Showing posts with label Native American. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Native American. Show all posts

Monday, July 02, 2018

Girl Warrior by Carmen Peone


The story behind why I wrote Girl Warrior is unusual to be honest. I was looking to write a contemporary young adult novel after writing a handful of historical YA novels and was considering different plots.


One fall day I was subbing for P.E. at our local K-12 school. Students and I were in the library as the weight-lifting class was sparse that day and many of the students needed to complete class assignments.

One young man, sixteen to be exact, bound up the steps––Late! I knew that past summer he had jockeyed the World Famous Suicide Horse Race in Omak, WA and an idea swirled in my head. Why couldn’t a girl qualify and ride?

Women had qualified for this exciting Native American horse even in the past, albeit very few.

I eyed the boy, him thinking it was because he was tardy. He squirmed and after a bit started spewing excuses as to why. I laughed and shared my book idea and, yes, however mischievous it was and with a “what the heck” attitude––in a small reservation town where everyone knows or is related to everyone––I suggested he either get written up or give me an interview.

With enthusiasm, he chose the interview. 


Blurb:

Charnaye Toulou has her sights pinned on winning the World Famous Suicide horse race during the Omak Stampede. The purse will help ease a financial burden of her paraplegic father, worn out mother, and ill grandfather. But more than that, she wants the respect earned from becoming “King of the Hill.” This race has been a long time rite of passage for male Natives. Charnaye is up for the challenge to prove females too can be awarded a warrior status as times are changing. 
 
But when bully Hagan Hurst chokes her and causes her self-esteem to plummet, she hooks up with her Okanogan relatives and a horse that can take her the distance. Anonymous threatening letters find her and they all point to Hagan. Her father and mother become overly protective, but she meets a woman who has ran the race, jumpstarting her confidence. The day after Charnaye graduates from high school, she jumps in with cousin and trainer Craig Stuart and heads for her relative’s Omak ranch. And so do the letters.

Charnaye begins the rigorous training it takes to become “King of the Hill”, or in her case, “Queen”, and tries to figure out who is behind the threating letters. She combats fear and anxiety, fighting to fulfill this rite of passage.

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Excerpt:
We turn left, travel down Dewberry Avenue, and pass houses. Some are empty, some have elders waving at us from the shade of their porches. We make our way to the dirt lot. I dismount, walk through the gate, and head straight to the hill’s lip. A tribal park’s boat is in the water to the right as is a Jet Ski. They circle in the water like ravens spiraling down for a dead carcass.
A handful of men on horses standby in the river to the left. Spectators behind them wade in the water. Family and friends of the jockeys line the dike. I shift my weight and dirt rolls down the hill. A photographer points his lens up the hill from near the pine tree straight across. A hot sun beats down from an azure sky. Breathe. I wipe sweat from my brow, pray, and rub Rooster’s neck, thanking him for the journey he’s about to take me on. For a single moment I’m calm. Until another jockey comes to the edge. Ripples of fear from my toes work their way to my belly, swirl around, and lodge in my throat.
“Easy as a sunset mixed with Carlos Nakai’s flute music and caramel fudge ice cream,” Benton whispers, leaning in to my ear from behind. 
Shivers dance down my back. I rub my arms. I give him a small smile. 
Officials call for the next person. Since there is a first time horse who needs the support of a veteran, that jockey and horse, Benton and I, and Billy Beck file into a group. Tone will follow us by himself. There is no start gun, so we just line up like we did at Omak Lake and trust everything will be fair. I rein Rooster into a spot.
A jockey waiting for his turn spits at me, “You shouldn’t be here.”
Another agrees. And another. I circle Rooster and keep to myself. Benton watches from a few feet away.
Billy Beck tells them to shut their mouths or he’ll do it for them. “She’s earned her right to be here.”
I nod, a small smile forming on my mouth. He nods back. I scratch him off my list of potential offenders. My legs feel Rooster’s muscles contracting. He paws the ground. Other horses rear, side step, or dance in place while the jockey holds them back. Even though it’s not their turn, the horses seem to know the drill.
“I’ll be coming after you,” one guy says. “Eventually.”
The others laugh and give me cat-calls. 
“If you can catch me,” I say, without looking at him. I talk to Rooster in a soothing tone, one hand on the rein, the other on a hunk of mane.

Bio:
Carmen Peone is an award-winning author who lives in Northeast Washington, on the Colville Confederated Indian Reservation, since 1988 with Joe, her tribal member husband. She had worked with the late tribal elder, Marguerite Ensminger, for three years learning the Arrow Lakes-Sinyekst- Language and various cultural traditions and legends. She enjoys her horses and competing in Mountain Trail Competitions. With a degree in psychology, the thought of writing never entered her mind, until she married her husband and they moved to the reservation after college.

Links to Social Media:
Website and blog: http://carmenpeone.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jcpeone/



Monday, October 30, 2017

Guest Post- Carmen Peone




Why I wrote Hannah’s Journey.
I moved to the Colville Reservation with my Native husband in 1988 and studied the Sinyekst (Sinixt) language with an elder. I fell in love with the people and customs of the tight-knit community. But couldn’t stop there. An idea for a story persisted in my head so I decided to write what came to be, Change of Heart.
I wrote for our 4 sons, my future grandchildren, and my nieces and nephews. Because I worked in the school system at that time, it seemed natural to create teen main characters. On the reservation the extended family is of major importance when raising children so I included the love and protection of the extended family and continue to do so in my books and short stories.
The adage is true: It takes a village to raise a child, which is the heartbeat of a reservation. 
Several years ago, I wrote Heart of Passion, Book 3 in a trilogy about Spupaleena, a young Native American girl, coming of age and racing horses in the mid-1800s, a time when girls would not think of behaving in such a manner.  Hannah Gardner was five then, a young girl in love with her adopted Aunt Spupaleena and having a strong desire to emulate the young woman. In Hannah’s Journey, Hannah is sixteen and has to decide if her future is to include horses, racing, a husband, or returning home to enjoy her young life within the strength and protection of the family unit.

