He died from Parkinson's disease on Januat the age of 83. He received the Caldecott Medal in 1979 for The Girl Who Loved Wild Horses. All rights reserved.Summary: A Lakota Indian legend in which the White Buffalo Woma. He was best known for his picture books inspired by Native American culture and lore including Buffalo Woman, Iktomi and the Boulder: A Plains Indian Story, and Crow Chief: A Plains Indian Story. by Paul Goble Copyright 1998Published by the National Geographic Society. Buffalo Woman There is eloquent beauty in this story of a young hunter who marries a woman from the Buffalo Nation. In 1977, he decided to become a full-time author and illustrator and accepted a position as the artist-in-residence at Mount Rushmore National Memorial. While working in freelance industrial design and teaching at Ravensbourne College of Art and Design, he and his first wife Dorothy Lee wrote four picture books. In 1959, he received a National Diploma in Design, with honors, from the Central School of Arts and Crafts in London. He was a sharpshooter in the British military from 1951 to 1953. Paul Goble was born in Haslemere, Surrey, England on September 27, 1933. A Lakota Indian legend in which the White Buffalo Woman presents her people with the Sacred Calf Pipe which gives them the means to pray to the Great Spirit.
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