From Publishers Weekly
In their first book of a planned epic series about the European explorers' conquest of the Native Americans, the archeologist husband-and-wife bestselling writing team (People of the Thunder) follow Black Shell, a wandering, mystical trader of the Chicaza clan who in 1539 first clashes with Hernando de Soto and his Conquistadors invading south Florida. Enslaved and cruelly mistreated by de Soto, Black Shell is soon freed by his extraordinary mate, Pearl Hand. Emboldened by his powerful Spirit dreams, Black Shell, aided by wily feminist Pearl Hand, swears revenge for the atrocities committed against the Native Americans and vows to defeat the brutal de Soto. De Soto obsesses over acquiring gold and spreading Catholicism in his armed scuffles with Black Shell and his intrepid band called the Orphans, a struggle cast as a traditional good versus evil showdown. The rich historical details and keen characterizations are offset by the graphic depictions of battlefield violence and social cruelty in this smooth, brisk-paced narrative that should generate wide appeal to American historical fiction fans. (Feb.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
The Gears, best-selling author-archaeologists, introduce the first installment of Contact: The Battle for America, their latest multivolume saga thoroughly steeped in the legend and lore of early Native American culture. Flush from the success of their previous blockbuster series, North America’s Forgotten Past, they march forward in time, fleshing out the clash between some of the first Europeans to arrive on the shores of the New Land and the indigenous population. Hernando de Soto’s exploration of the southeastern edge of the continent (present-day Florida) provides the dramatic context for the inevitable cultural collision. The Gears display their usual narrative finesse as they combine history, archaeology, and anthropology with an irresistibly intriguing story line that brings the past vividly to life. It’s not hard to imagine who the good guys and the bad guys are as de Soto and company are pitted against a Chickasaw trader named Black Shell and the disparate tribes he manages to unite in an ultimately doomed quest to preserve a threatened way of life. Nobody does Native Americana better than the Gears. --Margaret Flanagan













