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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Choctaw", sorted by average review score:

Dark River: A Novel (American Indian Literature and Critical Studies Series, Vol 30)
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Oklahoma Pr (Txt) (March, 1999)
Author: Louis Owens
Average review score:

A Novel for all Readers--and His Best Yet
In DARK RIVER, Owens creates memorable characters (one of his strenths, I think) and tells a compelling story with laugh-out-loud humor. Consider one of the minor characters: the resident anthropologist Avrum Goldberg, who wears a traditonal breechcloth and Apache leggings and moccasins. He shares traditonal lore with tourists, who mistake him for an Apache and call him Chief Gold Bird, a title he denies without success. Goldberg's dream is for the Apaches to turn the reservation into a tribal theme park to attract more tourists and generate income, a scheme that does not gain favor with the Apaches, who are reluctant to give up their cars, televisions, and other twentieth-century technologies. This is by no means the central focus of the novel, but Owens skillfully weaves his imaginative subplots and characters into the central story, his concern about what is happening on a river in the reservation where he goes to flyfish.

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.

Wonderful, wonderful book.
This book is witty and funny and exciting and merits a lot of attention. Filled with avatars of Apache culture heros and the creative/destructive Vulva Woman, the text is rich with wry humor. Where else will you find a sexy elder woman spiritual leader whose long dead or absent husband was a preacher named John Edwards. And the brothers, each a "surviving twin," babies she brilliantly gave different surnames to trick the gods. Where else but in a Louis Owens novel will you find the hilarious discussion of the establishment of an American Indian theme park, or a wise-cracking ghost stuck in an acrylic wolf suit? And the ending of this one is sublime, impressive in its incredible appropriateness, but a real surprise, nonetheless.

Wow! Another Owens masterpiece!!!
Louis Owens' latest book is a tightly woven mystery, the story of Black Mountain Apache tribal game warden Jacob Nashoba's fast, difficult trip into the Dark River canyon to retrieve his granddaughter, left there to fast during a four day vision quest by a well-meaning entrepreneurial Apache whose occupation is to sell vision quests to Anglos. Nashoba's unresolved post-traumatic stress from his days in Vietnam on long-range reconnaissance patrols has alienated him from his Apache wife and most of the residents of the Black Mountain community, and over the years Jake has routinely sought peace in the wild and deserted river canyon, fishing and hiking its length. The usually deserted steep river canyon is particularly busy this trip, and the cultural, narrative, and mythic intersections are complex. Nashoba's Choctaw roots bring new facets to the Apache creation stories brought to life in this sophisticated novel, dovetailed with popular culture Vietnam-era legends and backed by a chorus that lends anthropological and Hollywood moviemaking insights to the mix. Brothers and brotherhood, and stories and how they are told (and who should tell them) are recurring Owens themes also interrogated in this powerful and lucid story.

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 Hannali
Published in Paperback by Univ of Oklahoma Pr (Trd) (October, 1991)
Authors: R. A. Lafferty and Geary Hobson
Average review score:

Okla Hannali
A well written and engrossing story of a society and people depicted through an account of the life and experiences of a notable and idealized prominent tribal character, Okla Hannali. The main character's experiences and views embody and illustrate the ideals and principles of a developed yet, beset people. The character parallels the people's adaptation, acquiescence, manipulation and eventual conquest by accommodation of the factors which beset them.

The 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
As a life time lover of books, I now give book reviews. Years ago, I found "Okla Hannali" in a state lodge book store. I first reviewed it for a group of federated women. Some of them were teachers, and I was invited to give it to two high schools. In all, I probably gave it a dozen times and it was always well received. There was laughter, and at the end when the old chief died, there were tears. Recently, one of my daughters-in-law, who is part Choctaw, discovered it and tells me it is being taught in a class at the University of Oklahoma at Norman.

Offers a brilliant look at Choctaw life.
My old copy of this book is held together with a rubber band because I've read it so often, and haven't been able to find another copy anywhere. Sensitive insight into the Choctaw experience during their removal to Oklahoma. A must read for anyone interested in American Indians or American history: highly recommended for those simply looking for the story of an endearing man.


Rachel Lemoyne (Women of the West/Eileen Charbonneau)
Published in Hardcover by Forge (June, 1998)
Author: Eileen Charbonneau
Average review score:

The best yet from a talented author.
I enjoy all of Eileen Charbonneau's work. She has a rare, fresh voice that brings untold stories to life. This book is the best yet!