Hannah’s Journey
In the mountains of northeast Washington, sixteen-year-old Hannah Gardner fights for her childhood dream––to race horses with her adopted Indian Aunt Spupaleena. Her mother fears Hannah will get hurt. Frustrated with her daughter’s rebellious spirit, she threatens to send her away to Montana to live with an aunt Hannah’s never met.

To escape this perceived punishment, Hannah runs away to the Sinyekst village along the Columbia River to train with Spupaleena. After Hannah’s first race, an Indian boy pulls her off her horse and spews threats. When Running Elk comes to her rescue, Hannah plans their life together and possible marriage. Will this be the pathway to her freedom?

Excerpt

Falling Rain hugged me and boosted me up on my leggy mare, Moonie.
I nodded at her. “Reckon it’s time to give these boys a respectable lickin’ they’ll never forget.”
“Be careful.” She stepped back.
I spun my horse around and found my way to the other racers.  


Buy Links:
Barns and Noble


Carmen Peone lives on the Colville Confederated Indian Reservation with her Native husband, Joe.  She had worked with elder, Marguerite Ensminger, for three years learning the Arrow Lakes-Sinyekst- Language and various cultural traditions and legends. With a degree in psychology, the thought of writing never entered her mind, until she married her husband and they moved to the reservation after college. She came to love the people and their heritage and wanted to create a legacy for her family.

Social Media
Website and blog: http://carmenpeone.com/
Pinterest:
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jcpeone/



Thursday, October 20, 2016

Werecoyote by Paty Jager



 I take a 2 mile walk every morning. My min-pin/Chihuahua, Tink, usually goes with me. We live in the high desert and have lots of wildlife. Every day we see 1-5 coyotes out in the alfalfa fields catching rodents. Which we like. 

However, the coyotes come down out of the hills to catch the rodents and their path crosses my walking path. Therefore, I am extremely alert to any movement in the tall sagebrush that could be a coyote. My little Tink would be two bites and gone.

One day as we walked the more invigorating path, I heard yipping ahead of us. I called to Tink to get closer and we ended up turning around sooner than normal because it sounded like the coyote was chasing something right toward us. I started walking faster and the sound appeared up above us on the rock cliff. I looked up and there was a coyote staring at us and yipping. I don’t know if it caught Tink’s scent or what. I picked Tink up and kept walking. The coyote followed us along the ridge yipping and finally stopped, turned, and left.

Another day I had both Tink and my hubby’s dog with me. We were walking the other trail. The two dogs were playing a good twenty to thirty feet ahead of me. I saw movement to my right and spotted two deer running up the side of the ridge. Two their left was a large coyote staring down at the two dogs. I called them closer and hurried on by that area. 

This morning, it was cold and I left Tink at the house. She doesn’t like the cold. I was trudging along over the more rugged trail and I spotted the biggest coyote I’ve ever seen in the field just beyond our fence line. I took a photo but it’s fuzzy from trying to zoom in.  He didn’t see me at first. He wandered along, then disappeared. He either noticed the doe and fawn running up the hill or caught my scent. As I stood there trying to get a glimpse of him again, he stood on his hind legs to look over the four to five foot sage brush between us and I was looking at a werecoyote.  His head with perked ears, neck and shoulders were all I could see but as he stood on his hind legs he looked like a man standing there with the head/features of a coyote.

It was eerie and probably came to my mind so quickly because I’ve been judging paranormal books for a contest and they’ve had werewolves in them. 

As quickly as the werecoyote thought emerged in my mind I clicked over to Native American myths and thought how it also looked like images I’ve seen of American Indians wearing buffalo heads and wolf heads during dances and ceremonies. 

A Nez Perce Legend 

How Coyote Created People
One day, long before there were any people on the Earth, a monster came down from the North. He was a huge monster and he ate everything in sight. He ate all the little animals, the chipmunks and the raccoons and the mice, and all the big animals. He ate the deer and the elk and even the mountain lion.

Coyote couldn't find any of his friends anymore and this made him very mad. He decided the time had come to stop the monster.

Coyote went across the Snake River and tied himself to the highest peak in the Wallowa Mountains. Then he called out to the monster on the other side of the river. He challenged the monster to try and eat him.

The monster charged across the river and up into the mountains. He tried as hard as he could to suck 
Coyote off the mountain with his breath but it was no use. Coyote's rope was too strong.

This frightened the monster. He decided to make friends with Coyote and he invited coyote to come and stay with him for a while.

One day Coyote told the monster he would like to see all of the animals in the monster's belly. The monster agreed and let Coyote go in.

When he went inside, Coyote saw that all the animals were safe. He told them to get ready to escape and set about his work. With his fire starter he built a huge fire in the monster's stomach. Then he took his knife and cut the monster's heart down. The monster died a great death and all the animals escaped. Coyote was the last one out.

Coyote said that in honor of the event he was going to create a new animal, a human being. Coyote cut the monster up in pieces and flung the pieces to the four winds. Where each piece landed, some in the North, some to the South, others to the East and West, in valleys and canyons and along the rivers, a tribe was born. It was in this way that all the tribes came to be.

When he was finished, Coyote's friend, Fox said that no tribe had been created on the spot where they stood. Coyote was sorry he had no more parts, but then he had an idea. He washed the blood from his hands with water and sprinkled the drops on the ground.

Coyote said, "Here on this ground I make the Nez Perce. They will be few in number, but they will be strong and pure." And this is how the human beings came to be.

Top Photo: © Can Stock Photo Inc. / Pixelia29