LEADER 00000cam 2200361 i 4500 001 sky256438662 003 SKY 005 20150610115659.0 008 130717s2014 sdua 000 0 eng 010 2013027799 020 9780985290528 (alk. paper) 020 0985290528 (alk. paper) 040 DLC|beng|erda|cDLC|dDLC|dSKYRV|dUtOrBLW 042 pcc 043 n-us-sd 082 00 978.004/975244|223 092 |fJ|a398.208|bMON 100 1 Montileaux, Donald F.,|d1948- 245 10 Tasunka :|ba Lakota horse legend /|ctold and illustrated by Donald F. Montileaux ; Lakota translation by Agnes Gay. 264 1 Pierre, SD :|bSouth Dakota State Historical Society Press, |c[2014] 300 1 volume (unnumbered pages) :|bcolor illustrations ;|c23 x 29 cm. 336 text|2rdacontent. 337 unmediated|2rdamedia. 338 volume|2rdacarrier. 520 The story itself is about how the Lakota people came to have horses... not in recent times, but long ago. A very long time ago. A young Lakota man sees them and spends time away from his village, taming and training them. He brings them to the village, where nobody has seen them before. They learn to use them to make life easier, but they also use them in aggressive actions on other tribes. That is an abuse of them as a gift of the Creator, so they are taken away. Of course, we know they come back... much later, when Europeans arrive. 546 Text in English and Lakota. 650 0 Lakota mythology|vJuvenile literature. 650 0 Creation|xMythology|vJuvenile literature. 650 0 Lakota Indians|vFolklore. 650 0 Lakota dialect language materials|xBilingual|vJuvenile literature. 655 0 Bilingual books.
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