I loved this strong heroine and the endearing Irish hero!
Every page of this book was a delight; it was so different because it took the reader to the famine in Ireland and then back to America, where the couple, wed for convenience, now make their way to the West. The attraction between them crackles with sexual tension and when they finally do consummate their marriage-- well, I'll say no more. I do heartily recommend this wonderful book. --Eileen Hehl

A moving and interesting American historical.
I loved Eileen Charbonneau's richly developed characters and colorful history of The Randolph Legacy, her last historical novel. Rachel LeMoyne is an equally impressive story, filled with fascinating little-known facts of American history and characters we hate to let go of when we finish reading the book. Even the secondary characters are captivating. Eileen Charbonneau is a refreshing face in American historical fiction. I'm thrilled to have discovered her and I can't wait for more.


The Sharpest Sight (American Indian Literature and Critical Studies, Vol. 1)
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Oklahoma Pr (Trd) (February, 1992)
Author: Louis Owens
Average review score:

The Flow Of Rivers, The Flow Of Lives
The Sharpest Sight by Louis Owens is a mystery, a police procedural, a thriller, an exploration of identity, and magical realism all rolled up into one excellent novel. Sharpest Sight takes place in a [lightly fictionalized] Salinas Valley, California sometime near the end of the Vietnam War. Attis McCurtain, Vietnam vet and insane killer, has escaped from the state hospital and may or may not be dead. Mundo Morales, who is Mexican-American, Catholic, a Vietnam vet, a sheriff's deputy, and an old friend of Attis', and Cole McCurtain, who is Choctaw-Irish-American, and Attis' younger brother, must each try and unravel the mystery of Attis' disappearance. Mundo is aided by his duty to his buddy, his duty to his position in law enforcement, his love of his wife and child, and the ghost of his grandfather. Cole gets help from his dad Hoey, his Uncle Luther, a Choctaw elder and shaman, Old Lady Blue Wood, another elder and shaman, and his duty to his brother. The local crazed bartender, a twitchy Vietnam vet FBI agent, and the family of the girl Attis killed also play a major role. As the flooded river recedes towards dry river bed, all the characters converge towards a solution to the mystery and in some cases, a greater understanding of self. Potential readers unable to suspend disbelief in order to deal with ghostly grandfathers and magical Choctaw dirty tricks shouldn't even try to wade into this novel. For all others, I recommend that you dive into The Sharpest Sight and see where the flow takes you.

A satisfying, surreal metaphysical road trip
"The Sharpest Sight" reads a little like a murder mystery and a little like a road trip book, though both descriptions fall woefully short of doing this book justice. This is a complex tale of self-discovery and psychic healing set amid a backdrop of Native American and Hispanic culture and history, with Viet Nam flashbacks, fumbling feds and some mildly graphic sex scenes to help keep the action moving forward. While the main characters are vividly drawn, and completely believable and sympathetic, for my money it was some of the secondary characters who made this book worthwhile. The bar owner, Jessard Deal, is particularly entertaining, especially as he disintegrates late in the book. Some of his dialogue is priceless. The same goes for some of the FBI agents, which take on absurd cariciature-like qualities late in the book. Louis Owens has a deft hand with subtle intrigue and the surreal qualities of truth and discovery, and is expert at creating an authentic sense of place and character.

Feel the river sand under your feet and the thrill
up your spine with this mystery evocative of Garcia Marquez and Hillerman rolled into one. Choctaw/Cherokee/Irish Vietnam vet Attis McCurtain is murdered; his friend Mundo Morales and his great uncle Luther know it immediately through vision and dreams. His brother Cole and father Hoey must find the body which authorities believe is still a living psycho on the lam.

As 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
Published in Hardcover by Linnet Books (February, 1997)
Authors: Russell G. Davis, Brent K. Ashabranner, and Russell B. Davis
Average review score:

The Choctaw Code
Good reading for impressinable youngsters. Issues dealing with integrity, clashing cultures and a man who chooses not to take the easy way out. Inspiring.

a good example of respecting values of different cultures
The Choctaw Code is one of my all time favorites and was an especially liked read aloud chapter book for my fifth grade students in Atoka, Oklahoma. Readers relate to the growing beautiful friendship between Jim and the boy and the values being taught by example of the Choctaw people's way of dealing with justice and life. The story paints a picture of unselfish communication between two people of two very different cultures. I am pleased that it is back in print.


