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  • Walking the Choctaw Road

  • Stories from Red People Memory
  • Written by: Tim Tingle
  • Narrated by: Tim Tingle
  • Length: 3 hrs and 38 mins

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Walking the Choctaw Road

Written by: Tim Tingle
Narrated by: Tim Tingle
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Publisher's Summary

In Walking the Choctaw Road, Tim Tingle reaches far back into tribal memory to offer a deeply personal collection of stories woven from the supernatural, mythical, historical, and oral accounts of Choctaw people living today.

“Oklahoma” comes from the Choctaw word “Okla Homma,” meaning “Red People”. In this, his first collection of stories, acclaimed storyteller and folklorist Tim Tingle tells the stories of his people, the Choctaw People, the Okla Homma. For years Tim has collected the stories of the old folks, weaving those tales into his own stories, mixing traditional lore with stories from everyday life. Thus, Walking the Choctaw Road has a mixture of contemporary stories of Choctaw people living their lives right now, historical accounts passed down from generation to generation, and stories arising from beliefs and myths.

In one of the 11 stories, Tim tells how audiences are always wanting to hear stories about the Indian Wars, so he tells about his own Indian War, which he calls “Archie’s War”, the 20-year war between his father and himself, which ended in hard-won respect and love for them both. In another, he lets a five-year-old boy tell us a magical, tragic tale about “The Trail of Tears”, when the U.S. government forcibly removed the Choctaw people from their homeland to Oklahoma. And in another, a Choctaw preacher tells about his grandmother, a healing woman, who has a beyond-death relationship with her protector dog, Shob.

©2004 Tim Tingle (P)2004 Tim Tingle

What the critics say

" Walking the Choctaw Road will stay with you and lend you some of its strength. Delivered in Tim's quiet, down-home Indian voice, they're the sort of lesson stories that stick to you like a burr. Cross the river with these stories—they'll give you safe passage." (Joseph Bruchac, author of Tell Me a Tale)
" Walking the Choctaw Road is a delightfully presented, inherently entertaining and thoughtfully informative collection of original tales drawn from personal, mythical, and oral accounts." ( The Midwest Book Review)
"A true talespinner celebrates his heritage with 11 absorbing yarns drawn, recombined and retold from oral sources. Tales of shape-shifters and healing magic share space with stories about tragedy and miracles along the Trail of Tears and about prejudice, friendship, and incidents that illuminate traditional Choctaw values and cultural practices." ( Booklist)

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