Sunday, May 3, 2026

Assiniboine Book of Colors

  TeePee against a color sky



By Vicki Bisbee


A language can bloom in a child’s mind the same way a prairie opens under light.

Assiniboine: Book of Colors welcomes readers into a calm, image-rich world where learning colors also becomes a first step into language, land, and cultural memory. Each page pairs an Assiniboine color word with a vivid scene drawn from prairie life: a black horse running free, a blue Montana sky, a brown buffalo calf in the grass, gray cooking stones near a fire pit, green prairie plants, orange sunset light, pink wildflowers, purple twilight, red beadwork, a white winter tipi, and a yellow flower turned toward the sun. The result is a book that feels less like a standard primer and more like a walk through a living landscape, where every color carries its own presence and mood.

That sense of place gives the book its quiet distinction. These are not random objects chosen simply to teach vocabulary. The colors are rooted in plains, weather, animals, traditional materials, and images tied to Assiniboine life. Even the page for gray reaches beyond simple identification by referencing the meaning of Assiniboine as “cooks using stones,” allowing the book to gently suggest history and identity alongside early learning.

That deeper connection becomes even more meaningful through the background of its creator. Vicki Bisbee is an enrolled member of the Fort Peck Assiniboine and Sioux Tribes in northeastern Montana, where she has lived for more than fifty years. After a career as a school counselor, she received an Assiniboine dictionary and chose to create colorful language materials for all ages. That purpose can be felt throughout the manuscript. The book carries the warmth of something made not only to teach, but to keep language visible, welcoming, and alive for new generations. Her note that there are variations in the Assiniboine language, and that there is no right or wrong way to speak, adds another layer of generosity to the project: this is a book that invites learning rather than policing it.

For young readers, families, and educators looking for something beyond the usual alphabet-and-colors shelf, Assiniboine: Book of Colors offers a different kind of introduction—one where language is inseparable from land, and where a child’s first encounter with color words can also become an early encounter with cultural belonging.

Sometimes the simplest books carry the most lasting roots, because the first words a child learns can also become the first bridge to language, land, and belonging.


Click here to get Assiniboine Book of Colors

on Amazon Kindle 





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