

A Novel for all Readers--and His Best Yet
Wonderful, wonderful book.
Wow! Another Owens masterpiece!!!Like a hologram, Louis Owens' novel Dark River shimmers in the light and shadow. For newcomers to Owens' work, this mystery is an adventure that defies the common adventure stereotypes. For readers of American Indian literature, this novel is studded with subtle but hilarious references to other works in the field, and reveals Owens' versatility within the canon. For fans of Owens' other novels, this one is a tour de force, revealing again his talented verbal play and ability to charm and surprise the reader with his wry humor.


Okla HannaliThe Choctaw evaluate and accommodate the pressure of the immigrant American drive to acquire their native lands. The tribal people adapt by shifting their territory and preserving their society in a new area. They master the new lands and restructure their society again in the area newly adopted.
The reader feels empathy with the Choctaw. The book gives new understanding and experience of the people. Their blended culture exists today in the area described in the book. It is real.
My Favorite Book
Offers a brilliant look at Choctaw life.

The best yet from a talented author.
I loved this strong heroine and the endearing Irish hero!
A moving and interesting American historical.

The Flow Of Rivers, The Flow Of Lives
A satisfying, surreal metaphysical road trip
Feel the river sand under your feet and the thrillAs with his other novels, Owens tightly weaves many cultures to achieve a beautiful, funny and suspenseful story. If you're familiar with the mythological alter egos of Attis McCurtain and Diana Nemi it will take your breath away in its intricacy. A quick trip to read up on these two in Frazer's The Golden Bough will bring the story full circle, as many Native American stories tend to be presented. This book has the sexiest octogenarian couple readers are ever likely to encounter along with surprise players from across cultures and times


The Choctaw Code
a good example of respecting values of different cultures

"Choice" Review: Choctaws at the Crossroads
A Book to Look At: Choctaws at the CrossroadsNamed a C. Wright Mills Award Finalist by the Society for the Study of Social Problems (1998), this text draws on micro- and macro-analytical frameworks to critically examine the political economy of the Choctaws from their early life in Mississippi to the late twentieth century. Forcibly relocated in the early 19th Century from the lower Mississippi River Valley to Indian Territory (now Southeast Oklahoma, the Choctaws are today a dynamic and complex rural ethnic community in Oklahoma. This text models the tribe's social change from indigenous nation, to tribe, to ethnic minority community status. Many Choctaws are today employed as nonunionized laborers for large corporations, including Weyerhaeuser Timber Company and Tyson Foods, yet they still seek to retain some aspects of their traditional culture, through particpation in local church-based communities, regional tribal centers, and through tribal activities headquartered at Durant, Ok. Combining participant observation anthropological fieldwork and archival research, the author uncovers the processes by which the local economic and social practices of the Chocatws have become intertwined with, and, in some respects, dependent on corporate, extra-local, and global economic forces. The pathos of the tribe's struggle in the twentieth century is documented first-hand, while at the same time generalizeable conclusions are modelled through charts and maps. A thorough and passionate exploration.


Perfect Quick Reference Book
Great Book for Educators!!!

A profound look at history & communityThrough the memories of Choona, now known as Tom, who is very, very old, we learn of how he, as a young man, at last learned of that part of his family's history about which no one would speak & yet everyone looked so wounded. The Long March, when his people were forced to walk from Florida to Mississippi all through one fearsome, killing winter.
The Long March is rich in American history & memory. The marvelous drawings create a magically real place. This is a must for anyone who loves looking at other ways to live in community; other ways of teaching the spirit to grow & learning about courage, wisdom & respecting the memories.
An amazing book - to be read & read again & again & the pictures to be studied & dreamed over. Beautifully evocative.
This is a moving and beautiful book with awesome drawings.This is a truly delightful book. The drawings are lovingly created and the story is both touching and well written. What makes it even more compelling is that it is based on a wonderful true act of human generosity over 150 years ago, from one impoverished people to another, who, although worlds apart in both distance and cultures, had a common enemy, in hunger and oppression.
The author travelled to Oklahoma to research the book and has gone to great lengths to ensure the drawings are authentic as well as inspiring. I particularly like the drawings of the great-grandmother and indeed,the clever shadow of the American eagle when Choona raises his arms in the final drawing as well as the subtle, celtic symbols to be found in this same drawing. "The Long March" is a must for the millions of us with Irish-American heritage - every Irish American child should read this book!


*a sweet book*

The Next Best Thing Than Being There Assisting Dr. McCormackDr. McCormack in the US can be likened to James Herriott of England. His stories of animals that he treated and the start of his career in the 1960's makes the reader feel they are right along side him assisting in whatever procedure needs to be done to his animal patient.
I am a person of great compassion for animals and as a reader, I was truly appreciative that the love and compassion that Dr. McCormack has for his animal patients shines through to the reader's soul. I laughed with this book..I have cried with this book...I have pulled for the sick animal in this book...I have rooted Dr. McCormack through as he treated tough cases in this book.
There are books about animals and then there are the special books about animals because the respect, compassion from the writer is there and the animal patients become real as one reads along the journey in the book.
If you are a James Herriott fan or an animal lover who is a reader, I highly, and I stress highly, suggest getting this book and reading it!
Good Vet Stories, Great Portrait of Alabama
A good read anytime!I enjoyed reading how tough it was to convert some of the farmers to the methods of modern veterinary medicine, and it was interesting to read the different methods the farmers had preferred to treat the illnesses in their livestock and pets until their was more modern help available.
I think this is Owens's best novel yet. Furthermore, it is accessible to any reader--one doesn't need to be familiar with his other work or knowlegable about American Indian literature to read it. Actually this is true for THE SHARPEST SIGHT (1992), which my then 85-year-old mother compared to Norman McLean's "A River Runs Through It." She would read and reread passages from each.
I understand DARK RIVER is a finalist for the Best Novel of the West from the Western Writers of America, and I wouldn't be surprised if he wins. He has received several awards for his earlier works.