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Thursday, February 23, 2017

Thirteen Moons on Turtle’s Back: A Native American Year of Moons, by Joseph Bruchac and Jonathan London, illustrated by Thomas Locker -- Day 35




Thirteen Moons on Turtle’s Back: A Native American Year of Moons opens with a sketch of the patchwork of scales on Old Turtle’s back. Grandfather explains: “There are always thirteen on Old Turtle’s back and there are always thirteen moons in each year. Many people do not know this. They do not know, as we Abenaki know, that each moon has its own name and every moon has its own stories.” For readers not familiar with Native American beliefs and legends, this book presents the opportunity for a wonderful stretch of understanding, bringing a year of seasons into a beautiful, palpable, evocative fabric of the natural world. Scholar and storyteller Joseph Bruchac and poet Jonathan London explain in an accompanying note that Native American nations may use several names for the same moon “because so many things happen in the natural world at that time.” Choosing just one moon from each of thirteen tribal nations provides a moving glimpse of the ways one can observe the world. Readers are invited by the expressive poems and artist Thomas Locker’s striking landscapes to contemplate the Northern Cheyenne's “Moon of the Popping Trees” and a dozen others. The implied value of connecting with and respecting the rhythms of the natural world presents an important challenge to a society too prone to overlooking deep and enduring environmental concerns. Ages 4 up.


Related resources may be found at: TeachingBooks.net