Related Vacation Book Subjects: Oklahoma
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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Comanche", sorted by average review score:

Comanche Trail
Published in Mass Market Paperback by HarperTorch (May, 1999)
Author: Will Camp
Average review score:

Brothers in Arms
1859, in Santa Fe, army captain Jean Benoit cannot escape the dark rumors of war filling Fort Marcy's dusty air. A southern born soldier must decide which side he will fight in the upcoming war. But before he can decide Benoit is drawn into a battle far closer to home, a bloody conflict in which a beloved friend's life hangs in the balance. a great story.


Comanche Wind (An Avon Romantic Treasure)
Published in Paperback by Avon (May, 1993)
Author: Genell Dellin
Average review score:

I Loved this Book! It was a real Can't put it Down Book!
This was one of the Best books I've ever read, and I'm a big romance novel lover! It was VERY WELL Written, Genell Dellin makes you feel as if you are right there in the middle of everything or that you yourself become that character! I Loved it and I can't wait to read the rest of the series.


The Comanches: Lords of the South Plains
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Oklahoma Pr (Trd) (September, 1987)
Authors: Ernest Wallace and E. Adamson Hoebel
Average review score:

A classic Work on the Comanches
The Comanches: Lords of the South Plains, by Ernest Wallace and E. Adamson Hoebel, is a comprehensive ethnological study of the Comanches. It assesses the minutia of their origins, social structure, government as well as a history of their communal existence. An underlying tension regarding this work is the credibility of late day informates as opposed to period records. At issue is the comprehensive interpretation suggested for Comanche government and law as opposed to the meager allowance given to Comanche cosmogony. Regarding government and law, after citing very limited source data from informants, the authors suggest an extensive system of government and law. Focusing on various aspects of the Comanche social experience, they drew parallels with modern day legal code. In the end, it seems, the authors imposed a system with nomenclature upon the Comanche social culture that did not in totality exist. On the other had they are adamant that the Comanches did not maintain extensive philosophical or theological thought. Yet, the evidence they present clearly suggests they did. Comanches commitment to the "guardian spirit complex", and the "Great Spirit" in every aspect of their lives evinced an unequivocal as well as pervading theology. Nineteenth century observers of the Comanches, Dodge, Neighbors, Babb, Burnett and others noted that the Comanches maintained deep theological notions. Nonetheless, Wallace and Hoebel are skeptical and suggest that later Christian writers forced their views upon Comanche theology because descriptions of Comanche cosmology, similar to certain Christian believes, were not supported by the evidence given by informants in the 1933 Santa Fe Laboratory group. It truth, informants said very little about theology or cosmogony. Clearly, data taken from the Santa Fe Laboratory study is given credence over recorded witnesses from the period.
Despite the source issue, overall, this work is a superb study of the Comanches.


Dangerous Passage: The Santa Fe Trail and the Mexican War
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Oklahoma Pr (Txt) (April, 1994)
Authors: William Y. Chalfant, Mont David Williams, and Marc Simmons
Average review score:

Dangerous Passage: The Santa Fe Trail and the Mexican War
Mr. Chalfont has provided a truly an outstanding and original contribution to knowledge on the Mexican War of 1846-1848. Often under reported by many authors who concentrate on the more famous actions south of the Rio Grande, the campaign to secure the Santa Fe Trail was crucially important to President Polk's wider efforts at expanding the boundaries of the United States. Presaging by decades the later Indian Wars, the Santa Fe Trail between 1846 and 1848 saw some of the first concerted efforts by the US Government to utilize its military forces in the preservation of an economic pipeline. The author has also avoided the tendency of many "specialists" to present his research as a litany of dull facts. He has opted instead to relate history as a sequence of connected narratives that succeeds in conveying the flavor of the times as well as the historical substance. Replete with excellent photos and maps, I highly recommend this book to anyone with a serious interest in this important conflict.


The Deputy Sheriff of Comanche County (The Gregg Press Western Fiction Series)
Published in Textbook Binding by Gregg Pr (June, 1979)
Author: Edgar Rice Burroughs
Average review score:

Well worth the money.
This is a great book. If you like westerns' read it. If you like mystery read it. If you like adventure read it. If you like romance read it. If you like comedy read it. You love the hero. You are guessing through out the book. It is about Buck Mason (I know bad name.) who is the "Deputy Sheriff Of Commanche County." There is evidence against him say he killed a man. His family had had a feud with this man over land. When he finds out that he is being blamed he goes into hiding. He wants to prove his innocents and hunt down the real killer's. But after he went in to hiding everybody believed him guilty.

