Theodore C. Van Alst
Auteur van Never Whistle at Night: An Indigenous Dark Fiction Anthology
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Fotografie: Photo Source: https://native-voices.com/blog/theodore-c-van-alst-jr/
Werken van Theodore C. Van Alst
The Faster Redder Road: The Best UnAmerican Stories of Stephen Graham Jones (2015) — Redacteur — 7 exemplaren
Sacred Smokes 1 exemplaar
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Algemene kennis
- Geslacht
- male
- Land (voor op de kaart)
- USA
- Woonplaatsen
- Chicago, Illinois, USA
- Beroepen
- Professor and Chair of Indigenous Nations Studies
Director of the School of Gender Race and Nations - Korte biografie
- Theodore C. Van Alst, Jr. is Professor and Chair of Indigenous Nations Studies and Director of the School of Gender Race and Nations at Portland State University. His mosaic novel about sort of growing up in Chicago, Sacred Smokes, winner of the 2019 Tillie Olsen Award for Creative Writing, is now in its second printing. His next work, Sacred City, was published in fall 2021, also by the University of New Mexico Press, who released his edited volume The Faster Redder Road: The Best UnAmerican Stories of Stephen Graham Jones. He is the creative editor for Transmotion (a journal of postmodern Indigenous studies). His fiction and photography have been published in The Raven Chronicles, Red Earth Review, The Journal of Working-Class Studies, Unnerving Magazine, The Rumpus, Electric Literature, and Yellow Medicine Review, among others.
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- 6
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- 1
- Leden
- 482
- Populariteit
- #51,208
- Waardering
- 3.9
- Besprekingen
- 8
- ISBNs
- 12
1) Kushtuka, by Mathilda Zeller. Racist white guys slaughtered in a gore-fest by the mythological double of part-native Alaskan young woman… or by her? 3.0
2) White Hills, by Rebecca Roanhorse. To be part of elite white culture a woman will have to literally cut off part of her body that represents her part-Native ancestry… or does she use the knife for something else? 4.0
3) Navajos Don’t Wear Elk Teeth, by Conley Lyons. A queer native young man gets into an abusive relationship with a domineering young white man who ultimately wants to literally extract something from the native body. 2.5
4) Wingless, by Marcie Rendon. Violently abusive foster mother gets violence returned by one of her fosters. 2.0
5) Quantum, by Nick Medina. A young mother dotes on her infant who meets the threshold of blood quantum to be enrolled in her tribe while neglecting her child whose blood quantum falls short and thus cannot be a tribal member; as a result this child transforms into something non-human. 4.0
6) Hunger, by Phoenix Boudreau. Mythological evil spirit possesses racist white frat boy, and two native young women defeat it. 2.0
7) Tick Talk, by Cherie Dimaline. Alienated young man returns home to stay with his father, after whose death the young man finally goes out on a traditional hunt as the father wanted, young man gets bitten by a surreally growing tick. 3.5
8) The Ones Who Killed Us, by Brandon Hobson. Surreal fever dream of prose and story, the ghosts of Cherokee take their vengeance on the ghosts of soldiers in the lands of the Cherokee reservation in an ever repeating cycle of anger and despair. 5.0
9) Snakes Are Born in the Dark, by D.H. Trujillo. Racist white guy disrespects ancient Indian rock carvings on a hike, he and his girlfriend are tortured all night as they walk back. 1.0
10) Before I Go, by Norris Black. Woman hikes to the cliff her fiancé fell to his death from, camps, and is visited at night by his phantom… and by Mother Night. 3.0
11) Night in the Chrysalis, by Tiffany Morris. Woman moves into new house. It doesn’t want her there. 2.0
12) Behind Colin’s Eyes, by Shane Hawk. A boy and his father go hunting a large elk, and the elk’s spirit takes possession of his body, leaving him only able to observe, imprisoned behind his eyes. 4.0
13) Heart-Shaped Clock, by Kelli Jo Ford. A family drama about abuse, neglect, a burning desire for a sense of belonging, that erupts into violence. 5.0
14) Scariest. Story. Ever., by Richard van Camp. Wanting a scary story to tell for a contest, a young man visits an elder and gets half of a scary story followed by a didactic lesson on honoring the community and its stories. 3.0
15) Human Eaters, by Royce K. Young Wolf. Grandma tells kids about seeing spirits, which most people can’t anymore “after all these white people and other ones who are backward without culture arrived here”. 1.5
16) The Longest Street in the World, by Theodore G. Van Alst Jr. Somewhat Tarantino-influenced urban crime story involving a demon-like figure who assists the tribal community. 2.5
17) Dead Owls, by Mona Susan Power. Teenage Dakota girl is attacked through her dreams by the vengeful ghost of Custer’s widow, and is rescued by the ghost of her gmom’s Japanese-American love interest during WWII internment. “Sometimes it’s convenient being Native - we’ve got a pretty high tolerance for weirdness.” 3.0
18) The Prepper, by Morgan Talty. On an island reservation which previously was the tribe’s burial ground, a young man becomes convinced the dead are about to return as zombies, as his grandfather simultaneously hovers near death from cancer. 4.0
19) Uncle Robert Rides the Lightning, by Kate Hart. A man is killed and his ghost hunts for the biker who killed him, while his friend’s ghost searches for him. 2.5
20) Sundays, by David Heska Wanbli Weiden. Fifty years after being abused at an Indian boarding school as a child, a man angrily confronts the retired priest who assaulted him. 4.5
21) Eulogy for a Brother, Resurrected, by Carson Faust. After a woman’s brother is murdered, she and her medicine woman aunt reanimate him using mud and his ashes, with one eye on Christian mythos. 3.5
22) Night Moves, by Andrea L. Rogers. Werewolf tale set among American soldiers stationed in Germany. 2.0
23) Capgras, by Tommy Orange. In France to promote his new novel, a horrific buried memory starts to affect the author’s body and mind. 3.5
24) The Scientist’s Horror Story, by Darcie Little Badger. In a small group of scientists sharing horror stories, one woman’s story is about not winning a grant that would have helped a small native community, and asks if they have a future. 3.5
25) Collections, by Amber Blaeser-Wardzala. Native college student goes to party at house of her English professor and finds the professor has a collection of human heads on her walls, and wants to add to their diversity. 1.0
26) Limbs, by Waubgeshig Rice. Late 19th century Canada, a white businessman amputates and eats the toes of the native man he’d hired to show him around the woods; before he can continue, the woods come alive to kill him and drag his body into the earth. 1.5… (meer)