Define Out Of Books Cheyenne Autumn

Title:Cheyenne Autumn
Author:Mari Sandoz
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Anniversary Edition
Pages:Pages: 290 pages
Published:February 1st 1992 by Bison Books (first published 1953)
Categories:History. Nonfiction. Westerns. Native Americans
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Cheyenne Autumn Paperback | Pages: 290 pages
Rating: 3.98 | 274 Users | 41 Reviews

Commentary As Books Cheyenne Autumn

I found this to be a powerful book. I noticed a fair amount of criticism concerning readability. Her prose spoke to me. The book requires some effort. The litany of atrocities never lets up. Hope runs threadbare.

The Cheyenne are soft spoken people according to this account. The way these people responded to their diaspora and eventual forced starvation speaks well enough of their character. The emergence of Little Finger Nail a young warrior and the shattering of Black Coyote's spirit and mind struck me deeply. Little Finger Nail finds himself wailing in supplication for the gift of a new way of life. He is a bone thin man, a young warrior who seems to recognize he needs to burry his ego's needs in the earth for the benefit of his people. Black Coyote turns his violence towards his own people. I couldn't help but think of some of the mass shootings of recent years.

I most certainly found the book worth the time and effort. If I don't find a book to be worthwhile, I rarely bother to review it. The book is full of movement. The Cheyenne are nearly always on the run. Cheyenne Autumn, is rather dense I suppose. I have read other books concerning the life of the Cheyenne and other tribes of the plains. I believe that previous reading very much allowed me to appreciate the clarity and quality of the prose. I felt the structure of her writing was intended to slow a reader down closer to a walking pace. Any attempt at rereading a passage to get events or characters straight is likely to force a reader to relive a traumatic event.

I will give more thought concerning the prose. Something about that criticism fascinates me quite a bit. The confusion described by some reviewers strikes me as being analogous to what a person living through such an event might experience. She may not have intended the book to be easy, I don't know. Without having given much previous thought, I believe her style succeeds.

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Original Title: Cheyenne Autumn
ISBN: 0803292120 (ISBN13: 9780803292123)
Edition Language: English


Rating Out Of Books Cheyenne Autumn
Ratings: 3.98 From 274 Users | 41 Reviews

Judge Out Of Books Cheyenne Autumn
Through our inhumane treatment of Native Americans we have not learned a thing about our depression of groups of people. We took away their culture, their way of life, their children and their lives, the problem being we are still committing the same atrocities today. We say all lives matter but what we actually mean is, some lives matter more than others. We sit in our little bubbles and surround ourselves in our self righteousness and selfishness, we call ourselves Christians and conveniently



Cheyenne Autumn, by Mari Sandoz, 1953. This is a brilliant, painstaking, moving book. A history as the Greeks understood history, I think literature that brings us an understanding of our past, and our current lives. By the end, the story of the Cheyenne peoples long trek north amidst the corruption and violence of the American West in 1878-79, had become a universal story. How does a people survive when the old ways are gone and the new ways full of lies, depravity, and seduction? This is the

I loved this book. It was like reading a gentle stream. Mari Sandoz as expected shows the great humility and perseverance of the Cheyenne. The most pleasant surprise of this book was how Mari wrote it. In the beginning she explains that she is going to the best of her ability express the beauty of some Cheyenne words and phrases that she states really have no place in the English language. I believe she references to a Cheyenne word for how a breeze feels upon the face. And to her credit she

When I read about the Holocaust, the Killing Fields of Cambodia, and the genocide in Rwanda and Sudan, I have to remember it happened here, too. In September of 1878, the Cheyennes left Indian Territory for their home country up north. The US government had told them if they didn't like Indian Territory, they could leave. So they did. What the government didn't say was they would send the army after them, to kill them. Those captured were imprisoned in Fort Robinson without food or water. So

This is certainly an important book, and I think required reading for anyone wanting a broad perspective of US history. Many criticize the writing, but I did not find it awkward to read due to writing style. I have read many books written from a non-Anglo American perspective, and there is a lot of value in that. (This certainly does not fit with the toughest writing of William Faulkner, such as the first section of The Sound and the Fury or The Bear.)I found this was very tough to read because

No matter how often I read about all the broken promises to the different Native American tribes and their desperate attempts to continue their way of life in harmony with nature - it always makes me sad.Mari Sandoz had a lot of history to process in her book which made it seem a bit choppy at times as she talked about the different bands that tried to flee back north to their homeland and the situation from the Army's or newspapers' point of view. Nonetheless, Mari Sandoz did a wonderful job