This book is easy to read. If you can find it buy it. I only read Louis L'amour when it come to western's. But this guy is good.


The Doomsday Marshal and the Comancheros (A Double d Western)
Published in Hardcover by D D Western (January, 1990)
Author: Ray Hogan
Average review score:

AN AMAZING WESTERN ADVENTURE!
I still can't believe how good this western is. Every word is perfect and the story is incredible. Marshal John Rye helps an ex-Texas Ranger rescue another ranger who is being held captive by Comancheros down in Mexico. The people are so well developed, you feel like you know them. There is a haunting quality to the story and some unexpected turns. Ray Hogan is a master of the western novel. Must read for western fans.


Engineer from the Comanche Nation, Nancy Wallace (Verheyden-Hilliard, Mary Ellen. American Women in Science Biography.)
Published in Paperback by Equity Inst (June, 1985)
Authors: Mary Ellen Verheyden-Hilliard and Marian Menzel
Average review score:

Excellent Mentoring for Minority women Scientists
This book gives a young woman thinking about a career inscience a chance to see a warm engaging picture of a young nativeamerican woman scientist. Ms. Wallace's early inquisitiveness rings true as a way to identify a potential scientist. When I was a teenager I read a biography of Marie Curie, and I still remember the impact it had on my thinking that I could be a physicist. For Native Americans who have not had a change to know that people of their ethnic background can find a career in the special world of science and engineering, this book can serve as a similar spring board for a budding scientist. I wish there were more books like this to encourage young people of color to consider science and engineering as a career!


Glitter of Gold - An Avalon Western
Published in Hardcover by Thomas Bouregy & Co ()
Author: Kent Conwell
Average review score:

Glitter Of Gold
This is a ten stars book. You will be turning the pages as Kent Conwell takes you once again on a fun filled exciting journey with three children to Ft Sill. What he thinks will be easy to take them turns out to be heavy on the heart. And when Margaret shows up, well things get even more exciting. The children are adorable and so well mannered that you can't help but fall in love with them. I laughed, I cried. The book was wonderful. I loved the children, Del, Margaret and his brother. This is a must read book. Kent Conwell has once again done it again!!!


Painted Comanche Tree (Avalon Westerns)
Published in Hardcover by Thomas Bouregy & Co (October, 1997)
Author: Kent Conwell
Average review score:

Painted Comanche Tree
This is only one of Kent Conwell's books that I have read. There are many others that I have read. And I give them all a 5. He leaves you laughing and smiling throughout the day when you read one of his books. I really enjoyed the one about the wagon train and all the women going out west. I laughed, I cried. I love his books. He puts so much emotion into his books. If no one has ever read a Kent Conwell book, they are missing a golden opportunity. He is a great storyteller.


Plains Warrior: Chief Quanah Parker and the Comanches
Published in School & Library Binding by Atheneum (May, 1996)
Author: Albert Marrin
Average review score:

A Masterpiece! All History Should Be Written Like This!
Quanah Parker led a life that no novelist could ever haveinvented. His mother,Cynthia Ann Parker, was only nine when a Comanchewar party swept down on her family's frontier farm, killed her parents and grandparents before her eyes, and carried her off into captivity. By the time she was grown, she had become a Comanche herself and married a leading warrior. Their firstborn son was named Quanah, and he would lead his people during the greatest upheaval they would ever experience.

Marrin does an absolutely brilliant job of bringing this violent, critical period to life for young readers. He describes the Native lifestyle accurately but objectively, without romanticizing it through the distorted lens of political correctness. He describes the Indian atrocities and the "tornado of hatred" they inspired among the whites. He states correctly that 19th century Indian boys were "born to kill" and then portrays the teenage Texas Rangers who were, in many ways, the mirror image of the young warriors they opposed. We learn about Quanah's role as a leader in the war for Texas, and when that war was finally lost, about his equally impressive role guiding his people through the difficult transitions that followed.

I have studied the Indian wars for more than 30 years, and Marrin's book has left me in awe. I did not think it was possible for history to be written this well! If you are over 12 years old, you have to read it! END


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Oklahoma
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