Indian Books


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Indian Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Indian
Two Leggings the Making of a Crow Warrior
Published in Paperback by Apollo Editions (1980-06)
Author: Peter Nabokov
List price: $4.95
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Average review score:

Very authentic feel
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-15
This book is among my all time favorites in Native American studies. Two Leggings was not the greatest or the most famous of the Crows, but he seemed true to his culture. This gave the book the very rare feel of cultural and spiritual authenticity. Bueno.

Spiritual Power and Medicine
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-09
If you are interested in learning about spiritual power--sometimes referred to as medicine--amongst the plains Indians, then this book is for you. It discusses Two Leggings search for power through traditional vision quest and his inability to receive anything substantial. Ultimately, he receives something of value extended to him by his father-in-law. Also covered is what happens when a person makes a committment to spirit then dishonors that committment--the colapse and end of Sun Dance for the Crow people until it is returned years later through the Shoshone people.

A review of Two Leggings
Helpful Votes: 20 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-05
This book was prepared by Nabokov from notes from interviews between the ethnographer and collector Wildschut and the aged Crow warrior Two Leggings. Those looking for a general account of plains Indian life in the mid to late 19th century may be disappointed. This book deals almost solely with Two Leggings spirtual pursuit of 'power' or 'medicine' to give him success in horse raids. And by extension status within his tribal society. The book highlights the significance of dreams to the Plains Indian and the impact they had on the real world. The book documents Two Leggings various attempts to acquire 'power' through fasting or vision quests and also gives accounts of numerous horse raids he made against his tribal enemies. The end of the days of freedom on the plains and the reservation period are largely ignored for, as far as Two Leggings was concerned, nothing of interest happened after the buffalo disappeared and horse raiding ended.

All in all an excellent book which reveals how the spritual world and warfare were so interwoven in the mind of the Plains Indian.

Indian world, Indian ways
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-15
In 1919, anthropologist William Wildschut, living in Billings, Montana, at the time, befriended Crow Indian chief Two Leggings, who was living along the Bighorn River. Wildschut was interested in gathering Two Leggings's reminiscences. Bringing translators with him, Wildshut met with Two Leggings at his homestead over a lengthy period of time and wrote his memoirs down. The final 480-page manuscript was deposited in the archives of the Museum of the American Indian, where Peter Nabokov discovered it. Nabokov reworked Wildschut's manuscript somewhat, usually tightening up his expansive style, and this is the result.

The most striking thing about these reminiscences is how Two Leggings is not nearly as interested in Indian-white relations as he is with his raiding adventures against other tribes, especially against the Piegans. It seems his whole existence is centered on this activity. Almost equally important are his vision and dream quests; all important decisions are based on what are conjured in dreams and visions. Raiding enemy tribes, gathering coup, stealing horses - all these activities were primary to anyone wishing to be a great warrior chief. Possessing strong medicine that produced powerful visions was also important. Two Leggings relates his story up to about 1888 when the Crows were restricted to their reservation; he concludes, "Nothing happened after that. We just lived. There is nothing more to tell." His memoir is a fascinating one, and one that makes little acknowledgement of or concession to the white man's world.

Indian
The Unforgettable Maharajas: One Hundred and Fifty Years of Photography (Roli Books)
Published in Hardcover by Roli Books (2004-09-01)
Authors: Dharmendar Kanwar and E Jaiwant Paul
List price: $60.00
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Average review score:

Fascinating and enchanting
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-18
Love to look at pictures of this misterious culture and enjoy imagining their lives before the English arrival. Highly recommend it.

Marvellous Maharajas
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-03
A truly enchanting book. After reading it I was on the Internet for hours, researching all the various people whose pictures were in it. Highly, highly recommended.

An amazing collection of photographs..,
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-05
..from a surreal era of Indian history. It was a totally ostentatious and absolutely over the top lifestyle. The pockets of the sub-continent that were these states of princely India were to a degree remnants of the Mughal Empire. It truly must have been a painstaking process to put together all the photographs. But what a collection! Going through this book really takes you back in time, some superb rarely seen photographs. Some of the photographs are from private collections and national archives.

Lavishly illustrated, magnificent book
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-18
This is an extraordinary book, with fantastic pictures, some very famous, other belonging to princely familly collections, never seen before.Much better than most of the others on the same subject.

