From Publishers Weekly
Blakely (Too Long at the Dance) turns, in this vastly researched new western, to a pivotal time in Native American history, when the advent of the horse completely transformed the life of the Comanche people in the space of one generation. When Born-on-the-Day-of-the-Shadow-Dog (named for the appearance of the strange creature that wandered through his village) entered the world in 1687, the Comanche were still part of the Shoshone people. Shadow is imbued with the spirit of the mysteriously beautiful animal that came with the "Metal Men" (the Europeans); he becomes the best rider among his people, earning a new name, Horseback. Masters of the horse, the Comanche separate from the Shoshone, migrating South from Wyoming in pursuit of the buffalo, and a new tribe is born (the "dawn" of the title). Blakely tells the story from the point of view of his Native American protagonists, depicting fierce intra- and intertribal conflict as the natives struggle to accommodate the presence of Spanish and French foreigners and missionaries in a land that was once theirs. The book reads briskly despite its length and is leavened with much Comanche lore; a glossary of Comanche/Shoshone words is included.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Booklist
Not only a heartfelt expression of the author's love of horses, this fine novel also offers a detailed study of life among those Blakely considers to have been the greatest horsemen of all time. The tale begins with the birth of a boy, first called Shadow and later known as Horseback, on the day the first horse is seen and eaten in the Shoshone encampment of the half-starved Burnt Meat People. It then takes us on the boy's journey into manhood as he becomes a trusted leader and fierce warrior, and his people, the True Humans, made mobile by their mounts, evolve into the Comanche Nation and the most feared fighters on the southern plains. Painstakingly researched and carefully written, the novel is an obvious labor of love that merits comparison with such established classics as
Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee,
Little Big Man, and
Hanta Yo. Although it is fiction,
Comanche Dawn should be required reading for anyone wishing to know about life among the early Plains Indians.
Budd Arthur
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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