Let the Drum Speak edition by Linda Lay Shuler Literature Fiction eBooks
Download As PDF : Let the Drum Speak edition by Linda Lay Shuler Literature Fiction eBooks
She is called Antelope, the daughter of Kwani—She Who Remembers. Possessed of the same mystical powers that made her mother beloved and feared, Antelope takes her infant daughter and follows her wandering mate to the fabled city of the Great Sun. Here, her beauty arouses the lust of the city’s supreme ruler—a man who will become her most terrible enemy. And here, in a place of primitive splendor and savage human sacrifice, far from her people and torn from the man she loves, Antelope must struggle for her survival...and to keep her child safe at all costs.
Let the Drum Speak edition by Linda Lay Shuler Literature Fiction eBooks
This is the last of Shuler's trilogy about the emergence and development of two pre-colonial Indian cultures. One culture living in the Mississippi River course and the other in the Southwest. She brings alive the cultures with the development of her characters. The characters are the voice of the cultures. However, unlike the first two stories, Shuler focus more on the development of the love life of a female who follows her first love from the southwest to the River culture. At that point the plot could be a modern story of a woman who follows her love from one city to another, is deserted, falls in love with another man who has responsibilities of government. Shuler has the annoying practice of repeating information about the daily lives of her characters. The information is primarily an interpretation/discussion of assumed cultural practices. As a teacher of English and linguistics I am made most unhappy when authors and editors consistently use and allow grammatical errors in the progressive narrative of the plot. This book was laden with multiple errors in the correct usage of the forms of "to be"---Example: If he was instead of if he were......Product details
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Let the Drum Speak edition by Linda Lay Shuler Literature Fiction eBooks Reviews
I've completed reading the trilogy and my reaction is primarily positive. Yes, there were times when the plot lagged, but it was a nice change to read a series that was obviously well researched, even if the nature of some representations could only be speculative. The developments and cultural representation all seemed very plausible. The only real negative I felt was over Skyfeather. She was a very unlikable character in Book Two, which made it hard to empathize with her. I think a bit more work on her character development would've enhanced the series. I enjoy books like this, though, because they make me think of when the ancient ones lived. The Craig Mound, Caddo and Cahokia are all very real but unless things have changed, our children get none of this in school curriculum. After reading the third installment of the Trilogy I went out and Googled and was fascinated by what I found. What a shame society of the time of discovery did not exercise the caution taken now whenever a burial site is uncovered. If it had, we'd be able to see so much more and have much better knowledge of the cultures that populated that Valley before the White man and even before our Plains Native American peoples migrated to that area.
This is one in a series of three books about Kwani, a fictional Anasazi woman from ancient times. I loved the stories and they are quite reminiscent of Jean Auel's Earth people series featuring Ayla of prehistoric times. She uses great detail in describing what is now known as Mesa Verde and other parts of the world centuries ago. The detail of the lives these people led is pretty thorough and of course there is a bit of a love story and a telling of a family as well. For anyone who enjoys historical fiction, particularly about native people's you will enjoy this.
I loved reading a book so researched I could believe that these peoples depicted in these books of different tribes existed and their interactions with their differing cultures. The time of this book and others of this series is what I loved too. They take place when the people had lived on off the land for hundreds of years or more, with generations and generations of history and knowledge of how to coexist within natures rules. I am so tired of reading about the crushing of the Original People of the Americas by the influx of the white men. It continually breaks my heart and it always ends the same....badly. But these novels let you live within their villages and experience their lives, tribal structure, rhythm with the seasons and nature and respect for their Creator. These stories take place before the People have to deal with their demise. It is enjoyable yet engaging and has enough drama/suspense to support your interest all the way. I was sorry to end the journey with these 3 books of the series. Read them all!
It has been a very long time since I felt compelled by a storyline and characters to the point that I envisioned myself as one of them. The Kwani series, and especially this final installment was so compelling that I kept stopping my reading to research the locations, the Native American tribes and societies and culture discussed. I could not extricate myself several times and felt myself wishing I were Antelope and living her life. The ending was poignant and disappointing in that you wanted two good people, Antelope and Far Walker, to remain together, but that would have been a impossible ending. The fact that Far Walker let Antelope and Skyfeather return to her village was heart-rending. His soul and goodness confirmed themselves at the end because he realized that they would be garroted if anything happened to him and he could not live with that responsibility, especially after a near--death experience. Outstanding escapist series with many, many interesting pieces of cultural history woven between the compelling lives of these two and Kokopelli's son. The book also introduced a fascinating theory as to why the Pueblo and Anasazi people began building their homes in protected cliffs. The Europeans, are coming! The Europeans are coming! I highly recommend the entire series, but start at the beginning...the Kwani/Kokopelli story is fascinating in its own right!
This is the last of Shuler's trilogy about the emergence and development of two pre-colonial Indian cultures. One culture living in the Mississippi River course and the other in the Southwest. She brings alive the cultures with the development of her characters. The characters are the voice of the cultures. However, unlike the first two stories, Shuler focus more on the development of the love life of a female who follows her first love from the southwest to the River culture. At that point the plot could be a modern story of a woman who follows her love from one city to another, is deserted, falls in love with another man who has responsibilities of government. Shuler has the annoying practice of repeating information about the daily lives of her characters. The information is primarily an interpretation/discussion of assumed cultural practices. As a teacher of English and linguistics I am made most unhappy when authors and editors consistently use and allow grammatical errors in the progressive narrative of the plot. This book was laden with multiple errors in the correct usage of the forms of "to be"---Example If he was instead of if he were......
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