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The Chichi Hoohoo Bogeyman, New Edition
Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve
With a new introduction by the author
Drawings by Nadema Agard
paperback
2008. 64 pp.
978-0-8032-1745-4
$9.95
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Strange events and an undercurrent of tension permeate
The Chichi Hoohoo Bogeyman
. While secretly exploring an old fort on the South Dakota prairie, three Indian girls encounter a stranger. One of the girls playfully names him the chichi hoohoo bogeyman, after the Sioux, Hopi, and white figures used to discipline children. On a forbidden outing the girls again encounter the stranger, who starts to chase them as they run away in fear. Swearing themselves to secrecy, they become further unsettled when they return home and hear the adults talk of recent unexplained occurrences at home, perhaps driven by spirits. The most rebellious of the girls disappears before the mystery of the chichi hoohoo bogeyman comes to light.
Booklist
praised the “fresh, in-tune portrayal of the girls and their families” and recommended the book for readers in grades 3 to 5. This Bison Books edition includes a new introduction by the author.
Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve is a well-known Lakota writer and a recipient of the 2000 National Humanities Medal. She is the author of
Lana’s Lakota Moons
(Nebraska 2007),
Grandpa Was a Cowboy
and an Indian and Other Stories
(available in a Bison Books edition), and many other children’s books. Her memoir
Completing the Circle
(Nebraska 1995) won the North American Indian Prose Award.
Nadema Agard is a Lakota-Cherokee-Powhatan artist, curator, educator, museum professional, and consultant in repatriation and multicultural–Native American arts and cultures as well as the director of Red Earth Studio Consulting and Productions.
“A deftly written portrayal of the modern Native American family, enhanced with illustrations from Nadema Agard.”—
Midwest Book Review
“In
The Chichi Hoohoo Bogeyman
, Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve reveals the universality and the uniqueness of this imaginary figure used for generations by parents to discipline their children. The Sioux (chichi) and Hopi (boohoo) and Caucasian (bogeyman) cultures combine in this tale of three culturally mixed cousins in a 5-chapter, 63-page mystery novel recommended for grades 3–5.”—Sonja Davis,
Big Muddy: A Journal of the Mississippi River Valley
Also of Interest
Lana's Lakota Moons
Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve
Adventures in the West
Susanne George Bloomfield
My Indian Boyhood, New Edition
Luther Standing Bear
Trickster and the Troll
Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve