North Dakota Books
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Important update of the historyReview Date: 2008-01-09
don't botherReview Date: 2007-06-26
Indian CountryReview Date: 2007-11-15
We need the whole story and more facts because it affected all our lives.The Federal injustice continues to this day.Review Date: 2007-08-18
I was deeply committed and involved within the Indian communities because for some strange reason yet unknown to me I have been very close to Indian people since my youth.
I suffered and experienced the daily abject poverty with them in their homes and could not realize why they could never share what most of the people called the American Dream. I knew part of the answer was almost a
total culture of poverty rather than the Indian cultures I had learned about in school.Multi-generational abuse,physical,sexual,and substance abuse,was the direct cause of much dysfunctional behavior I witnessed.I decided early in my life and to do whatever I could do to help change whatever I could in my lifetime that would stop this injustice. I would give my own life to change that.
I always deplored most organizational efforts to accomplish anything however I joined the Michigan Chapter of the Great Lakes Indian Youth Alliance and the American Indian Movement. The reason why I joined is because for the first time in my life I could feel the surge of self respect,self actualization and spirituality within these organizations,and the individuals and Indian Communities involved at that time.It was a refreshing healing wind of change like you feel after a thunderstorm.
I actually thought the young brilliant Indian Warriors were street/woods wise and spiritual enough to avoid the pitfalls of other dominant culture civil and equal rights organizations but ultimately as far as I am concerned the movement became more and more corrupt exactly like the enemy as it matured.
Individual's like Russell Means,Dennis Banks,Ed McGaa,Floyd Westerman and others less visible continued to self actualize and work hard to individually accomplish the original goals of their and our youth in rather unusual ways after AIM died. I know that each one is committed to do what they can do to improve the lives of their families,extended families,and Indian Nations. Sometime being human they fall short of our and even their expectations. They do what they can as Warrior in spite of almost total overwhelming repression by the United States Government and the American society. However humanly flawed they remain in my mind truly contemporary Warriors of this century.
I also feel Steve Hendricks and many others are doing their best to bring out the truth and documentation of constitutional and personal injustices of those days.I expect other individuals with information to come forth with their knowledge and writing because our society is even much farther away from the truth and principals that this Country was founded on today.
As far as I am concerned whoever killed the active committed lives of the Freedom Fighters,Ray Robinson,Anna Mae Aquash, Neogeshick Aquash the FBI Agents, and the others made a serious mestake and destroyed the purity, beauty,and Sacred Place of the Movement. The murderer or murderers who called for the hit on the precious Warrior Anna Mae Aquash in that instant killed AIM with the same bullet. They will pay for that decision deep within their soul.
I was pleased to see a that the Law Library at the Cleveland-Marshall College of Law purchased the copy of The Unquiet Grave I am reading for their students.
It is my hope and prayer that the youth of today will read everything they can get their hands on work, and commit to make justice a reality in their lifetimes.
As long as this abuse, poverty, and injustice remains in our society no one will be free. Until the truth is known we will all be in a "unquiet grave" just waiting for the next shovel of dirt.
If you want to broaden your knowledge,be alive,and aware at least read this book and those that will be forthcoming.
What Did Andrew Jackson Do?Review Date: 2007-05-27
Though flawed in some "facts" and reporterage, Unquiet Grave is marketable and intelligible to the masses and it is important that wider cultures read this (in the Aretha Franklin sense to RESPECT the Native cultures, delight in diversity, and abhor forced "assimilation and "THINK") about what the US Government did - not only in the Miner's Canary sense (If the US Government so cavalierly abrogates/ignores its treaties with the First Nations before this Nation - what does that tell other sovereign nations with whom we seek to entreat?) but also the Santayana sense ("those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.")
For a fuller understanding of Wounded Knee I (1890); Wounded Knee II (1973,) and context, this reviewer recommends my List "The water's still running and the grass still growing, so .? " including
Custer Died for Your Sins: An Indian Manifesto (Civilization of the American Indian)
and
Robert Redford/Sundance Incident at Oglala: The Leonard Peltier Story
What did Bill Janklow do? /TundraVision, Amazon Reviewer "What do you mean 'illegal alien,' Pilgrims?"
