Reading Notes: Native American Heroes Part B

Dreamcatcher Task 
Continuing this week's chapter of Native American stories, I read the second part of the Heroes option. I had found the use of animals and non-specific creatures as characters so unique in the past section, though also characteristically folk, that I was pleased to see it continued with part B. These stories have characters that are so simplified that it allows the reader to focus entirely on the story itself. From Son-In-Law to Thrown-behind-the-curtain, the names of the characters provide just enough information to read the narrative, while not distracting form the story. As the latter navigated a series of stories that seemed to follow a single timeline, we don't garner TOO much information about Thrown himself. Instead we see his interactions with other players that are shed in a similar light. I think tomorrow I will take an attempt at writing in this style, specifically in the narrative of the Son-In-Law tasks. Wemicus' challenges seem very full of culture and continued narration, while still allowing for an episodic-like narrative.

Story: Heroes: The Son-in-Law Tests. From F. G. Speck. Link.
Image: Link

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