Alice Too: A Code Talker's Guide to Indian Time

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Bol Native American code talkers from tribes like the Navajo and Choctawserved in both World War I and World War II, using their unwritten triballanguages to send encrypted battlefield messages. This novel tells thestory of a family of code talkers in Indian Time. It is a sequel to authorStephen WinterHawk's novel Alice, in which the secret word is Miinawa.Can you crack open this code when colonists, would-be conquerors, andNazis alike have failed-even if you know that this word means "again,there is more"?WinterHawk writes to further Truth and Reconciliation for the Anishinabepeople. To do this he uses his personal experiences in Dreamtime. Thisnovel began with his dreams, and thus he does not ask the reader toliterally believe what he wrote. This can be viewed as a work of fiction, anovel similar to the stories that his ancestors told around their campfires.Now he asks you to suspend disbelief and simply accept that our people'sstories are as real as any of the scriptures written about sacred men whowalked on water and healed people. All he asks is that you might believethat his people have accepted the stories of your people, and now theyare saying Miinawa, an Ojibwe word-there is more.

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Native American code talkers from tribes like the Navajo and Choctawserved in both World War I and World War II, using their unwritten triballanguages to send encrypted battlefield messages. This novel tells thestory of a family of code talkers in Indian Time. It is a sequel to authorStephen WinterHawk's novel Alice, in which the secret word is Miinawa.Can you crack open this code when colonists, would-be conquerors, andNazis alike have failed-even if you know that this word means "again,there is more"?WinterHawk writes to further Truth and Reconciliation for the Anishinabepeople. To do this he uses his personal experiences in Dreamtime. Thisnovel began with his dreams, and thus he does not ask the reader toliterally believe what he wrote. This can be viewed as a work of fiction, anovel similar to the stories that his ancestors told around their campfires.Now he asks you to suspend disbelief and simply accept that our people'sstories are as real as any of the scriptures written about sacred men whowalked on water and healed people. All he asks is that you might believethat his people have accepted the stories of your people, and now theyare saying Miinawa, an Ojibwe word-there is more.


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Merk iUniverse.com
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  • 9781663277237
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