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Counting Coup : A True Story of Basketball and Honor on the Little Big Horn

Counting Coup : A True Story of Basketball and Honor on the Little Big Horn

List Price: $14.95
Your Price: $10.17
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Wannabes beware
Review: I've recently read two books on rez life: Ian Frasier's "On the Rez," and this -- better -- book by Larry Colton. "Counting Coup" is ostensibly about senior Sharon LaForge and the Hardin Lady Bulldogs basketball team. But it's real strength is in Colton's depiction of the lives lived off the playing floor on the Crow Reservation. Some parts, I believe, have to be fabricated. His description of Sharon's "Mother from Hell" Karna Fallsdown knocking down shots in a bar while her daughter is playing in the state championships might be accurate, but the author couldn't have been there. But "facts" are somewhat fluid in Indian Country, and Colton's pretty much on target. He sure nailed Hardin, Montana, for what it is. Reading the book, you get to know the characters and you get to care about them. My personal favorite was Stacey "Spacey" Greenwalt, whose quick wit provides much-needed sparks of humor in what is mostly a depressing tale. There's drama, certainly, in the sports reporting of the games. I just wanted the highs of the wins on the basketball court to be accompanied by some highs in the post-game parts of the book. But the rez life highs your read about are drug-induced. That's depressing, but for the most part true. I had hoped Colton would have a SuAnne Big Crow-like story to report, as is told in "On the Rez." (She was also a high school basketball player, a hero and a legend on the Pine Ridge reservation.) But real heroes are hard to find. I'm sure Frasier and Colton take flak from Indians for being middle-aged white guys trying to relate life in Indian country. Some Indians don't even grab the concept of the freedom of the press. They believe "permission" should be granted before a story is told. Clara Nomee, the (former) Crow Tribe chairman, certainly doesn't think the First Amendment applies in her part of America, and Coulton has to go undercover at one point to attend a Crow council meeting. We need more good Indian writers to put these white guys in their place, writers with the guts to tell truthfully and objectively the stories about contemporary reservation life. I'll buy those books. For the record, I spent a year in Hardin in the early 1990s as editor of the weekly newspaper there, and later worked as journalist covering the Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota for Indian Country Today newspaper. I'm a middle-aged white guy.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Overcoming Odds
Review: Being a Montanan and residing near the Fort Peck Indian Reservation, I was stunned by the accuracy of the portrayal of life on the reservation and basketball in rural Montana but also the kindness with which the truth was told.

I would recommend this for anyone who wants a sense of real Indian life on the reservation in Montana.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Counting Coup
Review: This was a fabulous, poinant book about life, love and basketball. The callous, thoughtless racism that is depicted on the parts of the Indians and the Whites is enlightning as it sheds light on the fact that ignorant people come in all shades and colors. I would highly recommend this book to anyone and my wife and I have enjoyed it several times each. I'm hoping for a follow-up to see how her life has been in the past 10 years.


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