Sketchbook. Elizabeth LaPensee, Ph.D., and Michael Sheahshe -- Future world / Jennifer Storm, illustrated by Kyle Charles -- Slave Killer / Jon Proudstar, illustrated by David Cutler -- Sisters / Jeffrey Veregge -- H20 / Gerard and Peta-Gay Roberts, illustrated by Stephen Gladue -- Emmie and the starweb / Lee Francis IV, illustrated by Dale Ray Deforest -- They come for the water / Elizabeth LaPensee, Ph.D., illustrated by Weshoyot Alvitre -- In our blood / Jay Odjick, illustrated by David Cutler -- Litmus flowers / Darcie Little Badger, illustrated by Jerry Thistle -- Waterward / Sean and Rachel Qitsualik-Tinsley, illustrated by Sadekaronhes Esquivel -- Sky people / Richard Van Camp, illustrated by Kyle Charles -- Xenesi: The Traveler / Michael Sheyahshe, illustrated by Roy Boney Jr. -- Billow / David Alexander Robertson, illustrated by Maria Wolf Lopez -- Digital Bird and the Bitter Spirit / Alina Pete -- Afterword / Elizabeth LaPensee, Ph.D., and Michael Sheahshe -- Biographies -- Sketchbook.
Summary:
"Explore realities unseen and unknown in this exciting follow-up to the award-winning indigenous comics collection! In Indigenous storytelling, the concept of Indigenous Futurisms - a term coined by Anishinaabe scholar Grace L. Dillon - tells of the past, present, and future as being a nonlinear reality. Using the knowledge of the ancestors, it is possible to experience history, be in the present, and witness the future all at once. The stories in Moonshot Volume 3 illustrate the Indigenous Futurisms concept in striking, intriguing, dramatic, and dynamic ways. Space and time travel, parallel dimensions, advanced technology, post-apocalyptic settings, robots, aliens, and more. It's all here! But this is not fantasy, and time is not a straight line with a definitive beginning, middle, and end..."-- cover page 4.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.