|

137 pages
$8.95 (paper)
ISBN 0-932511-36-8
Reviews
Read an Excerpt
Purchase
About the Author
Home
|
Trigger Dance
In Trigger Dance, her first
collection of stories, Diane Glancy takes us to uneasy places where
both the environment and the characters are at risk, where even the
animals grieve. Sometimes the author's voice, sometimes the voices
of the characters, tell us about their migrations, symbolic or
literal. Diane Glancy's characters walk in two worlds and try to
build a middle ground between white and native cultures. They are
the offspring of those who survived the Trail of Tears. Some of the
young men dance at powwows in tune with the dead. Filo and Parnetta
buy a fridge at the Hardware Store on Muskogee Street, in Tahleqah,
Oklahoma. Farther west, near Chickasha, Keyo can't read, while
Joseph Sink, an Indian hermit, learns a word a day. Anna America
remembers her shortcomings as a mother and her hard life as she
waits in the Northeastern Cherokee County Shelter for her wings to
unfold so she can leave this earth. In the title story, Roan mourns
the fact that human beings have the power to destroy the earth. He's
astonished that creation and cremation could be so closely linked.
Even his father, when he feels death approach, demands to be
cremated because "it's autumn in outer space." Roan's final vision
in the sweat lodge is of the air red as leaves. He admonishes his
people to be strong and responsible, to acknowledge that life is a
sizeable endeavor. it.
1990 Winner of the Mildren P. Nilon Award for Minority Fiction
|