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Salmon and His People: Fish & Fishing in Nez Perce Culture
 
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Salmon and His People: Fish & Fishing in Nez Perce Culture (Paperback)

by Dan Landeen (Author), Allen Pinkham (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Paperback: 225 pages
  • Publisher: Confluence Press (July 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1881090337
  • ISBN-13: 978-1881090335
  • Product Dimensions: 11 x 8.5 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #1,807,146 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)


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Customer Reviews

2 Reviews
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What a book about fish should be, June 27, 1999
By A Customer
Books about fish customarily fall into two categories: biology texts that treat the animals like biochemical systems and fishing books that treat them like cunning prey (the better to rationalize the angler's heroism). "Salmon and His People" is another kind of book entirely-a complex look at how the salmon has figured in Nez Perce tribal origin stories, tribal history, tribal religion, tribal stewardship, and how the animal has fared under the dubious stewardship of the Corps of Engineers, Bureau of Reclamation, and National Marine Fisheries Service.

The voices telling this complicated story are multiple, as are the perspectives: tribal storytellers, biologists, fishermen, children, policymakers. Salmon is not treated as an isolated creature but is instead viewed within a finely wrought network of other water animals.

I cannot praise the ambition and achievement of this book highly enough. Because the Nez Perce view the fate of the salmon as part of a regionwide environmental disaster, "Salmon and His People" also becomes an elegy for that lost river, the free-flowing Columbia. Several recent books (Blaine Harden's "A River Lost," Wm. Dietrich's "Northwest Passage," Richard White's "The Organic Machine") have addressed the devastation of the Columbia and its fisheries, but none of these is as heartful and creaturely an account of what the damming of the Columbia has meant to the peoples and animals of the river. The Nez Perce are particularly qualified to write an account of the Columbia's devastation because their lands are upstream of most of the eighteen dams on the mainstem Columbia and Snake, and much of their section of the river lies within the Hanford Reach, that unhappy zone once occupied by the federal government's plutonium-production plants. (The Hanford Reach is also the only undammed section of the Columbia River.)

Beautifully illustrated with color plates on almost every page (the registration could be better), "Salmon and His People" will challenge most readers to think about fish more deeply. The book is the second in a series of Nez Perce nature guides; it was written by Dan Landeen, environmental specialist for the tribe, and Allen Pinkham, a tribal elder and former chairman of the Nez Perce Tribe Executive Committee, and published by Lewis-Clark State College's Confluence Press.

I have no connection to the Nez Perce Tribe or the Confluence Press. I write for fishing magazines, and in my experience this is a singular book.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Local knowledge and fish biology, August 10, 2007
By E. N. Anderson (Riverside, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)      
This book deserves the highest praise for its integration of local knowledge with academic fisheries biology. It provides an excellent guide to Columbia River fish. That alone is worth the price of the book. The real "meat" of the book, though, are the Nez Perce testimonies: myths, folktales, personal reminiscences, views on local fish politics, and just plain good old-timer stories. We are reminded that the Native people often say in poetic or symbolic form what biologists say in academic polysyllables. Whether Coyote's encounter with beavers or excessive offtake of a fluctuating population is to blame, everybody knows that you can't catch too many fish or there won't be any more. The Native people add the critically important dimension of respect for the fish. You won't protect what you don't respect. That is why the politicians and even biologists so often fail to preserve the fisheries, even with the best intentions and the fisheries science--they lack that critical realization.
The book brings out the tragedy of damming the Columbia River. Hydropower is cheap only because nobody factors in the real costs, especially the hundreds of millions of fish a year lost to the economy.
This book is pure delight. I haven't enjoyed reading a book in a while, or learned so much.
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