Indian Trains

Indian Trains

by Erika T. Wurth
Indian Trains

Indian Trains

by Erika T. Wurth

Paperback

$11.95 
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Overview

Indian Trains is about small town Indians, about community and family, about thieves, prostitutes, train stealers, drug dealers, loners, jerks, dreaming alcoholics, and the ones who did everything but all of that. It is about an entirely new tribe: urban mixed-bloods of multiple tribes who are respectful of where their ancestors have come from but are increasingly going to Indian powwows, Indian bars, and Urban Native organizations for cultural fulfillment rather than only returning to reservations to find out who they are. They are about 70 percent of the Indian population—the truly unsung peoples of America.

"This is a funny, sad, and powerful book. Each poem is lovely and the cumulative effect is devastating."—Sherman Alexie

"The country between poetry and stories is where this story-singer comes from. Tales of polished obsidian. Full of night, fascinating, and frightful. Glistening and brilliant. Small enough to hold in the hand. Sharp enough to tear open the heart. I was left breathless."—Sandra Cisneros

"Indian Trains is a marvelous, intimate poetic journey. There are hardy native families here, the immediacy of survivors and traditionalists. The incomparable images arise from worried hearts, irony, the actual centers of cultural memory. Erika Wurth writes about a woman on a leather chair, 'a revolution in her heart,' as she waits for 'metaphors to change everything.' And they do in this brave, inspired selection of poems."—Gerald Vizenor, Almost Ashore


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780975348673
Publisher: West End Press
Publication date: 11/15/2007
Pages: 72
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.30(d)

About the Author

Erika T. Wurth is mixed blood (Apache, Chickasaw, Cherokee) and was born in Los Angeles. She grew up in Colorado between Idaho Springs and Evergreen, although she has lived different places off and on. Her work, both poetry and fiction, has appeared in Raven Chronicles, Fiction, Cedar Hill Review, AMCRJ, and SAIL. She teaches creative writing at Western Illinois University in Macomb. This is her first book.
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