Choctaws at the Crossroads: The Political Economy of Class and Culture in the Oklahoma Timber Region
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Nebraska Pr (November, 1997)
Author: Sandra L. Faiman-Silva
Average review score:

"Choice" Review: Choctaws at the Crossroads
"A superlative work...focusing on shifts in the political, economic, and cultural lives of the Choctaw, the author demonstrates the degeneration of the group's political status from nation to tribe to ethnic enclave, as well as its economic marginalization through forced entry into the world capitalist system....Faiman-Silva eschews a simplistic model of victimization without denying the glaring inqualities and injustices of past andn present interactions with the surrounding world. She presents vividly the internal heterogeneity of Choctaw solution seeking."

A Book to Look At: Choctaws at the Crossroads
Editorial Review:

Named 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.


A Concise Encyclopedia of the Choctaw Indians: Past and Present
Published in Paperback by Infinity Publishing.com (15 November, 2002)
Author: Keith A. Pounds
Average review score:

Perfect Quick Reference Book
I totally enjoyed this book! As for someone like myself who is part Choctaw and been doing family research for some time, its a perfect quick reference. I love the cross language dictionary of commonly used words ! The book is also a must for anyone just starting their research of Choctaws. Its gives you a quick overview of pre removal til now. Mr. Pounds is highly respected and truly admired for his work and research for Choctaws !! Cant wait for the next book!!

Great Book for Educators!!!
Great Book! Easy to read for those who are just beginning a serious research of Native Americans in the South. As a part time teaching assistant I have found it a very convenient reference source, and have already used it for my own thesis writings. Good history of lots of different southern Indians including Choctaws, Chickasaws, Creeks, Seminole and many more that I never heard of. The author having an obvious knowledge of native language makes the book a real treat with new information from a different perspective than that which I am accustomed. Rivers, towns, and places in the South have a much deeper meaning now that I have read some of the ancient history associated with these places and how they were viewed by Native Americans in the South. Not an ordinary Native American book! I give it a 5!


Long March: The Choctaw's Gift to Irish Famine Relief
Published in Paperback by Tricycle Pr (December, 2001)
Authors: Marie-Louise Fitzpatrick, Gary Whitedeer, and Gary White Deer
Average review score:

A profound look at history & community
In 1847 an impoverished displaced group of Choctaw Indians collected from their meager resources the sum of $170 to send toward food relief for the Irish Potato Famine.

Through 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.
(I got this book in Dublin, Ireland, recently.)

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!


The Biggest Heart In Choctaw Hollow (Avalon Romance)
Published in Hardcover by Thomas Bouregy & Co (24 February, 1997)
Authors: Bernadette Pruitt and Burnadette Pruitt
Average review score:

*a sweet book*
* this book was so sweet. the characters were so life-like. i really enjoyed the story..it was filled with heart-warming scenes that will fill you tummy with a warm tingle =)..*


Fields and Pastures New: My First Year As a Country Vet
Published in Hardcover by Crown Pub (November, 1995)
Authors: John, Dr. McCormack and Peter Ginna
Average review score:

The Next Best Thing Than Being There Assisting Dr. McCormack
I own the hardback copy of this book...actually I have owned it for a few years now. It is one of those books that become a literary treasure in your bookcase. I was so hooked on this book when I first got it, I read it from cover to cover in one day...I just couldn't put it down!

Dr. 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
My people are not from Choctaw County, but we're from "around there." This is not only a sympathetic and heartfelt account of a rural vet practice in the sixties; it's a very accurate look at the folks you were likely to meet then and there, both the good and the bad. I have met most of the folks he talks about, or at least their near relations. Dr. McCormack's extended meditation on the verbal mangling of his job description by his neighbors is alone worth the price of admission, although the account of his visit to the Governor's Mansion driving the "rounds vehicle" and a too-long-delayed boar cutting run it very close. Excellent book.

A good read anytime!
I really enjoyed this book. It had good detail, and you really felt like you were going on the rounds with Dr. McCormack. I have read it several times since I bought it, and it is hard to put down each time, even though I know the outcome!

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.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Mississippi
More Pages: Choctaw Page 1 2 3 4