Author: | David Rory O'Neill | ISBN: | 9780463062616 |
Publisher: | David Rory O'Neill | Publication: | May 13, 2019 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition | Language: | English |
Author: | David Rory O'Neill |
ISBN: | 9780463062616 |
Publisher: | David Rory O'Neill |
Publication: | May 13, 2019 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition |
Language: | English |
A novel exploring time and relationships. Fourteen short stories in which we follow the same characters in different historical periods.
For Leoti, growth shaped her life in dramatic and not always welcome ways. Her childhood in the small settlement of Azure in the lee of the Bear Paw Mountains of Montana was happy and normal. Her mother, father and two brothers were all reasonably content folks with few of the hang-ups and problems reservation life can bring to native peoples. The Chippewa and Cree tribe of the Rocky Boy reservation had been astute and careful with their resources, their income from natural resources and later, the Northern Winz Casino, among other modern developments, meant a higher standard of living than was usual on reservations.
As the girl reached pubescence things changed. She began to have visions and was troubled. The shaman woman spoke to her and saw she had the magic. She became apprenticed. As she grew to womanhood Leoti suffered as she grew rounder, taller and more beautiful than her cousins and aunts. She was no longer of her band and they called her names and thought her mother must have lain with a white-man so they called Leoti: Métis-Mistik, meaning ‘mixed-race tree.’ No more flower of the prairie. Leoti left her band and her lands and travelled west.
A novel exploring time and relationships. Fourteen short stories in which we follow the same characters in different historical periods.
For Leoti, growth shaped her life in dramatic and not always welcome ways. Her childhood in the small settlement of Azure in the lee of the Bear Paw Mountains of Montana was happy and normal. Her mother, father and two brothers were all reasonably content folks with few of the hang-ups and problems reservation life can bring to native peoples. The Chippewa and Cree tribe of the Rocky Boy reservation had been astute and careful with their resources, their income from natural resources and later, the Northern Winz Casino, among other modern developments, meant a higher standard of living than was usual on reservations.
As the girl reached pubescence things changed. She began to have visions and was troubled. The shaman woman spoke to her and saw she had the magic. She became apprenticed. As she grew to womanhood Leoti suffered as she grew rounder, taller and more beautiful than her cousins and aunts. She was no longer of her band and they called her names and thought her mother must have lain with a white-man so they called Leoti: Métis-Mistik, meaning ‘mixed-race tree.’ No more flower of the prairie. Leoti left her band and her lands and travelled west.