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In the Sun's House

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A fledgling teacher finds his place in the unlikeliest of settings
  • 22 September 2009
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In the year he spent teaching at Borrego Pass, a remote Navajo community in northwest New Mexico, Kurt Caswell found himself shunned as persona non grata. His cultural missteps, status as an interloper, and white skin earned him no respect in the classroom or the community—those on the reservation assumed he would come and go like so many teachers had before. But as Caswell attempts to bridge the gap between himself and those who surround him, he finds his calling as a teacher and develops a love for the rich landscape of New Mexico, and manages a hard-won truce between his failings and successes.
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Price: $19.95
Pages: 304
Publisher: Trinity University Press
Imprint: Trinity University Press
Publication Date: 22 September 2009
Trim Size: 8.25 X 5.50 in
ISBN: 9781595340566
Format: Paperback
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“Teaching language arts to middle school students on a Navajo reservation is not for the fainthearted, as Kurt Caswell demonstrates in this probing memoir.”— the Rumpus

“In the Sun’s House gathers together so much of the world that lies remote, to our eyes and often our hearts—the Navajo nation, the desert Southwest, the elusive joys of the classroom, the forces that both shape identity and erode it, the lonely isolation that accompanies wanderlust, the not always apparent journey toward what it is we most desire from life. There’s a quiet, sometimes wind-bitten loveliness in Caswell’s seductive voice that builds triumphantly to a level of uplifting grace.”— Bob Shacochis, National Book Award–winning author of Easy in the Islands and The Woman Who Lost Her Soul

“An exquisitely written, consistently thoughtful, and engaging work . . . Its scrupulous personal honesty and research into the Navajos combine to produce a rich literary experience, as engrossing as a novel yet buoyed by the sense of a reliable observer bearing witness to what actually happened.”— Phillip Lopate, author of Two Marriages

“This is a literary chronicle with the flavor of Tom Wolfe's brand of naturalism, told with well-observed scenes, dialogue in full, strong point of view, and illuminating details.”— New Mexico Magazine
Rex Lee Jim is a member of the Navajo Nation Council and chairs its Public Safety Committee. He is the author of several books of poetry written in the Navajo language, including Dúchas Táá Kóó Diné, a trilingual poetry collection in Navajo, Irish, and English. He lives in Rock Point, Arizona.
— Rex Lee Jim

Kurt Caswell is a writer and professor of creative writing and literature in the Honors College at Texas Tech University, where he teaches intensive field courses on writing and leadership. His books include Iceland SummerLaika’s Window: The Legacy of a Soviet Space DogGetting to Grey Owl: Journeys on Four ContinentsIn the Sun’s House: My Year Teaching on the Navajo Reservation, and An Inside Passage, which won the 2008 River Teeth Literary Nonfiction Book Prize. His essays have appeared in ISLE, Isotope, Matter, Ninth Letter, Orion, River Teeth, and the American Literary Review. He lives in Lubbock, Texas.
— Kurt Caswell