southwestern states

Type: 
Topical Term
Subfield: 
z
Alias: 
southwestern states

Unique animals of the Southwest

2005
Examines animals that are unique to the southwestern United States, including armadillos, coyotes, lizards, roadrunners, and others.

Here comes the storyteller

1996
Presents favorite Southwestern folktales of storyteller Joe Hayes, photographs of Hayes performing, and storytelling tips.

Zu?i Pueblo

2002
A color-illustrated look at the history, customs, and daily life of the Zu?i Pueblo Native American tribe. Includes a glossary and a further-reading list.

The dark wind

1982
A new assignment with the tribal police in the troubled Navajo/Hopi borderlands draws Jim Chee into a world of Hopi sorcery, Navajo witchcraft and smuggling.

Decorative art of the Southwestern Indians

1961
Contains a collection of nearly three hundred black-and-white illustrations of authentic Southwestern Indian decorations and drawings from the thirteenth-century art of the ancient Pueblos to the styles and geometric designs of the Apache, Pima, Zuni, Navajo, and other tribes of the region.

Southwestern Indian designs

1992
A collection of 250 black-and-white, reproducible illustrations based on the arts and crafts of the Indians of the American Southwest.

Montezuma's serpent and other true supernatural tales of the Southwest

1992
Collection of supernatural tales of the Southwest from eerie tales to spinetingling ghost stories.

Collections of Southwestern pottery

candlesticks to canteens, frogs to figurines
1998
Displays and describes twenty-five specialized collections of Southwestern pottery.

Tread lightly

venomous and poisonous animals of the southwest
2005
Presents an illustrated guide to the venomous and poisonous arthropods, amphibians, and reptiles of the Southwest United States, providing information on range and habitat, physical characteristics, life span, behavior, and venom.

Turtle dream

collected stories from the Hopi, Navajo, Pueblo, and Havasupai people
1989
A collection of stories from the Hopi, Navajo, Pueblo, and Havasupai, based on true events, and reflecting the customs and beliefs of the Native American people.

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