

This piece is not so much a story as it is a description of theĪrduous search for the story, in this case the true facts about the CreeĬhief Almighty Voice. Unbelievably high and strong in its unending cry (31). Serviced by the grimed motionless men in bright coatsĪnd glinting buttons, a voice so high and clear, so Of guns that reel back in their positions, worked over, a voice rises over the exploding smoke and thunder Wiebe's acclaimed "Where is the Voice Coming From?"Īppears early in the collection and demonstrates the eloquence of which Place," Athol Fugard wrote, "is inside a story." Prairie harvest and seeing it safely stored. Repository for this literary outpouring than a real book? The process ofĬompiling the material must have been as satisfying as bringing home a Wake of oral culture and on the cusp of e-book culture, what better Pages, composed over more than half a century of story-making.

And what a formidable collection it is: more than 500 Story he has ever written-most of them published, many reprinted, and In this latest publication, Wiebe has gathered together every short German, it was his third language, English, that he tapped for its Light spoke the language of his mother, and the church spoke High But although rocks, birds, trees, and even Rudy Wiebe's writing began on the Canadian prairie where theĪuthor, as a young boy, listened and "Everything spoke, and it Rudy Wiebe: Collected Stories, 1955-2010. APA style: Rudy Wiebe: Collected Stories.Rudy Wiebe: Collected Stories." Retrieved from 2012 Mennonite Historical Society 05 May. MLA style: "Rudy Wiebe: Collected Stories." The Free Library.
