'The World Within' gathers twenty of the freshest, funniest, and most intriguing interviews in the history of the award-winning literary journal Tin House.
Offers eleven stories about Native Americans who, like all Americans, find themselves at personal and cultural crossroads, faced with heartrending, tragic, sometimes wondrous moments of being that test their loyalties, their capacities, and their notions of who they are and whom they love.
As he's about to commit a massive act of violence, he finds himself shot back through time to resurface in the body of an FBI agent during the civil rights era, where he sees why 'Hell is Red River, Idaho, in the 1970s'. This book seeks an understanding of why human beings hate.
Weaves characters, themes and language in 22 linked stories that evoke the complex density of life in and around the Spokane Indian Reservation. The author is one of Granta's 20 Best Young American Writers.
A collection of stories about love - between parents and children; white people and Indians; movie stars and ordinary people. The stories tell of Indians - upper and middle class, professional and white-collar workers, bureaucrats and poets.