Joseph Bruchac
Joseph Bruchac is an American writer, poet, and storyteller born in 1942 who has published over 120 books, primarily focusing on Indigenous peoples of the Americas with particular emphasis on northeastern Native American lives and folklore. A citizen and member of the Elders Council of the Nulhegan Abenaki Nation, he co-founded the Greenfield Review Press to publish works by marginalized writers and has received numerous accolades including an American Book Award for his anthology Breaking Silence.
poetry
fiction
novels
short stories
folklore
children's literature
The Great Ball Game: A Muskogee Story
Lay-ups and Long Shots: An Anthology of Short Stories
Code Talker: A Novel About the Navajo Marines of World War Two
Native American Gardening: Stories, Projects, and Recipes for Families
Raccoon's Last Race
The Dark Pond
The Way (Darby Creek Exceptional Titles)
Dragon Castle
Children of the Longhouse
Walking Two Worlds
Children of the Longhouse
Turtle's Race with Beaver
The Girl Who Married the Moon : Tales from Native North America
Buffalo Song
Guys Read: Choke: A Short Story from Guys Read: The Sports Pages
The Boy Who Lived With the Bears: And Other Iroquois Stories
Jim Thorpe, Original All-American
Night Wings
Code Talker, A Novel About the Navajo Marines of World War Two
The Waters Between: A Novel of the Dawn Land (Hardscrabble Books)
My Father Is Taller than a Tree
The First Strawberries
Wabi
How Chipmunk Got His Stripes