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OverviewTilton and Grace Entokah: An Osage Story offers an episodic history of the Osage Nation of Oklahoma as told through the life narratives of Anthony Lookout's great-grandparents Tilton and Grace Entokah. Anthony Lookout grew up hearing the stories of his relatives, including those of his great-grandfather Fred Lookout, who served as the principal chief of the Osage Nation in the early twentieth century. Anthony Lookout's father, Morris Lookout, methodically recorded the oral traditions and tribal stories of Osage elders and relatives on reel-to-reel tapes from 1965 to 1971. The recordings preserved generations of Osage history, religious practices, and cultural traditions reaching back to the mid-nineteenth century. To write this story of his family and Osage history, Anthony Lookout did additional research in archival collections, newspapers, and magazines and interviewed elders. From the perspective of a participant rather than an observer, Lookout tells the tribal history of the Osage Nation's removal from their Kansas homelands in 1865 and relocation to Oklahoma's Indian Territory from 1872 to the early 1940s. The heart of the story revolves around Lookout's great-grandmother Grace Entokah, who grew up as a traditional Osage woman, and adapted through traumatic and uncertain times, staying true to her Osage culture. She went from riding horses to riding in automobiles, eventually meeting the president of the United States. Lookout covers the family history of the Entokahs, the Allotment Act of 1906, Oklahoma statehood, the depredations of mining and oil companies on Osage lands, the establishment of tribal government and courts, Principal Chief Fred Lookout's journeys to Washington, DC, to meet top government leaders, as well as tribal stories of the infamous 1920s Osage murders and other key episodes in Osage history. Tilton and Grace Entokah is not only the story of the Entokahs but also an Osage history written from the collective memory of those on the Osage reservation. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Anthony LookoutPublisher: University of Nebraska Press Imprint: University of Nebraska Press ISBN: 9781496246554ISBN 10: 1496246551 Pages: 168 Publication Date: 01 May 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Foreword Preface Part One 1. Sitting Bull 2. Inlonshka 3. Seeing Things 4. Grace 5. Osage Relatives 6. Staying Traditional 7. The Wedding Day 8. The Business 9. See Haw 10. The Good Old Days 11. The Allotment Act 12. Making Plans 13. Results and Actions 14. Doing Time 15. Warnings 16. The Setup 17. The Journey Part Two 18. Moving Forward 19. Death and Romance 20. Trust 21. The Meeting 22. Osage Nuptials 23. Being Mrs. Abbott 24. Conversations 25. Cowboys and Indians 26. The Individual Song 27. Hattie 28. Expect the Unexpected 29. Will Rogers of the Osage Epilogue: Pahshehe AcknowledgmentsReviews""Through the riveting family saga, Tilton and Grace Entokah: An Osage Story shows the complexity of traditions and change in an evolving world. The focus on family ties, Indigenous food knowledge, pride, and courage show successful adaptations while preserving core values. Storytelling is a way of maintaining community, and this account makes the story of the Osage community richer, warmer, heartfelt, and memorable.""--Denise Low, author of The Turtle's Beating Heart: One Family's Story of Lenape Survival ""Tilton and Grace Entokah: An Osage Story is both engaging and authoritative. The author's voice is remarkable--he manages a storytelling manner and, best of all, he manages a tricky balance of entering the minds of historical characters, his kin, and stating what they likely thought and felt without presuming to know their opinions or deepest feelings. He is able to travel through history with these characters.""--Marcia Haag, coauthor of Osage Language and Lifeways ""So much of our Native American culture is now beyond our experience, having left our world with only memories for us. We live in a time and a place in which a new culture alien to the Native American has begun to influence everything. The bridge to preserve the customs of the ancient ones is so strained that we fear its collapse. Because of this, deep sadness resides in the hearts of those among us who can still hear the sounds of the native language and the voices of the ancients. It is good to remember there were those who lived and loved the days and nights of their time. Anthony Lookout brings us into those times and they are worth remembering.""--Geoffrey M. Standing Bear, principal chief of the Osage Nation ""This book is a collection of stories Anthony Lookout heard growing up in an Osage community embedded in white society. Readers of the stories will find them both familiar and perplexing, at times even strange. But isn't that true of all good stories?""--Peter G. Stromberg, professor of anthropology emeritus at the University of Tulsa Author InformationAnthony Lookout (1956–2026) was an Osage songwriter and musician from Tulsa, Oklahoma. His Osage name was Hunkathali, meaning ""good eagle,"" from the Hunka clan. He spent his life playing music as a multi-instrumentalist performing and recording songs and music videos and producing other local artists. Also an actor, he worked for two years with the Native American acting troupe Mahenwahdose. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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