Stories of village life: The embarrassment of the cranberry partners (Montagnais Indian)
Eviksheen the grass-user (Kobuk River Eskimo)
The girl who watched in the nighttime (Siverian Eskimo)
Uteritsoq, the obstinate one (East Greenland Eskimo)
The Chuginadak woman (Aleut)
The boy who became an Arctic tern (Naupaktomiut Eskimo)
The little old lady who lived alone (Athapaskan)
Qasiagssaq, the great liar (East Greenland Eskimo)
Witiko father and son bested by a conjuror (James Bay Cree)
The Crow story (Tanaina Indian)
Stingy reindeer owners (Lamut)
Fourteen with one stroke (Chippewa).
How things got to be the way they are: How the earth was made and how wood-chips became wlrus (Maritime Chukche)
The first snowshoes (Athapaskan)
Gambling story (Dena'ina Indian)
Story while pointing at a constellation : a Dogrib conversation (Dogrib Indian)
Why owls die with wings outspread (Swampy Cree)
When musk oxen spoke like humans (Iglulik Eskimo)
Why the path between fish-camps is always worn down and no one walks it any more (Hare Indian)
What is the earth? (Greenland Eskimo)
Ayas'e and the origin of bats (Timagami Ojibwa)
The loon and the raven (Repulse Bay Eskimo)
The giant skunk and his offspring (Attikamek Indian)
A Yukaghir tale of the origin of the Chukchee (Yukaghir)
Which animals are on the moon (Noatagmiut Eskimo)
Why rattlesnakes don't cross the river (Thompson Indian)
The first white men (Hare Indian).
Trickster and culture heroes: Smart beaver cycle (Tagish Indian): Little beaver meets giant
Beaver man meets mink lady
Beaver man meets otter man
Beaver man meets wolverine
Beaver man meets giant bear
Beaver man faces four trials
Kuloscap tales (Micmac): How Kuloscap dealt with ice giants
How Kuloscap saved his Uncle Turtle's life
Why loons don't get stuck any more in bottom weeds
How Kuloscap sang through rapids and returned his family home.
The Wenebojo myth (Chippewa): The sun impregnates a girl
The girl gives birth to triplets
Wenebojo kills his stone brother
Wenebojo causes his second brother's death
Wenebojo's brother makes the road to the other world
Wenebojo assumes the form of a beaver
Wenebojo becomes depressed and threatens all the spirits
The spirits try to appease Wenebojo
The spirits give Wenebojo some parents and establish the medicine dance.
Stories about animals: The bear goes on his long, solitary journey (Greenland Eskimo)
Bluejay's revenge (Shuswap Indian)
The wolverine loses his shoes (Gwich'in Indian)
Skunk's tears (Thompson Indian)
The duck whose grandmother was out of her wits (Chuvantzi)
The helldiver and the spirit of winter (Chippewa)
The stubborness of bluejays (Cree)
Coyote and fox (Shuswap Indian)
The owl woman (Dogrib Indian)
Crow and camp robber (Dena'ina Indian)
Why brown bears are hostile towards men (Chugach Eskimo)
The wolverine grudge (Woodland Cree)
The whale, the sea scorpion, the stone, and the eagle (Iglulik Eskimo).
Shaman stories: Carried off by the moon (Netsilik Eskimo)
Story of a female shaman (Reindeer Chukchee)
How the false shaman was flung by walrus (Caribou Eskimo)
Things seen by the Shaman Karawe (Chukchee)
The curing-fox windigo (Swampy Cree)
Kinigseq (Greenland Eskimo)
How a bagpipe drew hunters from the outskirts (Caribou Eskimo)
Song of Spider Goddess (Ainu)
Desire for light (Mackenzie Delta Eskimo)
Aksikukuk and Kukrukuk (Naupaktomiut Eskimo)
Encounter with the shaman from Padlei (Caribou Eskimo).
Stories of strange and menacing neighbors: The birth of Tchakapesh (Naskapi Indian)
The thrashing spirit with a bearded seal for a whip (Iglulik Eskimo)
The mother of sea beasts (Netsilik Eskimo)
Brushmen (Vanta-Kutchin Indian)
Ayaje's wives with forearms like awls (Naskapi Indian)
Three sisters and the demon (Ainu)
The giant rat (Eyak Indian)
The ghost (Mackenzie Delta Eskimo)
The giants (Point Hope Eskimo)
The woman who ate men (East Greenland Eskimo)
The wrong-chill windigo (Swampy Cree)
Ipiup Inua, the spirit of the precipice (Iglulik Eskimo)
Inugpasugssuk the giant (Netsilik Eskimo)
The four cannibals (Shuswap Indian)
Kivioq, whose kayak was full of ghosts (West Greenland Eskimo)
The ten-legged polar bear (Barrow Eskimo)
The monster fish in the lake (Gwich'in Indian)
The attainable border of the birds (Chukchee).
Hunting stories: The dream that came back (Mistassini Cree)
The hunter and the goats (Thompson Indian)
Agdlumaloqaq, who hunted at the blowholes in a far, foreign land (Iglulik Eskimo)
The moose among the Chandalar River people (Gwich'in Indian)
The woman who put a bucket over a caribou's head (Point Barrow Eskimo)
The day auks netted hid-well (Polar Eskimo)
Lake-dwarves (Eyak Indian)
The mammoth hunters (Kobuk River Eskimo)
Why woolly mammoths decided to flee underground (Caribou Eskimo)
Sometimes a seal hunt goes like this (Songish Indian).
Stories about all sorts of marriages: Raven didn't stick around (Tlingit Indian)
Kivioq, who left his home because his wife was unfaithful (East Greenland Eskimo)
The windigo almost prevents a marriage (Swampy Cree)
The star husbands (Athapaskan)
The girl who married the bear (Tlingit Indian)
How Whiskey-Jack man got married (Naskapi Indian)
The woman and the octopus (Eyak Indian)
The marriage of mink (Nootka Indian)
The wolf's bride (Cape Prince of Wales Eskimo)
The girl who married a whale (Chukchee)
The man who married a fox (East Greenland Eskimo)
Go away (Snowdrift Chipewyan).