I highly recomend it for anyone interested on Imperial India and the maharajas

Indian
Up Against Odds: Autobiography of an Indian Scientist
Published in Hardcover by South Asia Books (1993-05)
Author: Piara Singh Gill
List price: $21.00
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Average review score:

Frank and Honest Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-01
Similar to J. Robert Oppenheimer, Director of the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory and Manhattan Project, Dr. Gill was unique in that he transcended the continuum of leadership from leadership within a specific academic domain to a macro, international recognition. This should not be surprising because of Dr. Gill's close association with the likes of Dr. Oppenheimer and Dr. E. Fermi, the winner of the Nobel Prize in 1938. Dr. Oppenheimer asked Dr. Gill to present a paper at the California Institute of Technology at a symposium organized to celebrate the 80th birthday of Prof. R.A. Millikan, winner of the 1928 Physics Nobel Prize. The parallels between Dr. Gill and Dr. Oppenheimer do not stop at academia; both men were instrumental in nuclear consulting with their respective chief of states. Pandit Nehru, the first Prime Minister of India, and a close friend of Dr. Gill, called upon Dr. Gill for nuclear arms advice.

Splendid Read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-12
Revealing look at an Indian in America. Funny stories about cultural differences. This would be a good book for school summer reading because it teaches the value of hard work and good humor.

Gripping and Fascinating
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-22
Piara Singh Gill or "Pi," his nickname, has written a nicely detailed book in which he elucidates his struggles as a boy, his journey to America, and his work with the field of cosmic ray physics. Dr. Gill studied and worked under eminent professors such as Professor Compton. Dr. Gill was a nobel-caliber physicist, and this would have been realized by the masses had he have stayed in America, however, he returned to India to help his mother country.

Dr. Gill was a key figure during the middle of the 20th century enmeshed in Indian political and scientific dynamics. Prime Minister Nehru frequently asked Dr. Gill for advice; they used to have breakfast together. Science in India is synonymous with this father of Indian Science: Professor Gill.

I recommend this book because it shows that hard work certainly pays off! A must read for all immigrants and all people who believe in the American Dream!

Up against odds
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-22
It is a very nice biography of someone growing up in rural India and making a success of their life as a scientist. Dr. Gill gave back to his country a place in academic excellence in Physics. He had to constantly push against the odd forces of newly independent India, but achieved recognition for his efforts.

Indian
Valley of the Spirits: A Journey Into the Lost Realm of the Aymara
Published in Hardcover by Wiley (1996-03)
Author: Alan L. Kolata
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Average review score:

this is a fine book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1997-04-10
I'm an Egyptologist, but I like to read outside my own field. This excellent summary of years of work in the field was a real joy. It was exciting to read of a culture "done in" by a change in climate (we think this also happened in ancient Egypt!), and heartwarming to read of ancient irrigation technology revived to help people today. I feel this book is a must for anyone who cares about the past . . . and people today

Spirit of the Aymara
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-27
If you can't go to Bolivia, this is the next best thing. The archeological information about Tiawanaku is fascinating. The cultural information regarding the Aymara is great too. But, my favorite part was the project to reintroduce abandoned agricultural practices to the area. Much larger populations were supported in ancient times due to the micromanagement of climate using irrigation and raised fields. And it was dramatically demonstrated that it works in this book! Good reading!

Archeology rocks!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-28
I think this is my favorite book I've read about South America before and after a trip there. The author introduces us to the people who live there and are his friends. We get to see how Tiawanaku looked when it was in use and learn about customs and traditions which live today. The project to re-introduce ancient agricultural practices of raised beds and irrigation, was exciting. We were kept on the edge of our seat waiting to see if a freeze killed the crop and put the population in jeopardy. A real armchair trip to Bolivia!

Valley of the Spirits
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-13
I really enjoyed this book and have since read further volumes on South American Indian cultures because of it. Written by the primary researcher at Tiahuanaco, Alan Kolata, the text covers the origin of the earliest pre-Inca highland civilization, the Ayamara. So impressive was the legacy of this people to their successors that the Inca themselves sought to legitimize their claim to empire by seeking to place their roots at this site. I found Kolata's successful test of his economic hypothesis regarding population density and farming methods (by the reintroduction of raised bed and canal farming at altitude) especially profound. It certainly made abundantly apparent the pertinance of modern day archaeology, not only to the preservation of the world's ancient inheritance but to the material well being of modern populations as well. This book is a good place to start for anyone with an interest in ancient South American cultures and to applied archaeology.

Indian
View from the Medicine Lodge: Stories from the American Indian's Soul
Published in Paperback by Seven Locks Press (2002-03)
Author: Jim Great Elk Waters
List price: $16.95
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Average review score:

Research
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-12
It was full of pretty good information and stories. I personally know the author and a few of the people in the book and in the references.