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"Blessing in Disguise"Review Date: 2008-04-07
The best series I have read in a LONG timeReview Date: 2008-02-19
Red River bookReview Date: 2008-01-12
Not the best in the series, but worth the time to readReview Date: 2003-04-08
Blessings in DisguiseReview Date: 2002-11-30

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Open your mind and heart.Review Date: 1999-06-10
"Eagle Vision" is a vital chapter in American Indian historyReview Date: 1999-04-16
McGaa FICTION!!!! Priceless!!Review Date: 1999-05-26
A total immersion in the kaleidescope of human existence!Review Date: 1999-05-25
A Journey in Native Spirituality told as fictionReview Date: 1999-10-25

Don't read while drinking anything hotReview Date: 2004-07-18
old age . I never thought the cornflakes would leave me .Review Date: 2002-10-16
Don't read this in a public place!Review Date: 2000-03-31
By all means, read it in a public placeReview Date: 2007-05-23
Heroic recollection of an Australian childhood Review Date: 2004-10-25
To me this is the most impressive of James' autobiographical writing. He has a gift for describing childhood and a kind of relentless honesty which is hilarious and provides something of a turbulent rollercoaster ride for the reader, as he describes the trauma of being a single child to a single parent in the aftermath of the Second World War.
I felt a little left behind by many of the historical and literary references James makes but this is more than made up for by the relish with which he uses the English language. For example, he describes a friend's mother giving him buttered bread covered with hundreds and thousands as like "eating a slice of powdered rainbow".
"Unreliable Memoirs" made the hair on the back of my neck stand on end - I wish I had read it years ago.
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my reviewReview Date: 2006-11-10
EnlighteningReview Date: 2006-07-12
A good history, a good bookReview Date: 2002-11-13
In addition to being one of the best stories I've ever read, this was a fantastic look at the old ways of the Dakota.
This is a great book, and not just for people who are already interested in the subject, although that certainly can't hurt.
Oh, just read the book already.
Great easy reading of a remarkable nationReview Date: 2003-05-03
A Wonderful Book!!!Review Date: 2003-10-25


Great first hand account of homesteading.Review Date: 2008-02-09
Rachel Calof's Story: Jewish Homesteader on the Northern PlainsReview Date: 2008-01-31
Second, the writing style of this woman brings the reader deeply into their time. It is a sensitive, intelligent, articulate expression of their lives, and it is even more remarkable considering that she was a woman without any formal education.
I bought several copies and have been handing them to my friends who, in
turn, pass them on to their friends.
Short but powerfulReview Date: 2006-02-05
From Eastern Europe to the Northern Plains of America ....................Review Date: 2005-09-16
Memorable pioneer autobiographyReview Date: 2001-10-23
The brief memoir could easily be assigned to high school or college students. A short afterward by the translator, Calof's youngest son, completes her story, and an essay by the editor, J. Sanford Rikoon, sets the experience of Jewish pioneers in North Dakota in historical perspective. The other academic essay included is of no value.

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An attention grabberReview Date: 2007-10-15
Unearthed Bones: A Diamond In the RoughReview Date: 2001-06-30
I scanned editorial reviews of Hudson's "Bones" on the Internet, and saw, to my surprise, that a few critics did indeed rank it with "Grapes". I, of course, remained skeptical. Now, having read "The Bones of Plenty", I must agree: It is rugged & truthful, hopeless & brutal. It is magnificent in every way.
Is "Bones" the absolute equal of "Grapes"? Perhaps not, perhaps due to its safe distance of time from the Depression Era; an era that Steinbeck's words, in real time, painted so artfully. Perhaps since North Dakota doesn't hold the Hollywood charm for film as did Steinbeck's golden California, and, just maybe, because readers suspected Hudson no doubt drew inspiration from Steinbeck, & not vice-versa, "The Bones" could not quite climb that "Grapeful" platitude. Who knows? But it DOES rank. READ IT! It is amongst the rarest & best works of fine literature. And, dare I admit this? IT HAS BROKEN INTO MY TOP 10! As an avid reader myself of classics, I was at first stunned by how The Bones so quickly took its rightful place alongside The Old Man, Eden, Mockingbird, Fountainhead, Deliverance, King's Men, Lonesome Dove, etc., on my very exclusive list; hallowed ground, stingily reserved.
