
A story drawn from Haida Indian folklore in which a boy falls from his canoe into a world of eighteen-foot tall humanlike creatures who welcome him and eventually return him to his village.
year: 1999, 1995, 2001
call number/section: 398.26, 398.2, 1000, 398.24, 398.23
subjects: indians of north america, northwest, pacific, juvenile fiction, fiction, killer whales, whales, native americans, pacific northwest, haida indians, folklore, folklore, northwest, pacific, killer whale, legends
Editions

Lewis, Paul Owen
Gareth Stevens (1999)
Thrown from his canoe during an ocean storm, a young Native American boy is washed ashore under a strange sky near a village inhabited by very large people who make him very welcome.
Schools: 5

Lewis, Paul Owen
Beyond Words Pub. (1995)
A story drawn from Haida Indian folklore in which a boy falls from his canoe into a world of eighteen-foot tall humanlike creatures who welcome him and eventually return him to his village.
Schools: 10

Lewis, Paul Owen
Tricycle Press (2001)
Thrown from his canoe during an ocean storm, a young Native American boy is washed ashore under a strange sky near a village inhabited by very large people who make him very welcome.
Schools: 1

Lewis, Paul Owen
Thrown from his canoe during an ocean storm, a young Native American boy is washed ashore under a strange sky near a village inhabited by very large people who make him very welcome.
Schools: 13