Great gift item
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-27
I received this book as a gift. What a great gift. The book contains many short stories that would have appeal to both the young reader as well and the older reader. The book would have a broad range of appeal. The book contains may one liners which can be used in our normal lifestyle. This book is a keeper and will become part of your library.
This book will be on my gift giving list....

So Much Wisdom
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-25
Jim Great Elk Waters is wise, observant and a great story teller. History came alive for me through his tales of Indian culture and his positive approach to life is evident in every story. His book will appeal to lovers of history, to families needing the answers reflected in his quote, "Happiness, laughter and family voices in a home keep more people living right than all laws man can make," and to those people looking for inspiration, "You can be your dreamed self if only you believe." I enjoyed all of his "Views from the Medicine Lodge."

A thoughtful and thought-provoking collection of essays
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-22
Written by Jim Great Elk Waters (the Shawnee Sub-Chief and a legislator on the Shawnee Nation URB Tribal Council), View From The Medicine Lodge is a thoughtful and thought-provoking collection of essays, stories, and poems that present Native American-based inspiration and life lessons to contemporary readers of all backgrounds. Lasting wisdom and deeply meaningful ponderings fill the pages this thoughtful account, which emphasizes the importance of finding balance between Man and Nature. View From The Medicine Lodge is an enthusiastically endorsed recommended for Native American Spirituality and Cultural Practices reference collections and reading lists.

Indian
Virginia Bound
Published in Hardcover by Clarion Books (2003-04-21)
Author: Amy Butler
List price: $15.00
New price: $6.00
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Average review score:

Great book to read aloud
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-25
The fifth grade teachers at my school have used this book for a "read aloud" for several years. It has adventure, sympathetic characters, and action. The kids love it and the historical context helps them understand the challenges the Jamestown settlers faced as well as the havoc that they wrecked on the Native American population. It has been a great way to launch our unit on colonial America.

Thrilling historical fiction
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-13
This hard-to-put down book tells the story of Rob, an English orphan, who is kidnapped and sold as an indentured servant to a cruel Tobacco farmer in colonial Virginia. The story is so well-paced and action-packed you don't even realize you're learning quite a bit about American history as you tear through the pages. An excellent choice for summer reading!

Thrilling historical fiction
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-13
This hard-to-put down book tells the story of Rob, an English orphan, who is kidnapped and sold as an indentured servant to a cruel Tobacco farmer in colonial Virginia. The story is so well-paced and action-packed you don't even realize you're learning quite a bit about American history as you tear through the pages. An excellent choice for summer reading!

best kid's historical fiction I've read!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-10
Virginia Bound is a great story! It grabs you quickly and makes you care about the characters. It's got suspense and adventure and hard hard decisions for the main character to make. Rob's choice ends up making this a book with an important moral, but rather than the book lecturing or seeming saccharine, it shows Rob's dilemma and his decision as part of his growing up-- just the kind of thing that makes kids feel grown up themselves.

This book is also amazing in the way it depicts the history-- not one bit boring, the author brings the time and place alive with amazing details she's gleaned from the best research on Virginia. Who knew that to grow tobacco people had to hoe dirt up over their leg until it reached their knee, jerk their foot out of the pile, and put the plant in that hole? Any kid who reads this book will know a whole lot more about hard labor, hard times, and the complicated history of the beginnings of our country than most adults do...and they won't even realize they're being taught.

One last note...don't think this is just for boys-- there's a strong female character to match Rob, and girls will enjoy her skill, courage, and intelligence.

Indian
Wablenica (Tale Of A Lakotah Orphan)
Published in Paperback by Balance Books Inc. (2004-03)
Author: Mary Kay Thill
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Average review score:

A gentle and engaging story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-14
A gentle and engaging story about a young girl forced into orphanhood while finding her true home at the same time.

Rose is your typical preteen, concerned with her appearance, boys and her grades. When Rose was 10 her father passed away and one year later her mother died of cancer.

Rose is shifted from foster home to foster home, discovering herself along the way. With the help of an ancestrial friend, Ruli, Rose is guided to learn her Lakotah heritage.

Geared toward children ages 10 and up, this is an excellent fictional supplement for the child studying Native American culture. You can allow your child to read independently without worrying about offensive content.

