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Mystery
Writer
First United Methodist Church
October 5, 1994
Biography
Excerpt
Selected Works
Links
Biography
Tony Hillerman was born in Sacred Heart, Oklahoma on May 27, 1925. At
that time, Oklahoma was the dumping ground for numerous Native American
tribes displaced from their hereditary lands. Many of Hillermans
friends and classmates in Sacred Heart were Native Americans. His introduction
to this culture provides the foundation for most of his best-selling crime
novels. "I know what I write about seems exotic to a lot of people
but not for me", says Hillerman.
In 1943, Hillerman joined the military to escape life on the farm. Hillerman
fought in World War II and was eventually discharged for injuries in 1945.
He was awarded the Silver Star, Bronze Star, and Purple Heart. Letters
he had written his mother while fighting overseas earned him recognition
with a local journalist whom later told him to become a writer. Hillerman
enrolled at the University of Oklahoma where he received a B.A. in 1948.
After graduation, he worked a variety of journalist positions in the Southwest.
He received an MA in 1966 from the University of New Mexico and taught
there until 1987. With his wifes encouragement, Hillerman published
his first book The Blessing Way in 1970. Hillerman has since become
one of the most successful fiction crime writers and wonderful storyteller
"Ive been a newspaperman most of my life," he says, "I
dont have to look for ideas. Ive heard most of them."
Hillerman is also a respected portrayer of traditional Navajo culture.
He carefully researches each book to provide an accurate depiction of
Navajo life. He has received many awards including, the Mystery Writers
of America Grandmaster Award in 1989, an Edgar Award for Dance Hall of
the Dead in 1974, and the Special Friends of the Dinee Award by the Navajo
Nation in 1987. He says, "I never intended to write the Great American
Novel. I wanted to write books that told stories."
Hillerman lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico with his wife Marie.
Excerpt taken from The First Eagles (2002)
The
body of Anderson Nez lay under a sheet on the gurney, waiting.
From the viewpoint of Shirley Ahkeah, sitting at her desk in the Intensive
Care Unit nursing station of the Northern Arizona Medical Center in Flagstaff,
the white shape formed by the corpse of Mr. Nez reminded her of Sleeping
Ute Mountain as seen from her aunts hogan near Teec Nos Pos.
Nezs feet, only a couple of yards from her eyes, pushed the sheet
up to form the mountains peak. Perspective caused the rest of the
sheet to slope away in humps and ridges, as the mountain seemed to do
under its winter snow when she was a child. Shirley had given up on finishing
her night shift paperwork. Her mind kept drifting away to what had happened
to Mr. Nez and trying to calculate whether he fit into the Bitter Water
clan Nez family with the grazing lease adjoining her grandmothers
place at Short Mountain. And then there was the question of whether his
family would allow an autopsy. She remembered them as sheep camp traditionals,
but Dr. Woody, the one whod brought Nez in, insisted he had the
familys permission.
Selected
Works
The Blessing Way (1970)
Dance Hall of the Dead (1973)
Listening Woman (1978)
People of the Darkness (1980)
The Dark Wind (1982)
The Ghost Way (1984)
Skinwalkers (1986)
A Thief of Time (1988)
Talking God (1989)
Coyote Waits (1990)
Sacred Clowns (1993)
The Fallen Man (1997)
The First Eagle (1998)
Hunting Badger (1999)
Golden Calf (2002)
Web
Site Links
Interview
with Hillerman
Glossary
of Native American terms used in Hillerman's books
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