    Witchcraft
    Tsimshian Texts (New Series) by Franz Boas. [1912] (Publications of the American Ethnological Society Volume III, Part 2.)
    Tlingit Myths and Texts by John R. Swanton. [1909] (U.S. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin no. 39.)
    Many Swans: Sun Myth of the North American Indians by Amy Lowell [1920]
    Southeastern Indian
    Myths and Tales of the Southeastern Indians by John R. Swanton. [1929] (Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin, No. 88.)
    Sacred Formulas of the Cherokee by James Mooney [1891]
    The Swimmer Manuscript
    The Gatigwanasti Manuscript
    The Gahuni Manuscript
    The Inâli Manuscript
    Other Manuscripts
    The Kanâheta Ani-Tsalagi Eti
    Character of the Formulas--The Cherokee Religion
    The Origin of Disease and Medicine
    Theory of Disease--Animals, Ghosts, Witches
    Selected List of Plants Used
    Medical Practice
    Illustration of the Tabu
    Neglect of Sanitary Regulations
    The Sweat Bath-Bleeding--Rubbing--Bathing
    Shamans and White Physicians
    Medicine Dances
    Description of Symptoms
    The Pay of the Shaman
    Ceremonies for Gathering Plants and Preparing Medicine
    The Cherokee Gods and Their Abiding Places
    Color Symbolism
    Importance Attached to Names
    Language of the Formulas
    Note on the Orthography and Translation
    Formula for Treating the Crippler (Rheumatism)
    And This Also is for Treating the Crippler
    This is to Treat Them if They are Bitten by a Snake
    To Treat Them When Something is Causing Something to Eat Them
    To Treat Gûnwani'gistû'nï
    This Tells About Moving Pains in the Teeth (Neuralgia?)
    To Treat the Great Chill
    This is to Make Children Jump Down
    To Treat the Black Yellowness
    To Treat for Ordeal Diseases
    Concerning Hunting
    This is for Hunting Birds
    To Shoot Dwellers in the Wilderness
    Bear Song
    This is for Catching Large Fish
    Concerning Living Humanity (Love)
    This Tells About Going into the Water
    Song for Painting
    To Attract and Fix the Affections
    For Separation (of Lovers)
    To Fix the Affections
    To Shorten a Night-Goer on this Side
    I Have Lost Something
    This is to Frighten a Storm
    What Those who Have Been to War Did to Help Themselves
    To Destroy Life
    This Concerns the Ball Play--To Take Them to Water With it
    Myths of the Cherokee by James Mooney [1900]
    The Cherokee Ball Play by James Mooney [1890]
    Southwestern Indians
    Origin Myths of the Navaho Indians by Aileen O'Bryan
    The Creation
    The Age of Animal Heroes
    The Age of Gods
    The Wanderings
    The Mountain Chant, A Navajo Ceremony by Washington Matthews [1887]
    Navaho Myths, Prayers, and Songs by Washington Matthews (UCPAAE 5:2) [1906]
    Traditions of the Hopi by H.R. Voth, Field Columbian Museum Anthropogical Publication Vol. VIII. [1905].
