How Rabbit Tricked Otter And Other Cherokee Animal Stories (Cass, Album). HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. none.
A2. How Rabbit Tricked Otter. A3. How Deer Won His Antlers. A4. Why Deer's Teeth Are Blunt. A5. Why Possum's Tail Is Bare. How Turtle's Back Was Cracked.
In this collection of Cherokee tales, storyteller Gayle Ross and artist Murv Jacob, with a foreword by Chief Wilma Mankiller of the Cherokee Nation, bring together. This collection of 15 Cherokee tales introduces the trickster-hero Rabbit, the most important character portrayed in the animal stories of the Cherokee culture. ISBN13:9780930407605. Release Date:October 2003.
Gayle Ross is a published author of children's books and young adult books.
How Rabbit Tricked Otter and Other Cherokee Trickster Stories. How Rabbit Lost his Tail. How Medicine Came to the People: a Tale of the Ancient Cherokees. The Great Ball Game of the Birds and Animals, winner of the 2003 Oklahoma book awards. Four Ancestors: Stories, Songs, and Poems from Native North America. How Turtle‘s Back Was Cracked. Boy Who Lived with the Bears and Other Iroquois Stories. Rabbit and the Bears. Dog People: Native Dog Stories. Turtle Meat and Other Stories. Flying with the Eagle, Racing the Great Bear.
The Tale of Peter Rabbit is a British children's book written and illustrated by Beatrix Potter that follows mischievous and disobedient young Peter Rabbit as he is chased about the garden of Mr. McGregor. He escapes and returns home to his mother, who puts him to bed after dosing him with tea. The tale was written for five-year-old Noel Moore, son of Potter's former governess Annie Carter Moore, in 1893
Gayle Ross, Murv Jacob (Illustrator). Want to Read savin. ant to Read.
In Cherokee and other First Nations traditions of what is currently being called the Southeastern United States, our trickster figure is Tsis’du (Rabbit). How Rabbit Tricked Otter and other Cherokee trick-ster stories. New York: Harper Collins. Schutzman, Mady & Jan Cohen-Cruz.
Gayle (アリゲッティ, Arigetthī?) is a normal alligator villager in the Animal Crossing series. Her name relates to the sounding of the word alligator, her species. Her catchphrase refers to the fact that alligators like to frequently snap and eat things. Gayle is a pink and white alligator, with darker pink above her snout that forms a heart. Her snout is mostly white. She has a dark pink belly, and the tips of her arms and legs are either pink or white.