Native American Books


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Native American Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Native American
Crazy Horse
Published in Hardcover by MJF Books (1997-02)
Author: Mari Sandoz
List price: $7.98
Used price: $3.94

Average review score:

a better Human Being
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-27
The world needs more people like the man whose life is explored in this book. Taken from interviews with those who knew Crazy Horse in varying degrees, he is consistently shown to be highly principled, ethical, and devoted to the welfare of his people. His example best expresses the difference between a "Leader" and a "manager" or "CEO". All are necessary, be we have lately begun to mis-order their importance, and have begun to choke on our own bitter mediocrity.

Sandoz shows the poetic mindset of the Lakota people
Helpful Votes: 35 out of 35 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-03
If you ever wanted to know what month the "moon of the popping trees," or who "the little people of the air" are all about, you only have to start this book. I have read it more times than you can count on five hands and it still moves me everytime. CRAZY HORSE probably paints the picture of exhiliration and despair of the 19th century Lakota(Sioux)and the end of their world as no other book on the subject I've read. (And I've read a lot of them.) When you've dried your tears at the end of this book, you begin to feel a kindred spirit with the Lakota and their struggle to save the world they know, and anger and contempt for the treaties and the word of the United States. Custer fans will be surprised that the so called "Battle of the Little Big Horn" appears with little fanfair in the book, it's almost over before you know it. The fact is, that's how the battle occured: just another skirmish with the soldiers, but one which the Lakota find out later is the turning point in their long struggle with the United States. A great tragedy in the classic sense of the word.

Native American
The Crazy Horse Surrender Ledger
Published in Hardcover by Nebraska State Historical (1994-09)
Author:
List price: $44.95
New price: $70.19
Used price: $70.80
Collectible price: $185.00

Average review score:

Lakota history researcher 28Feb08
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-28
Very nice addition to my collection of works pertaining to Crazy Horse. What is contained in the book are images of the original ledgers at Camp Robinson. Amazon doesn't stock this book, try the Nebraska Historical Society website. You'll be pleasantly surprised at what you find there!

Oglala, Lakota -- Northern Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-02
If I could give this more STARS I would. Anyone interested in researching the Lakota society should consult this book. This book contains a census in ledger form of Indian tribes (Sioux, Cheyenne, and Arapaho) residing at the Red Cloud Agency towards the end of the Sioux War. It is exciting to see the followers of Crazy Horse identified. What makes this book truly unique is that it is not an abstract of the ledger... it is a page-by-page photograph of the ledger -- as written in the 1870's (in good handwriting too!). So you don't have to rely on someone else's interpretation of the names. I only wish more books of this kind were published this way! The Ledger format consists of: Arraprahoes, Cheyennes, Young Man Afraid of Horses, American Horses, Red Cloud, Red Leaf, Yellow Bear, Little Wound, Departures, Arrivals from the North, Transfers to Spotted Tail, Indians from Spotted Tail on Passes, and Crazy Horse. Also included are Beef Records, Ration Tickets, etc., as well as a historical introduction (nicely documented). This book has enabled me to successfully locate Sioux families that I am researching. I highly recommended it. (Printed on acid free paper.)

Native American
The Cree of North America (First Peoples)
Published in Library Binding by Lerner Publications (2002-04)
Author: Deborah Robinson
List price: $23.93
New price: $22.73
Used price: $4.80

Average review score:

Good Book for Children
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-30
This was an excellent book for all children and adults that like to read.
Thank you.

An informative & profusely illustrated look at the Cree
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-26
"The Cree of North America," by Deborah B. Robinson, is a fascinating look at the Native American people known as the Cree. The book combines an easy-to-read text with many full-color photographs. Also included are maps, a glossary, an index, many sidebar articles, and other supplementary features.

Topics covered include the Cree language, their environment, plants and animals in their areas, early Cree history, traditional arts and crafts, and more. Robinson doesn't shy away from controversial subjects; for example, she discusses the impact of the anti-fur movement on the Cree, for whom hunting and trapping have been important economic activities.

Native American
Crossing Between Worlds: The Navajos of Canyon de Chelly
Published in Paperback by SAR Press (1997-11-01)
Author: Jeanne M. Simonelli
List price: $19.95
New price: $5.02
Used price: $3.38

Average review score:

A beautiful, intimate look at the Navajo of Canyon de Chelly
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-05
The navajo are a mysterious and beautiful people that are in the most honest fashion brought to life by Jeanne Simonelli and her photographer Charles Winters. The beautiful pictures taken of the people of Canyon de Chelly mirror and compliment the beautiful stories they tell and the lives revealed in Simonelli's intimate portrayal of Navajo life. This is a joy to read, and an essential companion in the study of the Navajo, or in any visit to the Navajo Reservation.

Walk in beauty
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 31 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-23
Ze-ee-lo-ee is the Navajo name for a grass that grows in Canyon de Chelly, which I learned along with a few other words from Lupita McClanahan. A former park ranger, Lupita and her husband Jon now lead private tours through the Canyon and are included among those profiled in this fine 109-page documentary of the Navajo way of life.

