""Poetry at its most satirical and courageous. A tremendous book."-Seamus Heaney"Few voices in American literature are so honest and daring."-Mark Strand"One of our most brilliant
poets."-Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz"I feel the primal grain and temper of the genuine here."-William Heyen"A lament, a protest, an inextinguishable song."-Sherod Santos"Among the best and most
original poets in America."-Stanley Kunitz"Nothing short of splendid."-Robert Nazarene"The kind of energy found in the poems of William Carlos Williams and Gary Snyder."-Joseph BruchacThese
poems tell harsh truths of hopelessness and genocide. The confusion of children whose religion is forbidden; the ironic poverty of a lottery winner; an alternate American history in which
Columbus turns and sails away-in deceptively simple language, we hear the protest of survivors. "’Indian’ is not a derogatory word. It’s what we call ourselves."AFTER A SERMON AT THE CHURCH OF
INFINITE CONFUSIONAt ten, Mary Caught-in-Between came home from sunday school, told every animal and bird and fish they couldn’t talk anymore, told her drum it couldn’t sing anymore, told her
feet they couldn’t dance anymore, told her words they weren’t words anymore, told Raven and Coyote they weren’t gods anymore, said god was a starving white man with long hair and blue eyes and
a beard who no one loved enough to save when they nailed him to a totem pole. John Smelcer has written over forty books of poetry and prose. He is a member of the Alaskan Ahtna tribe"--