Packet 9: Bonus 1

Refugees from an unspecified apocalypse try to introduce cannibalism to a community of these people in the 2018 novel Moon of the Crusted Snow. For 10 points each:
[10m] Name these peoples whose oral storytelling tradition relays the Seven Grandfather Teachings. Basil Johnston brought wider attention to these peoples’ stories, like those of the culture hero Nanabozho.
ANSWER: Anishinaabe [or Anishinaabeg; accept Ojibwe or Ojibwa or Chippewa; accept Potawatomi; accept Odawa or Ottawa] (Waubgeshig Rice wrote Moon of the Crusted Snow.)
[10h] This Ojibwe author drew on his removal from his family in the Sixties Scoop for novels like Keeper’n Me and Medicine Walk. A hockey player struggles with trauma from a residential school in this author’s novel Indian Horse.
ANSWER: Richard Wagamese
[10e] Drew Hayden Taylor modernized Nanabozho in a novel titled for “motorcycles and” this plant. Nanabozho is described as an “Anishinaabe Linnaeus” in a book by Robin Wall Kimmerer titled for “braiding” this plant.
ANSWER: sweetgrass [accept Motorcycles and Sweetgrass; accept Braiding Sweetgrass]
<Editors, World Literature> | R. Playoffs 9 (Editors 9)

HeardPPBE %M %H %
2412.0879%42%0%

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