    Truth of a Hopi by Edmund Nequatewa, [1936]
    Chapter I. How The People Came Out Of The Underworld
    Chapter II. Masauwu
    Chapter III. How the Mocking Bird Gave the People Many Languages
    Chapter IV. The Hopi Decide to Seek a New Home. How Certain Clans Received Their Names
    Chapter V. How the Hopi Selected Shung-opovi For Their Home
    Chapter VI. How the Crow Clan Arrived and Settled at Mishongnovi
    Chapter VII. How a Family Quarrel Led to the Founding of Oraibi
    Chapter VIII. How the Spaniards Came to Shung-opovi, How They Built a Mission, and How the Hopi Destroyed the Mission
    Chapter IX. Return of the Spaniards to Hopi Country. Shipaulovi Founded as a Sanctuary
    Chapter X. The Return of the Bahana, the White Man
    Chapter XI. How The Hopi Marked the Boundary Line Between Their Country and That of the Navajo
    Chapter XII. How Some Hopis Resisted Sending Their Children to School and the Trouble That Resulted
    Chapter XIII. How Hotevilla And Bakabi Were Founded
    Chapter XIV. Youkioma
    Table of Zuñi Sounds
    Introduction to Zuñi Ceremonialism by Ruth Bunzel
    Zuñi Origin Myths by Ruth Bunzel
    Zuñi Ritual Poetry by Ruth Bunzel
    Zuñi Folk Tales by Frank Cushing[1901]
    The Trial Of Lovers: or The Maiden Of Mátsaki And The Red Feather
    The Youth And His Eagle
    The Poor Turkey Girl
    How The Summer Birds Came
    The Serpent Of The Sea
    The Maiden Of The Yellow Rocks
    The Foster-Child Of The Deer
    The Boy Hunter Who Never Sacrificed to The Deer He Had Slain: or The Origin Of The Society Of Rattlesnakes
    How Áhaiyúta And Mátsailéma Stole The Thunder-Stone And The Lightning-Shaft
    The Warrior Suitor Of Moki
    How The Coyote Joined The Dance Of The Burrowing-Owls
    The Coyote Who Killed The Demon SÍuiuki: or Why Coyotes Run Their Noses Into Deadfalls
    How The Coyotes Tried to Steal The Children Of The Sacred Dance
    The Coyote And The Beetle
    How The Coyote Danced with The Blackbirds
    How The Turtle Out Hunting Duped The Coyote
    The Coyote And The Locust
    The Coyote And The Ravens Who Raced Their Eyes
    The Prairie-Dogs And Their Priest, The Burrowing-Owl
    How The Gopher Raced With The Runners Of K'iákime
    How The Rattlesnakes Came To Be What They Are
    How The Corn-Pests Were Ensnared
    Jack-Rabbit And Cottontail
    The Rabbit Huntress And Her Adventures
    The Ugly Wild Boy Who Drove The Bear Away From South-Eastern Mesa
    The Revenge Of The Two Brothers On The Háwikuhkwe, Or The Two Little Ones And Their Turkeys
    The Young Swift-Runner Who Was Stripped Of His Clothing By The Aged Tarantula
    Átahsaia, The Cannibal Demon
    The Hermit Mítsina
    How The Twins Of War And Chance, Áhaiyúta And Mátsailéma, Fared With The Unborn-Made Men Of The Underworld
    The Cock And The Mouse
    The Giant Cloud-Swallower
    The Maiden The Sun Made Love To, And Her Boys: Or The Origin Of Anger
    Aw-aw-tam Indian Nights (Myths and Legends of the Pima) by J. William Lloyd [1911]
    The Traditions Of The Pimas
    The Story of the Creation
    Juhwerta Mahkai's Song of Creation
    The Story of the Flood
    The Story Of Ah-ahn-he-eat-toe-pahk Mahkai
    The Story of Vandaih, The Man-Eagle
    The Story of the Turquoises and the Red Bird
    The Story of Wayhohm, Toehahvs and Tottai
    The Story of Hawawk
    The Story of Tawquahdahmawks and her Canal
    How Nooee Killed Ee-Ee-Toy
    Ee-Ee-Toy's Resurrection and Speech to Juhwerta Mahkai
    The Story Of Ee-ee-toy's Army
    The Destruction of the Vahahkkees
    The Story of Sohahnee Mahkai and Kawkoinpuh
    The Story Of Pahtahnkum
    The Song of Koelhahah About Her Son
    The Story of the Gambler's War
    The Story Of Nahvahchoo
    The Story of Corn and Tobacco
    The Story of the Children of Cloud
    The Story of Tcheunassat Seeven
    The Legend of Blackwater
    This is a must have collection for any American Indian religion and myth (mythology) history buff!
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