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American Folktales - Page 10

Timeless oral stories passed through generations across the United States.
Parchment-style illustration of Rip Van Winkle waking on a Catskill Mountains slope, American folktale.

Rip Van Winkle, The Man Who Slept for Twenty Years: American Folktale of Time and Change

At the foot of the misty Catskill Mountains in colonial New York, there once lived a good-natured man named Rip Van Winkle. Rip was beloved by everyone in his small Dutch village. He mended fences for his neighbors, helped children fly kites, and was always ready with a friendly word or a helping hand. Yet for all his kindness, Rip
Parchment-style artwork of Nanabozho and animals during the Great Flood, Ojibwe Native American folktale.

The Great Flood and the Creation of the Earth: An American (Ojibwe) Folktale that Teaches Lesson on Humility and Renewal

When the world was young, the skies stretched endlessly over shimmering waters. The land had vanished beneath a vast flood that swallowed mountains, forests, and plains. The only living beings left adrift upon the endless waves were Nanabozho, the Great Hare and powerful culture hero of the Ojibwe people, and

Br’er Rabbit and the Millstone

October 17, 2025
Morning crept slow over the Georgia hills, bringing with it a syrupy kind of heat—the kind that made every creature move slower except for Br’er Rabbit, who never could sit still long enough to get sticky. He hopped down a red-dirt path, whistling a tune that might’ve been cheerful if

Coyote and the Borrowed Light

October 17, 2025
Long ago, before rivers remembered their names and before the People could see their own shadows, the world slept under an endless twilight. The stars shivered faintly above, too small and too far to warm the darkness. Nights and days were the same gray hour. The People stumbled when they
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