Product Description Mabel McKay's baskets cannot be separated from her Dreams, for it is through them she learned to weave and heal. In this wise book, the author of Grand Avenue connects stories from Mabel's life with an account of how he tried, and she resisted, telling the story straight--the white people's way.
Customer Reviews:
interesting history June 5, 2008 I read this for my book club. It was pretty good, though let's be honest... i have a very low interest in native american culture. It was pretty cool to learn about the transition from back then to modern times, and how the native american indian culture transformed to adapt. Especially here in the northern california area. Worthwhile read with amazing information.
Quyanna Mabel March 28, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Quyanna Mabel, for your story. You found someone to share your life, and I so appreciate sitting there late at night drinking hot tea, after my husband and daughter are asleep, to spend some time with you.
I will reread the book to feel closer to my elders and to feel closer to you. I am so thankful. What a blessing!
A fascinating and inspiring book January 1, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Mabel McKay, Weaving the Dream is a profound, poetic, and magical journey. I have read it aloud a number of times to savor its depths. If you have any desire to know Native Californians as human beings rather than museum pieces, you may want to start here. The book, which is steeped in the oral tradition inspired me to write the following poem which was published some years back through U.C. Davis.
Plumage of a Pomo basket Flame of feathers blue and black Strung with glistening abalone Rimmed with ivory disks of shell.
Read her book slowly or not at all. She believed that stories should be heard many times To sink in and merge with the heart of the hearer To sink like pebbles in the soul of the listener To grow like seeds in the earth of our minds.
Read her book slowly or not at all. Better still, read it aloud. Taste each word and savor the flavor Of willow and redbud and sedge.
"I never knew nothing but the spirit," she said. "Only the spirit trained me. I only follow my Dream. That's how I learn."
Plumage of a Pomo basket Flame of feathers blue and black Strung with glistening abalone Rimmed with ivory disks of shell.
Read her book slowly or not at all. She believed that stories should be heard many times To sink in and merge with the heart of the hearer To sink like pebbles in the soul of the listener To grow like seeds in the earth of our minds.
Read her book slowly or not at all. Better still, read it aloud. Taste each word and savor the flavor Of willow and redbud and sedge.
"I never knew nothing but the spirit," she said. "Only the spirit trained me. I only follow my Dream. That's how I learn."
continues to resonate over time August 17, 2005 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
This is just a wonderful piece of writing, one which keeps resonating with me, even several years after first reading it. This book should have more readers, and seeing so few reviews for it, I want to argue for it as a must read on anybody's list. We all know books or speakers, writers and lecturers who could take any subject and make it worthwhile, just to spend time in their company. Greg Sarris is one of those magical presences we can be lucky enough to get to know through the medium of the page. Saying this is not intended to undercut the amazing person of Mabel Mckay, by the way. The way the past present and future weave in and out of this book, her stories, Greg's life, the future of land use in California... all of this is here, an enticing mix of POV's, passed around like a sacred pipe.
A great read....
Great book December 9, 1998 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
I read this book for an anthropology class that i am taking, and i found it to be very good. We get a first hand account of what role Mable McKay played for the Pomo Indians as a medicine women and as a basket weaver. Everything that she did was for a purpose, even though at times she had to deal with not everyone accepting her. I would recommend this book for anyone interested in Native American ways of life
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