That way is a slower way, one that stops to greet the sun rising in the east, and puts in the time to paint in detail with grains of sand or threads in a woven blanket. A photograph of one such portrait is included with dozens of images of people and places in the Canyon. The portrait painted in a carpet is indistinguishable from the man portrayed.

The book explains some of the pre-requisites of life within the Navajo Nation, from the border towns of Flagstaff, Arizona and Gallup, New Mexico to the interior. It also details the history of the reservation, establishment of missions and schools in the 1910s, 20s and 30s, and the 1933 livestock reduction program that brought wealth to a few and poverty to many.

But it also delves deeply into the Canyon de Chelly microcosm, which is a community and family unto itself. Readers learn of ceremonies, both serious and light-hearted, as they are performed by the people who live here. The Kinaalda, for example, the puberty ceremony for young women, requires them to rise before the dawn on the second of four days and run into the sunlight. By the last day, the women are ushered into womanhood.

Of course, there are problems in the Canyon, chief among them the lack of employment opportunities. One of these is provided, of course, by the tourist industry. But that alone cannot absorb enough workers to accommodate a population of more than 150,000.

At Tsaile, at the eastern end of the Canyon, Navajo Community College gives young men and women higher education, while promoting them into the world of professionals. But until these youths advance, the book notes, the older generation has been left to "flounder between two worlds."

For those who wish to learn the trials and joys of Navajo life, this book is an excellent place to start. Reading it, one comes away with a sense of what it means to "walk in beauty."

--Alyssa A. Lappen

Native American
Crow and Hawk
Published in School & Library Binding by Harcourt (1995-03)
Author: Michael Rosen
List price: $15.00
New price: $2.99
Used price: $0.38

Average review score:

A Pueblo story about responsibility
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-09
According to the introduction of the book, this story was told in the indigenous language of Keresan by a well-known elder of the Cochiti Pueblo near Santa Fe, New Mexico, in 1928. This traditional story is part of a larger tradition of Native Americans in teaching values and right ways of living in community through storytelling. Crow is impatient and leaves her eggs in order to do the things that she wants to do. In essence, she gives up her responsibility towards her children. When Hawk comes by and sees the eggs abandoned, she sits on the eggs, hatches the eggs and feeds the chicks. She has taken on a responsibility that was not originally hers and will not give it up even when Crow comes back and is indignant that Hawk will not give up the young fledglings. While it is a hard story for Crow, one does notice later that Eagle is comforting Crow in her loss. As for the colorful and vibrant illustrations, childen will definitely enjoy them as they are led to think about personal responsibility and the costs associated with giving it up.

Good Stuff.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-04-26
This book reveals how modern adoption suits should be handled. The answer was plain, simple, and correct--how ironic that the bird which symbolizes America could see it so easily.

Native American
Crowfoot: Chief of the Blackfeet (Civilization of the American Indian Series)
Published in Paperback by University of Oklahoma Press (1989-08)
Authors: Hugh A. Dempsey and Paul F. Sharp
List price: $14.95
New price: $121.76
Used price: $8.00

Average review score:

A Fascinating, Captivating Read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-15
This book is interesting, adventurous, informative, accurate, captivating - a must read! It involves North American Indian history during the last half of the 1800's, in the Northwest US and Western Canada. The major focus is on the Blackfeet Indians of this area. Learn how critical the land and the buffalo were to so many Indian Nations, and how they lost both of these critical necessities of their life and culture. Read this book and learn that there were peaceful Indians, and there were violent Indians, rather like the rest of the world! Read this book and you will never think or say the North American Indians "were savages", as many people still do! This book should also be a must read for every high school student in North America! I highly recommend it!

A Fascinating, Captivating Read!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-15
This book is interesting, adventurous, informative, accurate, captivating - a must read! It involves North American Indian history during the last half of the 1800's, in the Northwest US and Western Canada. The major focus is on the Blackfeet Indians of this area. Learn how critical the land and the buffalo were to so many Indian Nations, and how they lost both of these critical necessities of their life and culture. Read this book and learn that there were peaceful Indians, and there were violent Indians, rather like the rest of the world! Read this book and you will never think or say the North American Indians "were savages", as many people still do! This book should also be a must read for every high school student in North America! I highly recommend it!

Native American
Crying for a Dream: The World through Native American Eyes
Published in Paperback by Bear & Company (2001-12-01)
Author: Richard Erdoes
List price: $24.95
New price: $0.01
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

This Book Literally Saved My Life!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-10
When this book first came out I was in an Intensive Care ward not expected to live. As a 50th birthday gift, one of the nurses put this book under my pillow. I did not know it was there. During the night I had 'visions' of a Native American man sitting next to my bed talking with me in a language I did not speak but somehow could understand. He told me many things. None of them could possibly come true. A couple of days later the Gail, the nurse, told me about the book under my pillow. When she pulled it out for me to see I almost went into cardiac arrest! The man in my vision was the same man from the book! A Lakota Medicine Man. I told Gail about my dream and she said she hoped it meant he was looking after me. Long story short; Months later I found myself on his reservation. The entire story is a book and a half. Incredible things happened to me from the time the book appeared in my life. Because of that book I am still alive today, fourteen years later. I hope to write a book of my own so that I can tell the entire story. This book is magical. Everyone who needs spiritual guidance to the right path should have it in their home.