Extremely well done!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-30
"Rose" Marie Lamar lived in Chicago. At the age of eleven years, her mother died of cancer. Her father had died the previous year. The story opens up at the funeral of Rose's mom. Rose feels as though her life has shattered. She is now an orphan. She is sent to live with her Dad's Aunt Gloria in Iowa. Rose ends up struggling in several foster homes, none last long. Some people were good to her, others were bad.

A Lakotah guardian angel is sent by God to help Rose deal with all that is happening in her life. The angel is called Ruli (Running Under Lightning). With the help of Ruli and the heritage box Rose's mom left her, Rose begins to learn about her Native American family from the Pine Ridge reservation. These things go a long way in helping Rose through the foster homes.

During her last two foster homes, Rose attends the same school. In this school, Rose meets Megan Riley. They become close friends. The time Rose spends with Megan is wonderful and very special to both of the girls. Rose hopes that at the end of her long and lonely journey she will, somehow, find the new family she dreams of and a place to belong.

***** Anyone from age ten and up will find themselves enthralled with Rose and her strength as they read the tale of her hard journey. The book cleverly tells of the government systems, foster homes, and the harsh conditions, all the while entertaining the reader. It also gives much information on Native American heritage including ceremonies, some of the actual language, and traditions. You do not have to be Native American to enjoy this wonderful story. I am proud to highly recommend it to everyone! *****

Reviewed by Detra Fitch of Huntress Reviews.

Sweet Heartwarming Story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-08
I was very pleased with the book as I was recommending it to a friend of mine (15 years old) that has been feeling displaced within her own family. I wanted to show her that even though I'm not related to her, I could still be a part of her family without her having to give up any of her relatives. She is of a different nationality and the story helped her realize as I hoped it would that she does not have to give up anything of her own heritage to be loved by me. It is an easy and fast read and is great for all ages. I was especially touched as I have lost both of my parents and sometimes feel orphaned even at the age of 40.

A heartwarming, deeply moving story
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-09
Wablenica: Tale Of A Lakotah Orphan is a young adult novel about an eleven-year-old Lakotah girl who loses her mother and father. Entrusted to the Chicago foster care system, she struggles and founders in foster homes. A Lakotah guardian angel comes to her and teaches her the importance of taking pride in being Lakotah, aiding her in her search of a family and discovery of true friendship. A heartwarming, deeply moving story that intertwines the importance of tradition and faith in oneself with the yearning to connect and share the bonds of family love.

Indian
The Walking People: A Native American Oral History
Published in Hardcover by Tribe of Two Press (1994-06)
Author: Paula Underwood
List price: $48.00
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Average review score:

compelling narrative Iroquois history=textbook on learning
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-02
This is a great story, compellingly told with simplicity and beauty. It also happens to be the best single book I've ever read on "organizational learning."

The "Walking People" left central Asia and walked across an ocean, over to another ocean and back to the great lakes. On their way, they had to learn to deal with an ever changing circumstance, both physical and social. In order to survive, they learned how to learn as a people more and more effectively.

This story deals with issues such as the balance between diversity and unity, how to honor individual styles of learning and use these to help the community, ageism, sexism, racism, cooperation and competition, the balance of long term goals and short term necessities, planning and improvisation, war and peace.

Are you beginning to get the picture? This should be read by everyone, but at least by anyone who teaches or manages people. If a CEO or Senator reads one book in this millennium to prepare for the next, this should be it.

