Miko Kings : An Indian Baseball Story

miko kings : an indian baseball story

more information about Miko Kings : An Indian Baseball Story

Miko Kings : An Indian Baseball Story

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Book Description

Miko Kings is set in Indian Territory's queen city, Ada, Oklahoma, during the baseball fever of 1903 and simultaneously in 1969 during the Vietnam era. The story centers on the lives of Hope Little Leader, a Choctaw pitcher for the Miko Kings baseball team; Lucius Mummy, a switch hitter; and Ezol Daggs, the postal clerk in Indian Territory. It is Daggs who, in attempting to patent her Choctaw theory of relativity, inadvertently changes the course of history for the Indians and their baseball team.

Though a lively and humorous contemporary work of fiction, the narration draws heavily on Howe's careful historical research: boarding schools for Native American children, relations between African Americans and Native Americans, Native American participation in the Vietnam War and-most centrally-the story of the little-known Indian Baseball League of the late 1800s and early 1900s.

As Hope Little Leader tells it: "This is where the twentieth-century Indian really began . . . not in the abstractions of congressional acts, but on the prairie diamond."

LeAnne Howe, an enrolled member of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma, is an author, playwright and scholar. Born and educated in Oklahoma, she has read and lectured throughout the United States, Japan and the Middle East. Her first novel, Shell Shaker, earned her a 2002 American Book Award and a Wordcraft Circle Writer of the Year in Creative Prose award. In 2004, Shell Shaker was published in French.

Howe is a recipient of a National Endowment for the Humanities award for research and a Smithsonian Native American internship for research. She has written and directed for theater, radio and film. Her most recent film project, commissioned by PBS, is on the history of the Choctaw Nation. Written and narrated by Howe, the film will air in prime time on National Public Television in the spring of 2005. She currently teaches at the University of Minnesota.



About the Author
Before writing fiction, plays, and scholarly essays, LeAnne Howe worked in Oklahoma as a waitress, and in a factory making the stems for plastic champagne glasses. Most recently she has taught at Carleton College, Grinnell College, Sinte Gleska University on Rosebud Sioux Reservation, and at Wake Forest University. Ms. Howe is an enrolled member of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma. She is a grandmother.

Miko Kings: An Indian Baseball Story,LeAnne Howe,Aunt Lute Books,1879960702,Fiction,Fiction - General,General,Literary,Fiction / General,Modern fiction

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