So I re-read Modern Library's 100 Greatest 20th Century Novels and similar published rankings, certain I'd find my "Bones" comfortably amongst the elite. But nothing. "Bones" made not one list! Hmmm...where & why were "The Bones" buried? Why Hudson - a great writer's ghostwriter - lack of notoriety? Was Hudson's beautiful "Bones" buried in the early-60's avalanche of Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird? Joseph Heller's Catch 22?: great books both, and both, like The Bones of Plenty, notched in my personal Top 20. Perhaps we'll never know. I suspect North Dakota's writers receive about as much respect & fanfare as does the humble state from which they come.
So my hat's off to Lois P. Hudson; a woman whose politics, I've gathered, could not be more distant from my own conservative views. (I was not pleased by her recent comments on GWB!) But, politics aside, it is my testimony to say that readers of fine works are a little less blessed for not having unearthed & wept over Lois' "Bones". I suggest they grab a shovel. The literary world owes her a belated thanks for this glorious book. Thank you, Lois. Greg Ryan
An overwhelmingly honest bookReview Date: 1999-10-29
Interesting novel about plains during the dust bowlReview Date: 2002-06-14
Things fall apart in North DakotaReview Date: 1999-06-01
Since Ms. Hudson spent her early years in North Dakota, I suspect that her book is largely autobiographical. She is to be commended for presenting her characters realistically, and yet sympathetically. Some of the people in her book may appear to be villains, but, ultimately, all of them are victims of the same awful combination of environmental and financial collapse. This is one of the many books that one can read that makes one proud of our farmers at the same time that one questions their judgment in choosing a career that is both demanding and risky.

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great booksReview Date: 2008-04-26
The best series I have read in a LONG timeReview Date: 2008-02-19
Did the "professional" reviewers even read this book?Review Date: 2007-10-21
I liked this book.Review Date: 2004-07-29
Thorliff is stymied, caught between his family and his desires, and he has no idea what to do. He also struggles spiritually; Thorliff doesn't have faith that God will make things right for him and his family. If that isn't bad enough, a long drought means there might not be enough money for his tuition. Thorliff has to make a very difficult decision about his life. Will he go to college and follow his lifelong dream or go with his father's wishes?
In another part of the story, Elizabeth Rogers lives in Blessfield, Minnesota. She comes from a very good family and is determined to reach her goal of becoming a doctor. Her family encourages her to follow her dream, but it's nearly impossible for a woman to get into medical school. Does her heart mislead her to think otherwise about becoming a doctor?
I liked this book because it inspired me to think about what I want to be when I grow up. When I grow up, I want to be a prosecuting attorney because I think it would be fun, and you wouldn't get bored at all because you deal with different types of cases. Maybe when you read A DREAM TO FOLLOW, it will make you think about what you want to be when you grow up, too!
--- Reviewed by Ashley, Reading Diva
Sweet.Review Date: 2003-02-27


Jakes OrphanReview Date: 2007-04-23
Tree has to stay at Mr. Gunderson's farm for one year before he can be sent back to the orphanage. While he is on the train he meets Mr. Gunderson's brother, Jake who later puts great effort in keeping Tree in the family.
Tree desperately wishes his brother was on the farm with him but he doesn't have the courage to speak up and ask anyone if his brother, Acorn, can come live there too.
This book is about the effort a brother puts in to his new home to save and create a new family of his own.
Jake's Orphan is a heart-warming and touching book that I would recommend to anyone and everyone.
