Description: This is a listing for 1 lot of 10 copies of KAIBETO MEMORIES: a trader's daughter remembers growing up on the Navajo Reservation at Kaibeto Trading Post in remote northern Arizona, 1936-1960. By Elizabeth Anne Jones Dewveall. With her parents our author witnessed first-hand a special chapter in U.S.-Native history as they traded with a rural population of Native Americans. Theirs was an isolated operation that was open dawn to dusk nearly every day. Their trading post provided canned meats and fruits, tobacco, ammunition, and cloth for dress-making-- and received in exchange sheep hides, wool, artfully-woven rugs, and silver-and-turquoise jewelry. Transactions were in pawn, credit, or cash. There was no other store. The Natives adapted their culture as the traders adapted theirs. Elizabeth Anne makes points, often incidentally, that understanding and cooperation are the ways to meet mutual needs, with a byproduct being acceptance of differences that begets mutual respect. For instance, trader parents Ralph and Julia Jones interacted compatibly with their patrons and occasional employees in ways that induced a Native couple to name their children Ralph and Julia: "Little Ralph" and "Little Julia". And again, Elizabeth Anne tells of "watermelon day" when a truckload of the sweet and juicy fruit arrived from the nearby Hopi Reservation, and all present sliced and slurped together: "We may have been a group divided by language and culture, but on watermelon day we were supremely united by taste buds and flavor. " The Kaibeto Memories were remembered long after their occurrence, for during recent COVID downtime Elizabeth Anne recorded her experiences for family and friends. After urging that her stories were an important aspect of U.S., Native, and Southwest history and anthropology, she allowed them to be published for others. Now abandoned, the Kaibeto Trading Post was situated near a life-giving spring in a region where roads were more like paths in the sand and over rocky ridges, snow-covered in winter and subject to flash floods any time. Here is where author Elizabeth Anne spent her childhood, with more Native Americans as playmates than those of her own race and where she learned to be a young trader. She chronicles incidents with rattlesnakes, favorite dogs, fishing in a now-forgotten desert lake, exploring nearby canyons alone, visits from relatives to her "digs"--always in the context of an only child in close contact with involved parents--and then away to distant schools, and finally her own marriage and operation of the post as her own family comes to be. To Elizabeth Anne, some of her stories must be told. Here is another: "We had a picnic where some huge cottonwood trees provided luxuriant shade. I was at the stage of pregnancy where I didn't care if I had a boy or a girl, I just wanted "it" out... I was seated on the ground, leaning against a tree trunk and thinking I was not going to be able to get up until my husband showed up to help. I dozed off and then heard footsteps. When I opened my eyes, it was not Bob who stood there but a little Hopi man named Mark Quarshero. In his right hand he held a beautifully painted gourd rattle which he began shaking over my bulging middle. It didn't take long for him to tell me there was a little girl in there. He gave me the rattle for her protection, then walked away as if he had done the most normal thing in the world. SueAnne still has the rattle. I still have the sweet memory." [A photo of this rattle is in the book.] Ships to US via media mail only. Allow 10 days for delivery; if rush, inquire. 120 pages, 6 x 9, illustrated. ISBN 978-0-89646-103-1. paperbound. Publisher's list price is $14.95 for 1 book. See special price for this lot of 10 books. Also available in cloth and electronic editions; see separate listings on eBay. --vistabooksman
Price: 89.75 USD
Location: Silverthorne, Colorado
End Time: 2025-02-03T23:25:02.000Z
Shipping Cost: 8.99 USD
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Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 30 Days
Refund will be given as: Money back or replacement (buyer's choice)
Signed By: Not signed
Book Title: Kaibeto Memories: a trader's daughter remembers growing up on the
Book Series: VistaBooks history reprints
Original Language: English
Item Length: 6 in
Vintage: No
Personalize: No
Format: Trade Paperback
Language: English
Item Height: 9 in
Personalized: No
Features: Illustrated
Topic: Native Americans
Item Width: 0.5 in
Signed: No
Ex Libris: No
Narrative Type: Nonfiction
Publisher: VistaBooks
Intended Audience: Young Adults, Adults
Inscribed: No
Edition: First Edition
Publication Year: 2023
Type: Historical stories
Illustrator: author's historical photographs
Era: 1936-1960
Author: Elizabeth Anne Jones Dewveall
Genre: History
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Item Weight: 12
Number of Pages: 120