While writing this play, I was fully expecting to become the Salman Rushdie of the Native community, for I'm sure there is something in this play to annoy everybody. Part of my goal was to create unsympathetic characters right across the board. And to do this, as the saying goes, I had to break some eggs. A close friend, a Native woman, came up to me quite angry and said, “So this is what you really think of Native people!” Then some time later, one reviewer referred to it as “witless white-bashing.” Evidently I have become a racist! Further proof that you never know how your day is gonna end. But oddly enough, most people come up to me after the play and congratulate me on exploring subjects and issues they felt were long overlooked. Then there was that little incident of the bomb threat in Vancouver, but overall, the response has been more than positive. Many people are responsible for the development of this concoction of ideas and characters. David Ferry gave me early encouragement and final direction: he was there at the beginning and the end. Other fine institutions like the Banff playRites Colony, Native Voices, Bluewater Theatre, Lighthouse Theatre Festival, Anita Knott for the translation, and the multitude of other actors and actresses who helped shape the characters and had a hand in the birthing, a hearty thank you. And let us not forget a certain Dawn T. Maracle who is my own little alterNative warrior. One final word: though an integral character in the play is a young Ojibway writer, this does not in any way make this story autobiographical. Any resemblance to people, either dead or alive, is purely coincidental. Honest Injun! —Drew Hayden Taylor