Real stories about real people from long ago-A MUST READ
Helpful Votes: 34 out of 35 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-29
Most of our historical evidence about the lives of our ancestors is in the form of tools, bones, fragments of pottery and cloth, and rock paintings. What was daily life really like before even these artifacts were tools? Perhaps something else did survive . . . In "The Walking People", Paula Underwood presents stories of real events lived by real people from the oral tradition of her people. Not a collection of mythological tales, they cover a span of history, geographical locations and events that is intellectuallly staggering and nearly impossible to put down. These are the stories of the Oneida people "from the beginning" which trace their intentional wanderings over three continents including how they crossed what is probably the Bering Strait, explore the events and decisions that made them who they are, and record some of their tantalizing encounters with other people. These are also teaching stories and can be understood on many levels intellectually and emotionally, individually and collectively. They can be seen as a straighforward historical account; an absolute literary delight; the unfolding of a people's culture and society; a presentation of the development of individuality (ego); a process of learning how to learn; an anthropological exlposion of possibilities; the evolution of scientific experimentation and evaluation; a description of ordinary living in various times; stories of individual lives and commitments - and so much more. I have read "The Walking People" cover to cover at least a dozen times, each immersion bringing fresh and expanding comprehension. The language used and the physical presentation on the page combine to make reading this book a nearly "auditory" experience. It invites the reader to walk with these people through time, participating in their experiences, sharing the tears of their misjudgments, the joy in their masterful accomplishments, and the relief that the laughter at their predicaments brings. It is a most extraordinary glimpse into the perceptions and thinking of real people in ancient and historical times. It is very difficult to describe the deep psychological effect of perceiving the actual voices and syntax of people who lived thousands and thousands of years ago - suddenly, "history" becomes an intimate, personal reality. Almost understated in terms of today's world of extremism, rampant emotionalism and dramatic egotistical conflicts, these stories carry a haunting impact quietly hidden in the simple, direct telling that spares nothing. I have no doubt that these stories have been kept accurately for millenia. This is the first presentation I have found that is a sharing of one Native American people's heritage; it has been my experience that such depth has either been lost altogether or is usually carefully preserved as part of the private, heartfelt identity of the Original People of America. Paula Underwood's generous recounting of the Oneida oral tradition is a stunning and manumental achievement in language and scope of material, a very special and unique gift to whoever cares to explore its pages. "The Walking People" blows the western world's catalog of knowledge to the winds, tatters our self-imposed limits regarding what is possible and how the possible may be accomplished, and rebuilds hope in a positive way - provided we can perceive the possibilities contained inthis true epic saga. It is a sharing of the soul for the soul, touching the essence of us all.

Wow
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-11
Sad, beautiful, wonderful, wise, haunting, and totally relevant to our global issues of change. Destructive paths happen easily. Creative paths are contingent.

What I am reading, by Alice Walker
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-01
This is the book that has been on my nightstand for the past several months. I read several pages each night. It is a big book, over 800 pages, written like a poem, and almost impossibly precious. The wisdom between its covers is astounding. For what this book teaches is something we, at this time in history, desperately need to know: how to start anew after devastation. How to be a whole people after we've been reduced to fragments. It teaches that the wisdom is within us, to survive, to begin again, to thrive. Hallelujah.

Indian
Walking Where We Lived: Memoirs of a Mono Indian Family
Published in Hardcover by University of Oklahoma Press (1998-10)
Author: Gaylen D. Lee
List price: $19.95
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Average review score:

A Fascinating Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-14
Gaylen Lee has offered a gem! This non-linear memoir is so thoughtfully written that it provides delicate insight into the history and life of the Mono Indians while wrapping you in the story along the way.

Pulled along through the text you want to read more but not without appreciating each step. This is a true treasure.

This book is rich with detail about a Calif. Indian family.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-09-14
Non-Indians reading "Walking Where We Lived" may have to re-think everything they once believed about California's indigenous population. On the eve of the state's sesquicentennial celebration, Gaylen D. Lee offers a view of the Gold Rush and subsequent settlement of California by Americans and immigrants that is clearly, from his perspective, nothing to celebrate. But Lee's book is hardly a whining narrative of the atrocities suffered by the native people of California. Instead, it is a celebration of his family and families like them who have managed to survive and perpetuate their culture, religion, and values despite the onslaught of intruders. Following the pattern of the seasons, Lee describes the lives of his ancestors, historical events which affected them, their loss of freedom, and the endurance of a way of life in the face of generations of adversity. "Walking Where We Lived" is rich with detail. Lee's description of the daily activities of his family and forbears is based upon knowledge passed to him and actual experience. As a child he accompanied his family to gather acorns, berries, and plant materials. He watched the women make baskets which he says are still used in his home. He learned to hunt and fish in the old way. Although he understood English, he spoke only the Nim language prior to beginning kindergarten in the mid-1950s. The generally peaceful life lived by the Nim and their fellows all over California was shattered as Americans moved to claim every inch of the new state following secession of the territory by Mexico and the world-famed gold rush. Stories of the Mariposa Indian Wars in the spring of 1851, and other skirmishes are generally told from the point of view of Central California settlers eager to rid their new land of pesky savages. "Walking Where We Lived" offers a view from the other side. It is not surprising for a man in Gaylen Lee's situation to be angry, and anger surfaces occasionally in his book. The region surrounding his life-long home place was once traversed freely by his ancestors. Now the land is fenced off and paved over. Rivers are dammed. Animals which once lived with and helped sustain the people are seldom seen. What is surprising, in the face of generally accepted lore about the Indians of California, is that Lee's family-and others-have maintained their culture and sense of community despite near annihilation.

