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Among many Native cultures, storytelling was normally restricted to the long winter evenings. The Cree were one culture with a strict belief in this regard: During the summer, no stories founded on fiction were ever told, the Indigenous peoples believing that if any fairy tales were told during that season when they were supposed to use their time to best advantage, the narrator would have his life destroyed by the lizard, which would suck his blood.Some broad themes can be identified in Indigenous Canadian mythology. Creation myths are among the most sacred to many Indigenous cultures. Haida myths of the Raven, a celestial being, explain the creation of the sun. The Haida word for Raven means the one who is going to order things, and it was Raven who established the laws of nature and was present when people were first created.Supernatural beings are prominent in many myths about the origin of places, animals, and other natural phenomena. Supernatural experiences by ordinary mortals are found in other myths. For example, the Chippewa have myths explaining the first corn and the first robin, triggered by a boys vision. Some myths explain the origins of sacred rituals or objects, such as sweat lodges, wampum, and the sun dance.Folktales have been a part of the social and cultural life of Native American regardless of whether they were sedentary agriculturists or nomadic hunters. As they gathered around a fire at night, Native Americans could be transported to another world through the talent of a good storyteller. The effect was derived not only from the novelty of the tale itself but also from the imaginative skill of the narrator, who often added gestures and songs and occasionally adapted a particular tale to suit a certain culture. As I said at the beginning of this short preface, its been a delight to get to know these tales just a little, and I still have a long way to walk amongst the stories of so many more tribes and peoples across North America.