Synopses & Reviews
Review
"In the experience of many native peoples, anthropologists come and go as fast as intellectual fads do among the anthropologists themselves. Robin Ridington offers us exceptions to both these forms of expediency....Ridington has taken risks, but the gambles have paid off: he has succeeded in the difficult task of going from the spoken to the written word, from the engaging act of speech to the disembodied world of print. In his prose, the knowledge and the stories come through with great power." American Anthropologist
Review
"Ridington is at his best when he tells what he has learned of Beaver worldview. His presentation of their Dreamers those who claim to travel along the road to heaven on behalf of their community, serving as mediators between earth dwellers and ancestors, humans and animals is especially illuminating." American Indian Quarterly
Review
"Robin Ridington has been studying the Dunne-za, or Beaver Indians, of British Columbia, for more than twenty years. Trail to Heaven is as much his autobiography as it is ethnography. In the jargon of the new ethnography, it is a shared discourse, in which he translates the personal narratives and traditional stories of his Dunne-za friends with as little commentary as possible, while telling of his own intellectual development in terms similar to theirs." American Studies International
Review
"Trail to Heaven is a truly remarkable document for several reasons. It is a vivid portrait of an indigenous people whose universe has only recently come into contact with mass society. It is a diary of sorts, in which Ridington pokes a good bit of fun of himself and the approach his own academic discipline takes to 'primitive' societies. It's also an easy read....It should be read and re-read and re-read." Vancouver Sun