An important book for Mono culture.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-04
As a Mono Indian, I have nothing but words of praise for Gaylen Lee's work. He begins by saying that he only speaks for himself, which is important since our families' experiences are all so different depending on contact and acculturation. I am grateful that this book was written, as it is something all people can read, appreciate and gain understanding of a California tribe.

By, not about, an Indian
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-10
The reader hears the authentic voice of a tribe of Indians of the US far west. Lee knows his people's language and uses Native words liberally. He exlains attitudes and concepts that were at such odds with white thinking that it made the Indians vulnerable to domination. He does not apologize for his people's culture. Adults whose knowledge of Indian life may have ended with elementary school social studies will find this book astonishing

Indian
A Warrior Blends with Life: A Modern Tao
Published in Paperback by North Atlantic Books (1993-06-24)
Author: Michael Latorra
List price: $14.95
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Average review score:

One of the Better Translations You'll Find
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-21
I was pleasantly surprised after stumbling upon this interpretation of the Tao te Ching. It is full of rich wisdom and insight. The author presents his translation of each stanza on the left-hand page, with his own commentaries on the right. I found that his insights into the Tao are unique and penetrating.

Do yourself a favor and buy this book. I am very glad I read it!

Wonderful, Beautiful, Compelling
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-18
This wonderful little book is full of insight, wisdom, beauty, and love. Read it. Enjoy it. Have your life wonderfully transformed. Become the guard. (Once you've read this excellent book, you'll know what I mean.)

Best Tao book I've read
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-09
I've read many spirituality books and this one is very good. It contains advice you'll find elsewhere like "keep everything simple," advice often attributed to taoism. It also contains Latorra's interesting interpretations of the Tao Teh Ching such as "when there are free markets, the people's needs are met." But by far my favorite part of the book are the very beginning and very end. It tells Lao-tzu's story of leaving the palace on an ox and meeting a guard at the edge of Chinese territory when he gave the guard the Tao-teh-ching. I plan to buy a copy of this book for my taoist sister for her birthday. Latorra also has comments about the afterlife about a paradisaical earthlike realm where people still live and die, one realm lower than heaven but 6 realms higher than earth. The story of the guard is continued at the end of the book to a beautiful conclusion. In my own conclusion, I recommend this book highly.

Hadar Shapir

I Enjoyed Mr. LaTorra's Book
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-06
A Warrior Blends with Life: A Modern Tao
by Michael LaTorra

On Dec. 5, 2005 the Ludwig von Mises Institute blog had an article by the late Dr. Murray N. "Mr. Libertarian" Rothbard entitled The Ancient Chinese Libertarian Tradition, originally printed in the Journal of Libertarian Studies, Fall 1990. Murray began his article, "The first libertartian intellectual was Lao-tzu, the founder of Taoism", and went on to describe Lao-tzu's recommended minimalist government and "live and let live" philosophy.
Lao-tzu's original book consists of 81 poems titled Tao Te Ching (Book of The Way"). All of the 81 poems appear in Mr. LaTorra's book along with a page of so of his own interpretation along side. The poems include what is standard advice today, such as "The more (people) live for others, the richer their lives become", "The more they give, the more they get" and "The nature of absolute being extends goodness unconditionally and universally, and doesn't pick fights with anyone', all from poem 81.

Poem 75 by Lao-tzu (around 400-500 BC), states:

"Why do people joke about death and taxes?
Because their rulers take too much for themselves,
and care only for personal power and prestige.
That's why people joke about death and taxes."

Poem 28 includes the line "Truly, the best governor governs least", which we often attribute to Jefferson, and also includes the line "Never stray from the truth." Twain said that "When you tell the truth, you don't have to remember anything", implying that it was the easiest and best way to live.

In Poem 32 Lao-tzu says "Return to simplicity and harmony will be restored", and again in poem 48 he says "To live in the chaos of the moment, simplify! Then simplify again," reminiscent of Thoreau's "Simplify, simplify."

Poem 38 begins "A truly good person is not self-conscious about goodness...When people estrange themselves from the Way, they can't see themselves as they are....When only ceremony and etiquette are left, people lack loyalty and kindness. Their society enters the chaos preceding the next cycle of history."

I circled and penciled in a lot more comments on this book, but if your curiosity is aroused, check the whole work out for yourself. One last point that I found interesting is that the Tao Te Ching seems to have been written a fairly modern style, like the Koran, and doesn't have references to God turning people into pillars of salt, or anyone slaying anyone else.


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