Jakes Orphan by Peggy BrookeReview Date: 2007-04-17
Summary:
Tree and his younger troubled brother, Acorn, live at an orphanage in St. Paul, Minnesota in the early 20th century. Although, Tree longs to be adopted, he has mixed emotions when a family from North Dakota wants him and not his brother, to go to work on their farm. Tree goes but finds life on the farm very difficult both physically and emotionally because Mr. Gunderson constantly criticizes his work. Despite this trying, Tree develops a strong bond with Mr. Gunderson's younger brother, Jake. When Acorn runs away from the orphanage and joins his brother on the farm, where he causes trouble, Tree worries about having to return to the orphanage. The tension explodes when Acorn runs away with Mr. Gunderson's gun. Tree, Jake ,and Mr. Gunderson go looking for Acorn but on their way Mr. Gunderson tries to shoot Acorn. Acorn gets mad and tries to shoot him back, but confuses Mr. Gunderson with Jake.Tree reacts fast and jumps in front of Jake,but the bullet got Tree in the head. He recovers after a few days ,and Jake decides to adopt both Tree and Acorn. After a long year with the Gundersons Tree and Acorn had finally found a home.
Opinions:
I think this was a great book at first I didn't like fiction books, but after reading such a good book like Jakes Orphan I will continue to read more fiction books
Recommendations:
I recommend this book to anybody it is truly a good book!!
A GREAT READ FOR YOUNG PEOPLEReview Date: 2006-09-18
A good book Claire P2/R2Review Date: 2007-04-22
You'll love this book if like to read historical fiction. Even though I didn't like this book that much, I think the author has a very unique way of writing that makes you want to keep reading the book until you finish it.
A Book for the Young Readers by Rosemary Proll-Clark Review Date: 2007-04-20
When Tree arrived at the farm he was introduced to Mr. Gunderson's brother, Jake, and then was immediately put to work milking the cows. Tree had only milked one cow so he was a really slow milker, and Mr. Gunderson was starting to regret bringing him. A couple of weeks later there was a big fire, and Tree was batting at the flames with a wet sack. The fire got bigger and bigger and after what seemed like hours, the fire was finally put out.
A few weeks after the fire, Tree went to his new school for the first time. He was greeted by two boys named Pete and Mike who said they wanted a boy named Leroy Johnson to come to the horse stables that afternoon and that Trees job was to make sure he got there. When Leroy arrived at the horse stable, Pete and Mike jumped out and tied him up. Then they started to beat him up. Just as Tree was starting to leave, his teacher caught him running away. The next day at dinner, his teacher shows up with the Leroy's father saying Tree beat Leroy up. Mr. Gunderson was really mad at Tree so Tree just stood listening quietly. Afterwards Tree ran behind the barn to find Jake there and started to tell him the actual story of what really happened. Jake told everyone the truth, but Tree still got punished for leading him there. Pete and Mike got the same punishment as him, which was cleaning out the horse manure from the horse stables. Mr. Gunderson was really mad at Tree and threatened to send him back.
After a few weeks passed, Mr. and Mrs. Gunderson went to see their son, Gus, and left Jake with Tree. About a day after they leave, Jake brings Tree a puppy. Tree decided to name the puppy Lady. As soon as Tree picked up the puppy, a visitor arrived at the farm. It was Tree's brother Acorn! Tree and Jake were both very surprised to see Acorn, but they were happy. When Mr. Gunderson and his wife came home, they were shocked! Mr. Gunderson wanted Acorn out of the house immediately, but a blizzard was coming in so Acorn stayed to help out at the farm. Once the blizzard passed, Mr. Gunderson let Acorn stay to help out with the farm.
Since Acorn was staying with the Gunderson's, he had to go to school. Acorn was in sixth grade and Tree was in eighth grade so the only time they saw each other during the school day was during recess. When Acorn heard what Mike and Pete did to Leroy, he decided to get even with them. The next day, people found odd things like tacks on the teacher's chair and love notes. On the last day of school, when Tree was in the horse barn cleaning manure, and Acorn ran in and acted as though he was there the whole time helping his brother. Then his teacher came and said for him to come with him because somebody had pushed over the outhouse while Pete was in it. Acorn said he thought he was on outhouse duty. Tree new what happened and explained it to the teacher and nobody got in trouble.
