The Ordeal of Running Standing

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University of Oklahoma Press, 1993 - 312 páginas

In this popular novel admired by both Indian and white readers, Running Standing is a Kiowa born too late to feel himself truly Indian. Driven by his own bitter ambitions, he becomes Joe Standing and cynically joins the conniving whites—hoping to beat them at their own game.

Meanwhile, Standing’s Cheyenne wife follows a different dream. While Joe heads further east after his six years at the Carlisle Indian School, Sara returns home to teach her people the skills necessary to compete in the white world. She is making slow progress when Joe returns with authorization to buy up the mineral rights to Indian lands.

In the end, hunted and wounded and outsmarted at every turn, Joe regains his manhood on the old Kiowa Glory Road. His revenge brings this driving tale of love and adventure to a savage and shocking but inevitable climax.

Set in Oklahoma early in the twentieth century, The Ordeal of Running Standing vividly dramatizes the dilemma of two young Indians caught between two worlds.

Dentro del libro

Páginas seleccionadas

Contenido

Sección 1
3
Sección 2
53
Sección 3
58
Sección 4
67
Sección 5
94
Sección 6
107
Sección 7
126
Sección 8
136
Sección 9
159
Sección 10
171
Sección 11
189
Sección 12
207
Sección 13
260
Sección 14
283
Sección 15
309
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Acerca del autor (1993)

Thomas Fall was born in the Ozark Mountains of Arkansas in a community with many Cherokee Indians. He said he had ?a touch of Cherokee ancestry? and ?grew up in western Oklahoma among many families of Plains Indians representing all the tribes mentions in The Ordeal of Running Standing. ?ÿ

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