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Glecia Bear has written and published several traditional stories in the Cree language (with English translations). These stories are meant for children to both intertain and educate them. She is the author of Kohkominawak Ot Acimowiniw Awa: Our Grandmothers' Lives, which is out of print and Wanisinwak Iskwesisak: Two Little Girls Lost in the Bush, Fifth House, 1992. She has participated in Alaskan oral history projects in an attempt to preserve the wisdom and knowledge of her tribal elders.
George Beaver is a retired school teacher from Six Nations of the Grand River in Ontario. From 1986 until the present, George Beaver has written about life on Six Nations in this regular column.
Author of the 1972 book Tsali, the author Denton R. Bedford is a Munsee Indian, who shares in his writing native peoples enduring many hardships as "'common man' in an act of nobility which compares on an equal plane with that of the world's heroic and epic figures."
Son of a Navajo medicine man Shonto Begay is an author, traditional storyteller and artist. He Born outside of Shonto, Arizona in 1950, he received his Associate of Fine Arts degree from Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, and went on to get his Bachelor of Fine Arts at the California College of Arts and Crafts, in 1980. Begay both writes and illustrates his books.
She has been called one of this generations most outstanding Native writers.  Winner of the American Book Award, Esther Belin is an urban Indian. Raised in the city, she speaks with an entirely different voice from those raised on the reservation.  In her writing she addresse she subjects such as urban alienation, racism, sexism, substance abuse, and cultural estrangement.
Betty Louise Bell is a novelist and Native American scholar. She presently works with the University of Michigan English Department in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Bell was born in 1949, and received her Ph.D from Ohio State University. She teaches courses in Native American literature and serves as the Director of the Native American Studies Program.
Lesley Belleau is an Ojibway writer and spoken word performer born and raised in Garden River First Nation, outside of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. She has an M.A. in English Literature and Creative Writing in 1976 from the University of Windsor.  She is author of the 2008 book of short stories entitled The Colour of Dried Bones.  Belleau is also a member of the Ontario Arts Council, Canada Council of the Arts.
Benedict, of Akwesasne's Cornwall Island, is a Mohawk writer whose work includes short stories, Iroquoian legends and one play. Her writing has been published in anthologies such as New Voices from the Longhouse (Greenfield Review Pr., 1989) and Reinventing the Enemy's Language : Contemporary Native Women's Writing of North America (W W Norton & Co., 1997).
1922-1997. Kay Bennett was a Navajo author, artist and dollmaker who was born at Sheepsprings Trading Post, New Mexico, in 1922. She taught at the Phoenix Indian School and travelled through the Middle East, Far East and Europe. She designed Navajo dolls and dresses, illustrated her own books, and also recorded Navajo songs.  She authored an autobiography called Kaibah : Recollections of a Navajo Girlhood in 1964 and a work of fiction entitled A Navajo saga  in 1969.   

Diane E. Benson (born 1959) is an Alaskan playwright, actor, poet and politician. Benson was born in Yakima, Washington of White and Tlingit ancestry (her mother being Tax' Hit, Snail House, of the Raven Moiety) and describes herself as "a lifelong Alaskan". She received a Master of Fine Arts in creative writing from the University of Alaska Anchorage in 2002. Benson founded the Alaska Native Performance and Film Commission in 1993, and went on to act in its first fully Alaskan production, Kusah Hakwaan (2001). I am originally of the sea, a Sitka girl, a fishing spirit. I live in Chugiak, running dog team for fun, handling them for my son who runs them competitively. I write for my sanity, and being published is just a delightful by-product. I am working on stage scripts again. I am an actress, but am seriously turned on by directing. I just directed the 'Ecstasy of Rita Joe' for University of Alaska Mainstage, a real honor. I do theater workshops with children as an Artist in the School under the Alaska State Arts Council. All I know is I am grabbing life with two sober hands. That's all there is to say. Gunalcheesh."

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