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Seller's Description:
Fair. This item is in overall acceptable condition. Covers and dust jackets are intact but may have heavy wear including creases, bends, edge wear, curled corners or minor tears as well as stickers or sticker-residue. Pages are intact but may have minor curls, bends or moderate to considerable highlighting/ writing. Binding is intact; however, spine may have heavy wear. Digital codes may not be included and have not been tested to be redeemable and/or active. A well-read copy overall. Please note that all items are donated goods and are in used condition. Orders shipped Monday through Friday! Your purchase helps put people to work and learn life skills to reach their full potential. Orders shipped Monday through Friday. Your purchase helps put people to work and learn life skills to reach their full potential. Thank you!
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Seller's Description:
Signed by author on title page. Text block, boards and binding are pristine. Dust wrapper in fine, like new condition. Well packaged and promptly shipped from California. US veteran operated.
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Seller's Description:
Very Good in Very Good jacket. Q5-A first edition (First Impression) hardcover book SIGNED by Joan Frederick on the half-title page in very good condition in very good dust jacket that is mylar protected. Dust jacket has some wrinkling on the edges and corners, dust jacket and book have some bumped corners, light discoloration and shelf wear. 10"x10.5", 199 pages. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Tommy Wayne "T.C." Cannon was to the world of contemporary Native American art what James Dean was to American movie culture. Killed in a car accident in 1978 at the young age of thirty-one, T.C. Cannon is regarded as the most eloquent and innovative of the Native American artists, one who helped change the direction of traditional Indian art to the "New Wave" movement that characterizes that genre today. In T.C. Cannon: He Stood in the Sun, Joan Frederick, working cooperatively with T.C. Cannon's father, presents the most comprehensive information available about this talented and influential Kiowa-Caddo artist. The author shares stories about T.C. in the words of his friends, family members, and teachers-but more importantly, the reader is given the artist's own view through his remarkable art and his own words as found in the songs, poems, and musings of his sketchbooks and letters. It is the story of a life, told not with idealism or sensationalism, but with unflinching candor. From his birth in 1946 in Lawton, Oklahoma, through his schooling during the Institute of American Indian Art's "golden years, " in the 1960s, through his tour in Vietnam, and, finally, through his international success and untimely death, T.C. Cannon displayed an insight into life that strikes chords of understanding in all of us. His statements emanated from a distinctly Indian point of view, but, ultimately, his words and works transcend ethnic barriers and profile the basic values and experiences that bind our human family.