The next couple of days, Acorn didn't talk to Tree at all. Then Acorn told Tree he was going to run away. They were able to work out their differences but Acorn still wasn't talking to Tree very much. A week went by and Acorn started talking to Tree again. That night, everyone went to town to sell the calves, go shopping, and dance at a festival that had come to town. Tree danced with a girl that used to be in his class and Acorn played with some of the boys he knew. When they were heading home, Mr. Gunderson announced that he'd sold all his calves to their neighbor. Acorn had gotten really close to one of the calves and when he got home, he went out and broke all the necks of Mr. Gunderson's chickens. When Mr. Gunderson saw the chickens, Acorn said a fox had come and killed all the chickens. So they had lots of chicken for dinner.
When it was time for Tree and Acorn to go back to the orphanage, Acorn planned on running away that night. Tree woke up later that night and saw that Acorn had run away. Acorn had taken Mr. and Mrs. Gunderson's money, gun, food, and bullets. Tree ran outside yelling for Acorn and woke everyone up. Mr. and Mrs. Gunderson saw what Acorn took and Mr. Gunderson got his other gun. Tree found Acorn and Mr. Gunderson fired a warning shot. Acorn got scared so he was about to shoot Jake but Tree jumped in front of him and got hit in the head with the bullet. Tree fell to ground, but he only fainted.
The next day, Tree woke up and Acorn had gotten a good lesson taught to him from Mr. Gunderson and he was planned on being sent back as soon as possible. Jake stood by Tree and told Tree they wanted to adopt him, but they had to send Acorn back to the orphanage. Tree he couldn't send Acorn back alone and that if they adopted him, they had to adopt Acorn. Jake convinced Mr. and Mrs. Gunderson to adopt both Tree and Acorn. The next day, Tree and Acorn became Tree Gunderson and Acorn Gunderson.
This book was won an award for one the best childrens novels. I think this book is good for those kids who like adventure, surprises, and drama. I highly recomend it to those who look for a book that leaves them hanging in various places. I myslef didn't really like it, but everyone has their own taste.

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No really new information.Review Date: 2008-09-23
sitting bullReview Date: 2008-09-17
Tatank Iyotake - Sitting Bull; A Great Man, a pretty good bookReview Date: 2008-09-03
We kept it among ourselves because of the repercussions we suffered back then, and still suffer today. To this day, we Lakota out here in "Dakota" Territory are harrassed in every way, all too often. Not as openly as used to be, but it's still there - the coffee-shop talk, the disparaging stereotypes, stuff like that. I call it, "the Custer effect". My People beat the crap out of Custer and his goons that June day so long ago, and whites have been crying about it ever since, and trying to "prove what really happened".
Custer was no hero; he was a murderer of babies and women, unarmed warriors and the elderly. Sitting Bull was a man of great pride and honor and strength. This book is worth reading more than once. Thanks for writing it!
Good book sad story.Review Date: 2008-08-12
Bill Yenne
Sitting Bull by Bill Yenne is an interesting read. Yenne utilizes Stanley Vestal, Jerome Stillson of the New York Herald, Sitting Bull's Hieroglyphic Autobiography, and an assortment of first hand accounts to present this historic American Indian. For all of us "Custer People", there is a chapter on the Little Bighorn Battle in which Yenne writes "Custer probably feared that if he delayed his attack for another twenty-four hours - as he planned - then Gibbon would be a day closer and Custer would have to share this victory with him". There is an argument which establishes a good book. The book is filled with informative and controversial quotes. Yenne frequently dwells on Washington's government officials arguing over the necessary actions to solve their Indian dilemma. Politicians and red tape do not make a good western adventure, unfortunately that was their role in the history of the American West. I want to be with Custer out on the plains or in an Indian camp, not in an office in Washington.
Overall, the book was very good. Even the cover with Sitting Bull's picture and autograph is notable.
A Dramatic and Scholarly HistoryReview Date: 2008-06-30
I was surprised to learn that Sitting Bull was only with Bill Cody's Wild West in 1885 and never went to Europe, never performed for Queen Victoria. As the book points out, it was his deaf stepson, later known as John Sitting Bull, who toured Europe with Cody's Wild West during a few years after the turn of the century. Indeed, the popular confusion about this persists and resurfaced the other day at lunch with our tennis players. How nice to have it right!
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Thoguht provoking and important.
Seth J. Frantzman