Writing history, N. Scott Momaday the author of The Way to Rainy Mountain, writes to remember, recollect, and restore his cultural heritage essay (Oates, Joyce 2000). In his pictorial essay, revealing and recovering what is part of his own untold story, Momaday takes on a journey to be at the Aho’s grave, his beloved grandmother and revive her memories of Kiowa. Artfully, he merges two sets of stories to cast his tale: first, he describes Aho’s memories as the only human link to his tribe and his culture, the Kiowas; then, travels to the Kiowas’ migration path, what he calls - his pilgrimage - to be at the place of birth and burial of his forebears. Arriving at an old landmark in the Kiowa, at the Rainy Mountain, he describes how Aho treasured…