Review
"This is the story of a boy who became a man in four days. Into it Charles McNichols has packed an amazing amount of action, adventure, Indian lore, and satisfying psychology. . . . A splendid piece of fiction that can stand up in any company of contemporary novels."—New York Times Book Review
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New York Times Book Review )
"One might almost say that Indian tales in America run the gamut from the romanticism of James Fenimore Cooper to the brilliant realism of Charles L McNichols. Almost within the Greek unties of time, place, and action, he has given us an unforgettable story which embraces the entire Mojave cul-ture."—Chicago Sun Book Week
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Chicago Sun Book Week )
"Crazy Weather belongs with our best beloved stories of a boy''s growing up. But it is a story for adults in every sense of the word. . . . McNichols belongs in the great tradition of storytellers."—New York Herald Tribune
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New York Herald Tribune )
"The book has anthropological interest and t is filled with good bits of psy-chology. . . . It is a reminder that racial enmities would die out in a single generation if they weren''t kept alive by tradition and adults."—New York Times
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New York Times )
"The story of the white boy who runs away from Civilization with his Indian brother appears often in American literary history from Natty Bumpo to the Lone Ranger; but McNichols tells a more mature story than ether of these. . . . Crazy Weather is an important document in our cultural history."—Western American Literature
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Western American Literature )
Product Description
In four days of "glory-hunting" with an Indian comrade, South Boy, who is white, realizes that he must choose between two cultures.