ADVANCE PRAISE FOR DEEP HANGING OUT
Armed with his legendary rolodex and even more legendary wit and keen perceptions, Malcolm Margolin has advocated vigorously to not only acknowledge Native Californians, but to provide the most prominent and honorable platform for us to advocate for ourselves and remind the modern world, We are still here, and were not going anywhere.
GREGG CASTRO (t'rowt'raahl Salinan/rumsien-ramaytush Ohlone),
cultural activist and cofacilitator
of the California Indian Conference
This book implies the depth and sensitivity we immigrants must achieve if we ever hope to inhabit a vital North America to the seventh generation. It will require centuries and an about-face of priorities to approach the intimacy chronicled in these pages. Every American should read this book, while theres still time.
PETER COYOTE, author of The Rainmans Third Cure,
Zen Buddhist priest
Not only is Deep Hanging Out a wonderful celebration of the diverse, living Indigenous cultures of California, its expressed with such easy eloquence that its a pleasure to read. With modesty and self-effacing humor, Malcolm never places himself at the center of the narrative. Instead, he displays that rarest of attitudes among non-Natives writing about our livesthe ability to listen and truly hear whats being said.
JOSEPH BRUCHAC, author of Two Roads
Malcolms lifelong curiosity, his abundant and sustained generosity, and his gift of deep friendship as revealed in this compendium a memory palace of sortsare invaluable.
GRETEL EHRLICH, author of Facing the Wave and Unsolaced
This collection, covering decades of Malcolms transcendent writings about the Native California cultures that inspired him, provides welcome insight into his capacious mind and generous heart.
ELAINE ELINSON, coauthor of Wherever Theres a Fight
Deep Hanging Out is an opportunity to not just wade, but to take a deep dive into the voracious curiosity of Malcolm Margolin. Malcolms magic lies in how he connects us to what was and could be again by respectfully learning from, not just about, the Native people of California.
ANNE BOWN-CRAWFORD, executive director of the
California Arts Council
Malcolm Margolin has spent decades in deep, respectful listening to the Indigenous occupants of California. He gives us a vital window into a special, largely forgotten world that can teach us wonders, if we will only take the time to listen.
BRUCE HAMILTON, national policy director of the Sierra Club
This glorious collection of essays invites us to jump into Malcolms old Volvo and travel alongside him for a deeply insightful, beautiful, and intimate exchange with Native California activists, leaders, and culture bearers. Margolins gift offers an enduring and engaging record of the powerful forces of cultural renewal alive in Native California today forces that inspire respect, cultivate appreciation, and stir emotion.
AMY V. KITCHENER, executive director and cofounder of the
Alliance for California Traditional Arts
This milestone monograph sheds light on one of the least understood and most fascinating corners of the Native American world.
DANIEL SHEEHY, director and curator of
Smithsonian Folkways Recordings
This book is for Californias Indigenous Peoples, and for all the rest of us too. It is from an ally who views the beauty and wonder of life as an essential element in fixing the world.
JANEEN ANTOINE (Sicangu Lakota), executive director of
American Indian Contemporary Arts
Malcolm has always worked diligently to ensure that our Native world-view, culture, and traditions are presented through our own voice. This book is an extension of his commitment to our people with the utmost integrity and respect.
SUSAN MASTEN, former chair of the Yurok Tribe,
former president of the National Congress of American Indians
Malcolm Margolin brings to life the beauty, wisdom, compassion, and diversity of Californias first people with wit, sensitivity, and style. This book should be required reading for any Californian interested in learning about our Indigenous people and their ongoing efforts to revitalize their languages, material culture and crafts, ceremonies, culinary arts, and lands.
KENT G. LIGHTFOOT, professor of anthropology at the
University of California, Berkeley
This compelling, wise, and profoundly moving book is a must read for anyone with an interest in the contemporary peoples of Native California. The fruit of a half-century of intimate involvement, it has much to teach us about living among the First Peoples of this ancient slice of the world.
IRA JACKNIS, research anthropologist at the Phoebe A. Hearst
Museum of Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley
With elegance, passion, and humanity, Malcolm Margolin takes his readers on a celebratory and profoundly hopeful excursion into the little known, diverse, vibrant, complicated, and deeply humane worlds of Native California past, present, and future.
BEVERLY R. ORTIZ, chair of Native California Research Institute
With his elfin nature and wry humor, Malcolm Margolin has modeled the most pure-hearted and humble allyship. Now he offers readers this deeply human, accessible, and wide-ranging storytelling, sharing what he has learned in order to benefit Mother Earth and all people who are Indigenous to her mysterious and complex interrelated systems.
NINA SIMONS, cofounder and chief
relationship strategist of Bioneers
Malcolm Margolin is not only a California hero, he is a national treasure; in this personal anthology-memoir he has brought us even closer to the still-beating heart of our foundational and astonishingly surviving Native California world.
PETER NABOKOV, author of Where the Lightning Strikes,
editor of Native American Testimony
Malcolm recognizes that simply recording stories is not enough, its in the telling. His work, personality, energy, uniqueness, creativity, and interactions with California Native people seem to have emerged from a place deep within his spirit and soul.
ANNETTE L. REED (Tolowa Dee-ni'), professor in
Native American studies and ethnic studies at
California State University, Sacramento
Throughout his book, Malcolm provides a glimpse into the California Indian world without the burden of top-down anthropological jargon or theorizing. It is a beautiful collection of stories about a journey of friendships that span decades. Malcolm embodies in print and in practice what it means to be an ally, an accomplice, andmost importantly a friend.
PETER NELSON (Coast Miwok and tribal citizen of the Federated
Indians of Graton Rancheria), assistant professor of ethnic studies and
environmental science, policy, and management at the
University of California, Berkeley
For every piece of insight or knowledge he has gleaned from our cultures, Malcolm gives back in savvy, tangible, imaginative support that empowers our cultures and our lives. It was a lucky day for us when this Boston Jew wandered into our homelands and hung out so deeply hes never left.