Voices and Pictures from Native America
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-06
This is an excellent book on the subject of Native Americans. This book is filled with beautiful photographs and significant qoutes from various Native Americans, as well as brief descriptions of Native American history up to the present day. There is a very strong emphasis on various religious ceremonies such as the Sweat Lodge and Visionquest. Certain groups, namely the Sioux, Navajo (Dine) and Pueblos, are focused in on. All in all, however, this is an excellent book, more emotional and intuitive than anything else. Hopefully you'll be as moved by it as I was.

Native American
Cycles of the Sun, Mysteries of the Moon: The Calendar in Mesoamerican Civilization
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Texas Pr (1997-02)
Author: Vincent H. Malmstrom
List price: $40.00

Average review score:

life a detective novel
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-03
The author never jumps to conclusions, but slowly, gathering the clues to lay out a history of the Mayan calendar. It is up to you to decide whether his logic is correct, I could not find any flaws. As the book goes you pick up plenty of astronomical, geographical and historical facts. Very engaging.
The book has gone out of print, but is now posted in a digital format on the author's website. Still it is sad that it did not get wider attention.

Wonderful journey into Mesoamericas past!
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-10
Vincent Malmstrom has written a wonderfully entertaining book stuffed full of facts on the Mesoamerican systems of calendrical accounting. I had no idea the history of their calendars went so far back, nor that they were so widely used by such a great number of civilizations. His theories fill in where the facts leave off, as most studies on ancient cultures must, and the facts support his hypotheses. Malmstrom's theories on the origin of the calendar are quite different in some aspects than those of scholars before him -- one major difference is that he does not believe the Olmec developed the calendar. I don't want to ruin any surprises for a reader -- and there are some for those who accept the commonly supported theories of the Olmec as the "father" of all subsequent Mesoamerican civilizations -- so I will stop with just one more comment: If you have any interest in Mesoamerica or the cultures of the Zoque, Olmec, Zapotec, Maya, Mixtec, Toltec or Aztec, GET THIS BOOK!

Native American
A.D. 1250: Ancient Peoples of the Southwest/Includes Indian Travel Guide & Map
Published in Hardcover by Arizona Highways (1994-09)
Author: Lawrence W. Cheek
List price: $19.95
New price: $19.00
Used price: $17.95
Collectible price: $75.00

Average review score:

A Good Place to Start
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-06
This lavishly illustrated, large-format "coffee-table" book would make a good showing in anyone's living room--even if it is never read. On the other hand, it provides the most succinct and informative descriptions of the Desert Southwest's major prehistoric native cultures that I have ever read. With this single volume, anyone interested in the ancient cultures of North America can acquire a basic understanding of the Southwest's major five: Anasazi, Mogollon, Salado, Hohokam, and Sinagua. Cheek provides all the information a person needs to know in order to begin learning about these fascinating groups of people.

Descriptions of each culture, along with major archaeological sites representing each, as well as respectable interpretations of major archaeological findings blend to form an indispensible resource for any student of prehistoric North America. I wish I had found this book years ago.

So interesting...
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-24
I just thought I'd say a word about my liking this book very much. I am very interested in the indians from the thirteenth century, and this book did a wonderful job of presenting the information extremely well.

Native American
Dahcotah Or Life And Legends Of The Sioux Around Fort Snelling
Published in Hardcover by IndyPublish.com (2004-07-31)
Author: Mary Eastman
List price: $42.99
New price: $42.99

Average review score:

Written with empathy and sorrow for the sufferings of the Dahcotah
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-25
Written by the wife of an army officer, and compiled over the course of seven years in the 1840s at Fort Snelling, in what would one day become Minnesota Territory, Dahcotah Or, Life And Legends Of The Sioux was a groundbreaking look into Sioux (Dakota) customs and manners from a long-term observer, first published in 1849. Now republished in a new edition with a biographical preface about author Mary Eastman and featuring the quality painted landscapes of the original reproduced in color, Dahcotah Or, Life And Legends Of The Sioux retains its unique keen insight and attention to detail that distinguished it over one hundred and fifty years ago. Though Dahcotah is not an entirely unbiased account - for one thing, the author was a devout Christian who wished to see all Native Americans converted to her religion - yet it is written with empathy and sorrow for the sufferings of the Dahcotah people, retold in individual stories as well as broad descriptions, and deserves its reputation as a frontier classic.

Excellent, authentic non-fictional story book on Indian life
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-19
I found this book extremely interesting, as it is written by Mary Henderson Eastman, who actually got to know the Native Americans who lived near Fort Snelling, where Mary's Husband, Seth Eastman, was stationed. I was completely engulfed by her stories, and sometimes felt as if I were right there with her, experiencing first hand what these Native Americans were like and how they lived. I applaud the Afton Historical Society Press for their efforts in preserving our country's history, and for putting a small part of that history in such a beautiful book--lovely paper, and a stunning dust jacket. Anyone who enjoys history, or just a good story, should DEFINITELY buy this book!!


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Literature-->Cultural-->Native American-->76
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