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Stories for a Winter's Night

EDITED BY

Maurice Kenny

Stories for a Winter's Night

An anthology of short fiction by Native American writers, edited by American Book Award winner Maurice Kenny. As Leslie Marmon Silko noted in praise of this collection, stories still have the power to bring us together, especially when there is loss or grief (AbeBooks). Kenny, a distinguished Mohawk poet and visiting professor at SUNY Potsdam, curates voices that honor the storytelling tradition central to Native American culture.

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"I feel the power which stories still have to bring us together, especially when there is loss or grief." 


—Leslie Marmon Silko

Maurice Kenny was born in Watertown, New York on August 16, 1929 to parents of mixed ethnic heritage; his father, Anthony Andrew Kenny, was of both Mohawk and Irish ancestry, while his mother Doris Herrick Kenny, was both Seneca and English. He was raised in both Watertown and Bayonne, New Jersey, alongside two older sisters, Mary and Agnes. He left the North Country as a teenager, initially traveling to New York City and then matriculating at Butler University in Indianapolis, Indiana, where he began his formal training as a poet and a scholar under Werner Beyer and Roy Marz, among others.


He began publishing his poetry in the early 1950s, with his first book – Dead Letters Sent – appearing in 1958. Over the course of the subsequent six decades, he brought more than thirty volumes of poetry, prose, fiction, and drama into the public eye. At the same time, in his roles as publisher, editor, and teacher, he mentored countless other writers at various stages of their development.

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