Lily H. Tuzroyluke
Goodreads Author
Born
in The United States
Member Since
July 2022
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Sivulliq: Ancestor
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Kaya
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Kaya
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* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.
Lily’s Recent Updates
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"I read this book as part of a readers group on Instagram (Indigenous Reading Circle) and I enjoyed it so much.
It begins with a guy punch of a scene, where we find the heroine caring for her family members who are dying of smallpox. Their Alaskan com" Read more of this review » |
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“In ancient times, when the world was cold, prosperous, and flourishing, it was a birthing place for our people. Newly married couples traveled to the cove, spending their first days as husband and wife. It is where love began.”
― Sivulliq: Ancestor
― Sivulliq: Ancestor
“My children tell stories of the ancient world, the old world. They search for Little People on the tundra, little beings not taller than a human hand. They tell stories of strong men who stayed underwater for days. The strong men cupped their hands against the ocean floor, breathing with pockets of air made by their cupped hands. My children try to forget death by telling these old stories. They’ve carried dead bodies to the graveyard with their own youthful hands.”
― Sivulliq: Ancestor
― Sivulliq: Ancestor
“In ancient times, at this shallow cove, the Koyukon attacked our people. The women fought alongside the men, running half-naked from their homes to show their courage. The Elders took the children into their umiaqs, fleeing to the sea. The Elders shielded the children’s eyes but could not shield their ears, and land went silent. The Elders and children buried the Inupiaq and Koyukon people side-by-side on the stilts of the whalebone, then they journeyed north to begin again.”
― Sivulliq: Ancestor
― Sivulliq: Ancestor
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“The healers drained our old blood in the arms or back of the knee. They tattooed ancient symbols on our bodies, especially children. Tattoos protect our spirits.”
― Sivulliq: Ancestor
― Sivulliq: Ancestor
“Instead, I think of my husband hunting in the foothills surrounded by fog, walking on tawny rocks and smoky green lichen, like we did in our early days of marriage when we wandered in the country on our dog sled, unrushed, unhurried, filled, and content.”
― Sivulliq: Ancestor
― Sivulliq: Ancestor
“In ancient times, at this shallow cove, the Koyukon attacked our people. The women fought alongside the men, running half-naked from their homes to show their courage. The Elders took the children into their umiaqs, fleeing to the sea. The Elders shielded the children’s eyes but could not shield their ears, and land went silent. The Elders and children buried the Inupiaq and Koyukon people side-by-side on the stilts of the whalebone, then they journeyed north to begin again.”
― Sivulliq: Ancestor
― Sivulliq: Ancestor
“In ancient times, when the world was cold, prosperous, and flourishing, it was a birthing place for our people. Newly married couples traveled to the cove, spending their first days as husband and wife. It is where love began.”
― Sivulliq: Ancestor
― Sivulliq: Ancestor
“This is how our people face death. We walk to the tundra, underneath the sky, and we face death by ourselves. Even the Elders, old, feeble, and minds like children, somehow, they know when the time is near. I suppose I’ll know when it is time.”
― Sivulliq: Ancestor
― Sivulliq: Ancestor
























